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Dr Johnson mistakenly derived it from the French "bon" (good).
Those who had influence almost invariably derived it from a close working relationship with the Secretary of State.
(Irvin derived it from an 1834 drawing of a Count D'Orsay, "man of Fashion in Early Victorian Period," that he found reproduced in the costume section of the Encyclopædia Britannica).
According to him, what distinguished the poor was their unique "culture of poverty", a concept he borrowed from anthropologist Oscar Lewis, who had derived it from his study of Mexican slum-dwellers.
Chaucer probably borrowed it from the French poet and musician Guillaume de Machaut (c. 1300 77), who may have invented it or derived it from earlier French and Provençal poets.
In the first gallery we see Hartley's earliest Maine landscape, in which he spiked a relatively conventional Realist style with short, slanting, cross-hatched brush strokes (known as the Segantini stitch, for the Italian painter who derived it from van Gogh and Seurat).
Similar(42)
BEANO derives it from the mold, Aspergillus Niger, I understand.
But instead of deriving a sense of direction from human guidance, neural networks derive it from their structure.
When self-worth is elusive enough that you can only derive it from packs of strangers in bars, there could be some psychological issues at play.
For this play Čapek invented the word "robot," deriving it from the Czech word for forced labour.
Sea level has an additional way we can derive it from, and that's simply from looking at the sea level that you see in the geological record.
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