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The handbook provides a wealth of information about the general construction sector.
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Foothold handbook How to get the best purchase on common gym holds.
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This shows that both you and the minister contravened the ministerial handbook.
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There's no handbook for how to manoeuvre your way gracefully through it.
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But I kept the handbook, and he never asked for it back.
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This prophecy of Noah is the vademecum of slaveholders, and they never venture abroad without it.
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Fire is the Arabs' vademecum; the actual cautery is deeply respected, and is supposed to be infallible.
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So, driven to the wall, we go for our subject-matter to the reliable, old, moral, unassailable vademecum-theunabridged dictionary.
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The document is nevertheless a useful vademecum and overview of the British government's positions and arguments on the forthcoming Inter Governmental Conference.
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She spoke eight languages fluently, including Arabic, and was a perfect " vademecum" of interesting information which she well knew how to impart.
Usage of enchiridion in anglès
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Epictetus in his Enchiridion makes short work of the question of evil.
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For evil is the privation of good, according to Augustine (Enchiridion xi).
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For "the works of the Trinity are inseparable," as Augustine says (Enchiridion xxxviii).
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Now a thing is called evil "because it harms," as Augustine says (Enchiridion xii).
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For, according to Augustine (Enchiridion xii), "a thing is evil because it is harmful."
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We have also from Arrian's hand the small Enchiridion or Manual of the chief precepts of Epictetus.
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Hence, as Augustine says (Enchiridion xl): "Grace is in a manner natural to the Man Christ."
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Wherefore Augustine says (Enchiridion xl): The manner in which Christ was born of the Holy Ghost .
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Hence Augustine says in the Enchiridion (Serm.
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There is a valuable commentary on the Enchiridion by Simplicius, who lived in the time of the emperor Justinian.
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Poliziano's version was printed in the first Bâle edition of the Enchiridion, A. D. 1531 (apud And.
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For Augustine says (Enchiridion 103): No one is saved, except whom God has willed to be saved.
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For, according to Augustine (Enchiridion xii), a thing is said to be evil because it does harm.
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The Enchiridion, on the other hand, is a purely devotional book, though written for a man of the world.
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Augustine says (Enchiridion iii) that "God is worshiped by faith, hope and charity," which are theological virtues.
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The last reflection of the Stoic philosophy that I have observed is in Simplicius' Commentary on the Enchiridion of Epictetus.