Sentence examples for customarily published from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

We haven't been informed at all about the planned construction... even on the village bulletin board where all ads are customarily published there was no information about building the drilling rigs," says Rutowski.

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On being enrolled the deed is customarily 'gazetted', that is published in the London Gazette.

Book superstores and warehouse clubs routinely discount the price of hardcovers by as much as 50percentt, giving readers less reason to wait -- customarily, a year -- after a new book is published to buy the cheaper paperback version.

Our observation that the absolute sizes investigated in food studies tended to be large is based primarily on comparison with external data, derived from ranges of typical dietary intakes (amounts customarily consumed in a single eating occasion), that were published in 2002 (Food Standards Agency 2002), which may not be transferable to the present day or other settings.

Nicks hasn't yet published her verses, but given the emotional angst, philosophical profundity and lunar weird she customarily packs into a couplet, how could Nicks's George RR Martin-inspoems poems not be superb?

The beginning of what has come to be termed the "dinosaur renaissance" is customarily dated to the 1960s, and the study of a remarkable predator named by John Ostrom, the palaeontologist who published the first monograph on it, Deinonychus: "Terrible Claw".

Copies of the speech are customarily distributed to members of the news media ahead of time — on the condition, of course, that they not be published until after the president begins his delivery.

In Historia Coelestis Britannica (published posthumously in 1725), Flamsteed numbered the stars within each of 54 constellations consecutively according to right ascension, and the Flamsteed numbers are customarily used for the fainter naked-eye stars such as 61 Cygni.

For present-day scholarship, however, Talmud in the precise sense refers only to the materials customarily called Gemara an Aramaic term prevalent in medieval rabbinic literature that was used by the church censor to replace the term Talmud within the Talmudic discourse in the Basel edition of the Talmud, published 1578 81.

The United States as a whole is approaching a level of black-white residential segregation that researchers customarily consider "moderate," and in places such as Blacksburg, Va., or Fort Collins, Colo., housing segregation is in the "low" range, as Massey notes in a review of the data soon to be published in the Journal of Catholic Social Thought.

Though the journal customarily lets authors reply to criticism, it has refused to publish Mr. Maxwell's rebuttal, in what he charges is a bid to silence debate over United States policy on Mr. Kissinger's watch.

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