- published: 19 Mar 2021
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In the Christian liturgical calendar, there are several different Feasts of the Cross, all of which commemorate the cross used in the crucifixion of Jesus. While Good Friday is dedicated to the Passion of Christ and the Crucifixion, these days celebrate the cross itself, as the instrument of salvation.
This feast is called in Greek Ὕψωσις τοῦ Τιμίου καὶ Ζωοποιοῦ Σταυροῦ ("Raising Aloft of the Honored and Life-Giving Cross"), in Russian Воздвижение Креста Господня' and in Latin Exaltatio Sanctae Crucis. In English, it is called The Exaltation of the Holy Cross in the official translation of the Roman Missal, while the 1973 translation called it The Triumph of the Cross. In some parts of the Anglican Communion the feast is called Holy Cross Day, a name also used by Lutherans. The celebration is also sometimes called Feast of the Glorious Cross.
According to legends that spread widely, the True Cross was discovered in 326 by Saint Helena, the mother of the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great, during a pilgrimage she made to Jerusalem. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was then built at the site of the discovery, by order of Helena and Constantine. The church was dedicated nine years later, with a portion of the cross placed inside it. Other legends explain that in 614, that portion of the cross was carried away from the church by the Persians, and remained missing until it was recaptured by the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius in 628. Initially taken to Constantinople, the cross was returned to the church the following year.
A cross is a geometrical figure consisting of two lines or bars, intersecting each other at a 90° angle and dividing one or both of the lines in half.
Cross or to cross may also refer to:
The Cross (also known as The Cross: The Arthur Blessitt Story) is a 2009 documentary film directed by Matthew Crouch, in his directorial debut. The film chronicles Arthur Blessitt's Guinness World Record-setting journey of 38,102 miles of forty years "into every nation and major island group of the world" while carrying a twelve-foot wooden cross. At the end of 2013 he has carried the cross over 40,600 miles in 321 nations, island groups and territories as he walks on.
Twenty years earlier Crouch had made a documentary about Blessitt. Then, in the summer of 2008, Crouch and Blessitt "ran into each other" on the cusp of Blessitt's final trip to Zanzibar, an island off the coast of the continent of Africa, which gave them the idea to create a brand new documentary that would finish telling the story of Blessitt's journey.
The Cross opened on March 27, 2009 in 221 theaters, and grossed approximately $300,000. It made $741,557 total.
Most reviews of the film criticized it for not offering a balanced, unbiased insight into both Blessitt's journey or the effects of it on his life and family. As an example, Annie Young Frisbie, writing for Christianity Today, wrote:
Kristin Lavransdatter is a trilogy of historical novels written by Nobel laureate Sigrid Undset. The individual novels are Kransen (The Wreath), first published in 1920, Husfrue (The Wife), published in 1921, and Korset (The Cross), published in 1922. Kransen and Husfrue were translated from the original Norwegian as The Bridal Wreath and The Mistress of Husaby, respectively, in the first English translation by Charles Archer and J. S. Scott.
This work formed the basis of Undset receiving the 1928 Nobel Prize in Literature, which was awarded to her "principally for her powerful descriptions of Northern life during the Middle Ages". Her work is much admired for its historical and ethnological accuracy.
The cycle follows the life of Kristin Lavransdatter, a fictitious Norwegian woman living in the 14th century. Kristin grows up in Sil in Gudbrandsdalen, the daughter of a well-respected and affluent farmer. She experiences a number of conflicts in her relationships with her parents, and her husband Erlend, in medieval Norway. She finds comfort and conciliation in her Catholic faith.
Dan DeMers, CEO and Co-Founder of Cinchy, and Dave McComb, President of Semantic Arts and Best-Selling Author to break down the ambiguity of six data systems and products you’ve likely heard of but want to understand the difference
You can find the Google Drive folder with the notebooks here: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1paIso1fqasLblXgjvkzOwEns4cO81ipc
Joey Lim and Michael Yoshitaka Erlewine, presented at SICOGG 22, August 2020 Pangasinan (Austronesian; northern Philippines) has case marking and some agreement and generally free postverbal word order. However, in a particular, limited configuration where case and agreement fail to disambiguate between core arguments, their word order becomes rigid. We argue that these facts are explained by a feature-driven approach to scrambling, where scrambling probes can only target morphosyntactic features and not A'-features. This work shows that the well-known trade-off between word order rigidity and overt case/agreement is not merely a typological tendency, but can also be observed in an individual's synchronic grammar.
