By 1943, Donald Barchok filed a patent for a radar system using the acronym IFF in his text with only parenthetic explanation, indicating that this acronym had become an accepted term.
12.
I added a definition after the word anti-pattern so you don't have to follow the link to know what it means ( I hope my parenthetic def is clear ).
13.
Similarly, when the text says " articles published in the May 14 and May 21, 1857 issues ", the year is acting as a parenthetic, and needs a comma after it.
14.
The length of this text is 109 letters ( ignoring the parenthetic note on Greek ), whereas the original text contains only 87 or 88 characters : Sams claimed the surplus letters are implied by phonetic shorthand.
15.
There is a parenthetic-ish reference in Dovid Katz's book to Zuckermann, in which he is called " fresh-thinking " and in which one of his claims is described as " reasonable ".
16.
Note, however, Norwegian " John, som hadde sett mannen, visste hvordan han s?ut " ( John, who had seen the man, knew what he looked like ), where the dependent clause is parenthetic.
17.
We already know they do not, because the " AP Stylebook " and other journalism-specific style guides uniformly ignore this character entirely, using the hyphen for its conjoining uses, and the em dash for its parenthetic uses.
18.
In the orthography ( used here ) of the native Kiowa speaker, Parker McKenzie, who collaborated with both J . P . Harrington and Laurel Watkins, these are represented as below ( parenthetic letters are used only at the end of the syllable ):
19.
The first two compositions ( Galla and Pampinea ) are said by the author himself to be as if they were youthful exercises; in Faunus, Dorus, Silva cadens and Alcestus facts and events related to the Angevin court are elevated to the rank of parenthetic exemplification.
20.
As for Morse's other question _ can an episode be something momentous ? _ it's true that the word's roots imply a parenthetic, incidental event; in ancient Greek tragedy, it was the part ( originally an interpolation ) between two choric songs.