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Examples
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Other analysts, like Tindale, believe Europe has no choice, but to continue with nuclear power until less risky clean-energy alternatives are fully developed and the region slashes its energy use.
Europe's Nuclear Debate at Forefront After Japan Disaster 2011
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Stephen Tindale, a climate change analyst at the London-based Center for European Reform, said, There is a very big question about whether Europe will, both the institutions, the commission and more importantly the national governments, continue to develop nuclear.
Europe's Nuclear Debate at Forefront After Japan Disaster 2011
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Tindale, but also by the celebrated Hebrew, of the Hebrews, Emanuel
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Tindale, the friend of John Brown, who went there almost with his life in his right hand, commands, and his will is law, his sword is the guarantee of peace, and by his order the town is destroyed, with the single exception of that hall which John Brown's presence has rendered immortal. '
The Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No. 6, December 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy Various
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Similarly there are now accounts of the writings of almost all the great Churchmen, such as Cranmer, Latimer, Tindale, Laud, Ken, etc.
The Book-Hunter at Home P. B. M. Allan
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Spite of his odds, however, Tindale is the real father of our King James version.
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And it all came out as it was planned; the Bishop of London had the books, Packington had the thanks, Tindale had the money, the debt was paid, and the new edition was soon ready.
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It cannot be too strongly urged that the two great pioneers of English Bible translation, Wiclif and Tindale, more than a century apart, were chiefly moved to their work by social conditions.
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Erasmus either was a teacher at Cambridge when Tindale was a student there, or had just left.
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For Tindale there were available two new and critical Greek Testaments, that of Erasmus and the so-called Complutensian, though he used that of Erasmus chiefly.
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