mystery (original) (raw)
The obvious answer from the paper is that such considerations reside with the opaque mysteries of non-classical process.
Many mysteries remain about how and why languages change.
While these reminiscences do not solve any mysteries, they could eventually help to shed new light on significant but as yet unresolved biographical questions.
All this is familiar to those in the business, but two mysteries stand out.
While covering similar ground, the books are complementary in providing different perspectives on one of science's greatest unsolved mysteries.
Moreover, the mysteries of mixing and diluting serum - second only to homeopathic remedies - made it necessary to establish an objective value.
Books were no longer laboriously compiled clerical mysteries: they had rapidly become both commercially viable and highly visible in society at large.
Just-deserts responsibility requires mysteries or myopia; either way, it is fundamentally incompatible with medical science.
By reason of this terror the savage trembled before the magician who seemed to have penetrated the mysteries of nature about him.
We enjoy mysteries, so long as they do not threaten our person.
In the hands of those less skilled than the aforementioned religionists, mysteries themselves, can be used to justify virtually any behaviour.
Their mechanics, in a sense, outweigh their mysteries - which may be a way of saying that the records are disturbing but not inexplicable.
All these and other mysteries are explored in this fascinating book, with the aid of some good illustrations.
The material means of music are rationally quantifiable but not the mysteries of their application.
The near-sacred statistics are explained; formulas are given for mysteries like the earned run average.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.