<span>The correct answer to the question given above is the fourth option which is the: big bang theory.
</span>Georges Henri Joseph Édouard Lemaître <span>proposed the theory of the </span>expansion of the universe and later proposed <span>the </span>Big Bang<span> theory of the origin of the </span>Universe.
Answer:
みんなから推薦されたパイレシピ(作り方)。パイ生地から手作りのものから、お手軽なパイシートを使ったものまで。手作りでパイ生地を上手に作れるようになりたい!
Explanation:
パイ パイ パイ パイ パイパイ パイ パイ パイ パイパイ パイ パイ パイ パイパイ パイ パイ パイ パイパイ パイ パイ パイ パイパイ パイ パイ パイ パイ パイ パイ パイパイ
Imfao
Indifference, impartiality, equality, and justice
all of them apply
<span>Etymology and Usage of the Term Pre-Christian use of apostolos [ajpovstolo"] in the sense of messenger is rare. More common is the verb <span>apostello, </span>referring to the sending of a fleet or an embassy. Only in Herodotus (1.21; 5.38) is it used of a personal envoy. Josephus employs it once (Antiquities17.11.1) in the classical sense of an embassy. Epictetus (Discourse3.22) speaks of the ideal Cynic teacher as one "sent by Zeus" to be a messenger of the gods and an "overseer" of human affairs.The Septuagint uses apostello [ajpostevllw] or exapostello [ejxapostevllw] some seven hundred times to translate the Hebrew salah [j;l'v] ("stretch out, " "send"). More than the act of sending, this word includes the idea of the authorization of a messenger. The noun apostolos [ajpovstolo"] is found only in 1ki 14:6, where the commissioning and empowering of the prophet are clearly in mind. Thus, the Septuagint uses the apostello [ajpostevllw] word-group to denote the authorization of an individual to fulfill a particular function, with emphasis on the one who sends, not on the one who is sent.
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