In the end, No. 8282 becomes a progenitor of hope, rather than a procreator of life.
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Anonymity was built into the Internet's design from the days of its progenitor (Arpanet) in the 1960s.
By the mid-1990s, Andersen Consulting had proved so successful that it had grown larger than its progenitor.
"The goal is to intervene with these progenitor cells, stabilize the eye and prevent things from getting worse, " said Friedlander.
Hounded by bankers and bondholders, Iridium was pushed by its progenitor Motorola and other backers into a Chapter 11 restructuring last month.
In Search of Excellence by Robert Waterman and Tom Peters was arguably the progenitor of business literature as a modern popular genre.
If we accept Macedon to be the progenitor of his tribe, where is the connection for the rest of the Macedonian tribes?
Indeed, in many ways, Kim the younger was the progenitor of this theory, which wedded Confucian provisions on dynasty with Marxist conjecture.
This group, which forms the largest and best organized opposition movement to the Mubarak regime is the progenitor of Hamas and al Qaida.
Created in 1999, Neopets was the progenitor of what would later become an extremely popular game genre: the multi-player browser-based pet simulation game.
He said further research was needed to determine whether there was a definite cause and effect relationship between a decrease in endothelial progenitor cells and cardiovascular disease.
While researching the work of Charles Addams, the famed New Yorker cartoonist and progenitor of the eponymous, macabre family, I toted around a compendium of his work.
His next stop was the dimetrodon, the progenitor of Mammalia.
Unmistakable in all of this was the central role played by the Federal Security Service (FSB) as a full-fledged political police worthy of its KGB progenitor of the totalitarian past.
Long gone are the days of the Great Exhibition in London of 1851, the progenitor of all expos, when the point was to show off manufactured goods (and British industrial strength).
The United States government, through its public funding of DARPA, was responsible for the creation of the Internet and our nation reaped untold wealth as the progenitor of the information revolution.
There is an air of concentration, of quiet, mastered pleasure, and in some sense, these attributes mirror the astonishing ascendency of Japanese whisky itself, which now regularly surpasses its Scottish progenitor in international whisky awards.
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As a scientist and progenitor of a website called Data-Based Medicine, he begins by citing three studies that have shown an effect, albeit a weak one, for cardiac patients who were prayed for versus those who were not.
Only a small handful of build options are available, keeping Bad Piggies just as speedy of a game -- to pick up and play while commuting or while waiting at the dentist's office -- as its wildly successful progenitor.
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Mr Brown vigorously rejects one criticism that, these days, is sometimes aimed at New Labour, the pro-market social-democratic force of which, along with Tony Blair, his predecessor as prime minister, and Lord Mandelson, now the business secretary, he was a progenitor: that it was a fair-weather creed.
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