I don't think the content of this post should be included " in extenso, " as it means that this AfD discussion itself becomes complicit in attacking Schwarz . ( talk ) 17 : 21, 13 September 2005 ( UTC)
12.
"Det udvalg af J�rgen-Frantz Jacobsens breve, der bringes her & mdash; for det meste i uddrag, nogle dog in extenso & mdash; handler hovedsagelig om brevskriveren selv, om betydningsfulde tildragelser i hans liv, og om det sind, hvormed han m�der denne sin " sk�bne " ."
13.
The selection of J�rgen-Frantz Jacobsen's letters here presented & mdash; mainly in the form of excerpts, though some in extenso & mdash; is principally about the letter-writer himself, the significant events in his life, and the mental qualities with which he meets this his " fate ".
14.
However, the Selden Society's experiment was not repeated, and at a General Meeting held in 1903 the Pipe Roll Society decided to abandon record type in favour of publishing its texts " " in extenso " " ( i . e . with all abbreviations extended ).
15.
La viuda del ex-presidente conto con tres formidables aliados en su cruzada, a los que alude in extenso el libro de Glendon : uno fue Rene Cassin, un judio que habia sido escapado por milagro de los Nazis y que presidia el Consejo de Estado en Francia.
16.
On the other hand, "'the topic is cool because "'of the recently developed mixture of conspiracy theories, anti-papacy ( " in extenso " anti-catholicism ), popular ( both in a proper and pejorative sense ) interest in biblical archeology, and the need to fill a void in the " civilised " but secular West.
17.
In short, neither Cooper nor Praeger, on whom this article very extensively relies ( and from both of whom it apparently quotes verbatim in extenso ) can be acceptable as sources for Wagner, unless they cite genuine primary sources-in which case those sources should be cited, and not the piffle written by Praeger and Cooper themselves.
18.
Mr . Brooke commented " A most extraordinary variety, of which next to nothing appears to be known, is the hairless cat, and we cannot do better than quote in extenso the description given by the owner of what, if his surmise should unhappily prove to be correct, was the last pair of these peculiar animals, a portrait of which we give.