On board the distant frigate, Vaako had termi-nated the connection at his own end, leaving the communicator Quasi to its chamber and to its rest. ❋ Foster, Alan Dean, 1946- (2004)
The gray blanket was caused by the smoke and ash that spewed from its surrounding summits, and because the valley of Sanction was a windtrap, termi - nus of the Newsea. ❋ Kirchoff, Mary (2003)
There were no working termi-nals, and she didn't have a tricorder. ❋ DeCandido, Keith R. A. (2001)
"In order to comply, life-support must be termi-nated." ❋ DeCandido, Keith R. A. (2001)
He spared a quick glance for the termi-nal, as if to assure himself it was still there. ❋ Foster, Alan Dean, 1946- (1997)
The central termi-nal was only one of a dozen of similar size that ringed the city's boundaries, and was as large as Paszex. ❋ Foster, Alan Dean, 1946- (1982)
In one sense, a serf's employment by a Citizen ended when that serf entered the Tourney, since all tenure was termi - nated by such entry. ❋ Anthony, Piers (1981)
Her face, arms and upper torso were perfectly humanoid, with shape, color and texture no ordinary person could have told from a living woman, but her perfectly humanoid body termi - nated at the edge of her desk. ❋ Anthony, Piers (1980)
As the disguised pair neared what had been Nadsokor's forum there came a scream from one shattered doorway and a young girl, barely over puberty, dashed out pursued by a monstrously fat beg - gar who propelled himself with astounding speed on his crutches, the livid stumps of his legs, which termi - nated at the knee, making the motions of running. ❋ Moorcock, Michael, 1939- (1970)
Marxist-Leninist concept of class cannot do justice to the Soviet, not to speak of the Chinese experience, in which peasants are often referred to as proletariat in order to give some semblance of sense to the termi - nological Marxist pieties of the Communist Party. ❋ SIDNEY HOOK (1968)
The subsequent evolution of these ideas is deter - mined by their Greek origin, as is evident in the termi - nology. ❋ E. N. TIGERSTEDT (1968)
There is only a termi - nological difference between saying, with Huxley (ibid., pp. 315, 319) that this limitation of scope imposed by ❋ RULON WELLS (1968)
A man's action, consisting in his free decision and its consequences up to a termi - ❋ EDWARD G. BALLARD (1968)
Again Arabs such as Avicenna and Abū'l-Barakāt had used equivalent Arabic termi - nology to express the same idea, and thirteenth-century ❋ WILLIAM A. WALLACE (1968)
These ideas and their linguistic expressions found their synthesis in the German term Volksgeist and its derivations, Geist connoting — even in Kant's termi - ❋ NATHAN ROTENSTREICH (1968)
Hegel uses also the term “genius of a nation,” following the termi - nology found in the preceding discussions, as well as the term “God of a people.” ❋ NATHAN ROTENSTREICH (1968)
It is then a matter of termi - nology whether he is still considered to be a rational actor. ❋ OSKAR MORGENSTERN (1968)
Priscianus 'rather haphazard and ad hoc grammatical concepts into a highly abstract and abstruse termi - ❋ ALVAR ELLEG (1968)