Some re-namings are probably in order, but I don't think deletion via redirect is the right way to handle things . "'talk 19 : 22, 4 January 2008 ( UTC)
42.
Therefore what I say is that we can not depend on local news papers as RS for school namings even though they are RS in general terms . talk ) 07 : 42, 30 September 2012 ( UTC)
43.
The report, by Master-McNeil Inc ., found that while overall applications for trademarks have grown steadily, filings in the area of technology namings have exploded, jumping more than 186 percent between 1989 and 1996.
44.
It was therefore certified for marriages by the Registrar-General until 1977 when the Deputy Registrar-General ruled that the Hall could not be used for weddings under the terms of the namings of children at Conway Hall.
45.
His namings, or those connected with him, include Mount Raleigh and Mount Sir Francis Drake, but others such as Mount Sussex, Oriana Peak and Madrigal Mountain were named by nomination of the Alpine Club of Canada in the 1980s.
46.
"' Due to the large and changing number of cultivars, and the variation of cultivar namings in different regions, this list only gives a few examples of the estimated 50, 000 pepper varieties that exist . "'
47.
I think that web surfers should be already aware that they shouldn't take functions or namings for granted, and categories are already enough intuitive so that the casual web surfer can understand or at least suspect whaat are they about.
48.
It was perhaps in recognition that any perceived marketing advantages available from the unconventional namings had been exhausted, that from 1958 the car was sold simply as the DKW 900, the name being now conventionally based on the car s approximate engine displacement.
49.
Our convention for category namings is that cultural phenomena are sorted " by nationality " and thus named " fooish " whatever; but most straightforward factual entities or events are categorised " by country " and thus named " of foo ".
50.
Also included are synonyms, which are now discarded duplicate or incorrect namings, or in the case of the domestic dog synonyms, old taxa referring to subspecies of domestic dog which, when the dog was declared a subspecies itself, had nowhere else to go.