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full:credits
(Results
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175
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/prebuilts/gcc/linux-x86/host/i686-linux-glibc2.7-4.6/sysroot/usr/include/linux/
coda.h
18
CREDITS
.
/prebuilts/gcc/linux-x86/host/x86_64-linux-glibc2.7-4.6/sysroot/usr/include/linux/
coda.h
18
CREDITS
.
/prebuilts/python/darwin-x86/2.7.5/lib/python2.7/idlelib/
help.txt
114
About IDLE -- Version, copyright, license,
credits
NEWS.txt
501
- Extend AboutDialog.ViewFile() to support file encodings. Make the
CREDITS
505
buttons to display Python's NEWS, License, and
Credits
, plus additional
/prebuilts/python/linux-x86/2.7.5/lib/python2.7/idlelib/
help.txt
114
About IDLE -- Version, copyright, license,
credits
NEWS.txt
501
- Extend AboutDialog.ViewFile() to support file encodings. Make the
CREDITS
505
buttons to display Python's NEWS, License, and
Credits
, plus additional
/external/kernel-headers/original/linux/
jbd.h
94
* The buffer
credits
field is used to account for journaled buffers
98
* operation completes, any buffer
credits
not used are credited back to
[
all
...]
/sdk/files/typos/
typos-es.txt
241
# or Collection appears, then as part of these
credits
and in a manner
242
# at least as prominent as the
credits
for the other contributing
typos-it.txt
241
# or Collection appears, then as part of these
credits
and in a manner
242
# at least as prominent as the
credits
for the other contributing
typos-tr.txt
241
# or Collection appears, then as part of these
credits
and in a manner
242
# at least as prominent as the
credits
for the other contributing
/external/chromium/chrome/browser/
browser_about_handler.cc
110
const char kCreditsPath[] = "
credits
";
139
const char kOSCreditsPath[] = "os-
credits
";
[
all
...]
tab_restore_uitest.cc
605
// Restore tab with special URL about:
credits
and make sure the page loads
/external/chromium_org/third_party/WebKit/PerformanceTests/Layout/
chapter-reflow-once.html
43
<p><span>The German White Paper was prepared formally for the information of the Reichstag, which was summoned to meet on Tuesday, August 4 of imperishable memory, for the purpose of voting $325,000,000 of initial war
credits
. Paris was not won in the expected six weeks, and the Reichstag has voted $7,500,000,000 of war
credits
up to this writing (September 1, 1915), with melancholy promise of still more to come. The twenty-four hours preceding the war sitting had not been eventless. Monsieur Sverbieff and the staff of the Russian Embassy were the victims of gross insults from the mob in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>, as they left their headquarters in automobiles for the railway station. Mounted police were present to "keep order," but their "vigilance" did not deter German men and youths from spitting in the faces of the Czar's representatives, belaboring them with walking-sticks and umbrellas, and offering rowdy indignities to the women of the ambassadorial party. In front of the French Embassy menacing crowds stood throughout the day and night, waiting for a chance to exhibit German patriotism at Monsieur Cambon's expense. When Señor Polê de Bernábe, the Spanish Ambassador, who was calling to arrange to take over the representation of France during the war, made his appearance, the mob mistook him for Cambon and was just prevented in the nick of time from assaulting the Spaniard. How the French Embassy finally got away from Germany, under circumstances which would have shamed a Fiji Island government, was later related for the benefit of posterity in the French</span> <em class="italics">Yellow Book</em><span>. When I read it months later, I remembered my first German teacher in Berlin, a noblewoman, once telling me, when I asked her how to say "gentleman" in German: "There is no such thing as a 'gentleman' in the German language." That was paraphrased to me by another German on a later occasion, when, discussing the ability of German science, so well demonstrated during this war, to devise a substitute for almost anything, he remarked: "The only thing we can't make is a gentleman, because we never had a proper analysis of the necessary ingredients." The Germans, in their communicative moments, always used to acknowledge that Bismarck was right when he called them "a nation of house-servants." It is impressively exemplified on their stage, which boasts the finest character actors imaginable; but when a German player essays to portray the gentleman, he is grotesque. He gropes helplessly in a strange and unexplored realm.</span></p>
chapter-reflow-thrice.html
43
<p><span>The German White Paper was prepared formally for the information of the Reichstag, which was summoned to meet on Tuesday, August 4 of imperishable memory, for the purpose of voting $325,000,000 of initial war
credits
. Paris was not won in the expected six weeks, and the Reichstag has voted $7,500,000,000 of war
credits