sc post: https://soundcloud.com/akemiyuyu/utau-mind-brand-xcross == hi curretn mood bye oh i also drew a little cover art thingy but ended up not using it for this video lmao just in case http://kemiyukishi.deviantart.com/art/mindfuck-570956142 == UST by マコロン (thanks!) Harmonies, tuning, adlib, mix, Suzu by me Subs by FreedomT1 Original by MARETU (yes im kinda maretu-obsessed rn help)
Pandelis Karayorgis Trio Pandelis Karayorgis, piano Nate McBride, bass Randy Peterson, drums December 3, 2016 Third Life Studio, Somerville, MA
Distinti disambiguates the results of the Quad Loop Experiment to show New Induction is the best fit for the phenomenon of induction Please support Ethereal Mechanics! Our Patreon Site: https://www.patreon.com/Etherealmechanics Join our Forum: https://www.etherealmechanics.info
Relational machine learning author disambiguation | Конференция: AINL FRUCT: Artificial Intelligence and Natural Language Conference 2016 | Лектор: Jose Millan, Ekaterina Bastrakova, Rodney Ledesma | Организатор: AINL FRUCT Conference Смотрите это видео на Лекториуме: https://www.lektorium.tv/lecture/29480 Подписывайтесь на канал: https://www.lektorium.tv/ZJA Следите за новостями: https://vk.com/openlektorium https://www.facebook.com/openlektorium
About the event: Senseval and SemEval datasets have come to be the de facto gold standards for much of the work in computational semantics. The events that spawned these datasets have enabled comparison of systems, fostered a large community of researchers and spawned interest in a wide variety of semantic tasks. In my talk, I will discuss the origins of these events in the evaluation of word sense disambiguation systems and I will describe a sample of the tasks that have arisen as SemEval has evolved. These `evaluation exercises' have brought many benefits to the field in terms of algorithms and data as well as new players and tasks. Nevertheless, various issues have arisen from the very inception of Senseval and need consideration when interpreting results and designing tasks. One ...
Author: Xiangnan Kong, Department of Computer Science, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Abstract: Partial label learning deals with the problem where each training example is represented by a feature vector while associated with a set of candidate labels, among which only one label is valid. To learn from such ambiguous labeling information, the key is to try to disambiguate the candidate label sets of partial label training examples. Existing disambiguation strategies work by either identifying the ground-truth label iteratively or treating each candidate label equally. Nonetheless, the disambiguation process is generally conducted by focusing on manipulating the label space, and thus ignores making full use of potentially useful information from the feature space. In this paper, a nove...
Invited Talk – Prof. D.Sc. Galia Angelova (Institute of Information and Communication Technologies): Tag Sense Disambiguation in Large Image Collections: Is It Possible?
In the Christian liturgical calendar, there are several different Feasts of the Cross, all of which commemorate the cross used in the crucifixion of Jesus. While Good Friday is dedicated to the Passion of Christ and the Crucifixion, these days celebrate the cross itself, as the instrument of salvation.
This feast is called in Greek Ὕψωσις τοῦ Τιμίου καὶ Ζωοποιοῦ Σταυροῦ ("Raising Aloft of the Honored and Life-Giving Cross"), in Russian Воздвижение Креста Господня' and in Latin Exaltatio Sanctae Crucis. In English, it is called The Exaltation of the Holy Cross in the official translation of the Roman Missal, while the 1973 translation called it The Triumph of the Cross. In some parts of the Anglican Communion the feast is called Holy Cross Day, a name also used by Lutherans. The celebration is also sometimes called Feast of the Glorious Cross.
According to legends that spread widely, the True Cross was discovered in 326 by Saint Helena, the mother of the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great, during a pilgrimage she made to Jerusalem. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was then built at the site of the discovery, by order of Helena and Constantine. The church was dedicated nine years later, with a portion of the cross placed inside it. Other legends explain that in 614, that portion of the cross was carried away from the church by the Persians, and remained missing until it was recaptured by the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius in 628. Initially taken to Constantinople, the cross was returned to the church the following year.
Choronzon with us abide!
It´s the night of the cross
All come to the congregation
Come to celebrate the sign of our lord choronzon
Come to receive the perfection of light
Tonight out spirits burn under the cross of redemption
Follow the path to the foot of the cross
Follow the path reversing and blessing
Follow the path concealed in revelation
Follow the path the one way is threefold
Erect ye the shape of infinite fire
Raise aloft the serpent within
Return and find ouranos sulphur
Erect the cross of unconscious will
We bear the mark that scatters illusions
We bear the mark that dissolves the gods
Be it multiplied and worshipped
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