up to this writing (September 1, 1915), with melancholy promise of still more to come. The twenty-four hours preceding the war sitting had not been eventless. Monsieur Sverbieff and the staff of the Russian Embassy were the victims of gross insults from the mob in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>, as they left their headquarters in automobiles for the railway station. Mounted police were present to "keep order," but their "vigilance" did not deter German men and youths from spitting in the faces of the Czar's representatives, belaboring them with walking-sticks and umbrellas, and offering rowdy indignities to the women of the ambassadorial party. In front of the French Embassy menacing crowds stood throughout the day and night, waiting for a chance to exhibit German patriotism at Monsieur Cambon's expense. When Señor Polê de Bernábe, the Spanish Ambassador, who was calling to arrange to take over the representation of France during the war, made his appearance, the mob mistook him for Cambon and was just prevented in the nick of time from assaulting the Spaniard. How the French Embassy finally got away from Germany, under circumstances which would have shamed a Fiji Island government, was later related for the benefit of posterity in the French</span> <em class="italics">Yellow Book</em><span>. When I read it months later, I remembered my first German teacher in Berlin, a noblewoman, once telling me, when I asked her how to say "gentleman" in German: "There is no such thing as a 'gentleman' in the German language." That was paraphrased to me by another German on a later occasion, when, discussing the ability of German science, so well demonstrated during this war, to devise a substitute for almost anything, he remarked: "The only thing we can't make is a gentleman, because we never had a proper analysis of the necessary ingredients." The Germans, in their communicative moments, always used to acknowledge that Bismarck was right when he called them "a nation of house-servants." It is impressively exemplified on their stage, which boasts the finest character actors imaginable; but when a German player essays to portray the gentleman, he is grotesque. He gropes helplessly in a strange and unexplored realm.</span></p>
chapter-reflow-twice.html
43
<p><span>The German White Paper was prepared formally for the information of the Reichstag, which was summoned to meet on Tuesday, August 4 of imperishable memory, for the purpose of voting $325,000,000 of initial war
credits
. Paris was not won in the expected six weeks, and the Reichstag has voted $7,500,000,000 of war
credits
up to this writing (September 1, 1915), with melancholy promise of still more to come. The twenty-four hours preceding the war sitting had not been eventless. Monsieur Sverbieff and the staff of the Russian Embassy were the victims of gross insults from the mob in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>, as they left their headquarters in automobiles for the railway station. Mounted police were present to "keep order," but their "vigilance" did not deter German men and youths from spitting in the faces of the Czar's representatives, belaboring them with walking-sticks and umbrellas, and offering rowdy indignities to the women of the ambassadorial party. In front of the French Embassy menacing crowds stood throughout the day and night, waiting for a chance to exhibit German patriotism at Monsieur Cambon's expense. When Señor Polê de Bernábe, the Spanish Ambassador, who was calling to arrange to take over the representation of France during the war, made his appearance, the mob mistook him for Cambon and was just prevented in the nick of time from assaulting the Spaniard. How the French Embassy finally got away from Germany, under circumstances which would have shamed a Fiji Island government, was later related for the benefit of posterity in the French</span> <em class="italics">Yellow Book</em><span>. When I read it months later, I remembered my first German teacher in Berlin, a noblewoman, once telling me, when I asked her how to say "gentleman" in German: "There is no such thing as a 'gentleman' in the German language." That was paraphrased to me by another German on a later occasion, when, discussing the ability of German science, so well demonstrated during this war, to devise a substitute for almost anything, he remarked: "The only thing we can't make is a gentleman, because we never had a proper analysis of the necessary ingredients." The Germans, in their communicative moments, always used to acknowledge that Bismarck was right when he called them "a nation of house-servants." It is impressively exemplified on their stage, which boasts the finest character actors imaginable; but when a German player essays to portray the gentleman, he is grotesque. He gropes helplessly in a strange and unexplored realm.</span></p>
chapter-reflow.html
43
<p><span>The German White Paper was prepared formally for the information of the Reichstag, which was summoned to meet on Tuesday, August 4 of imperishable memory, for the purpose of voting $325,000,000 of initial war
credits
. Paris was not won in the expected six weeks, and the Reichstag has voted $7,500,000,000 of war
credits
up to this writing (September 1, 1915), with melancholy promise of still more to come. The twenty-four hours preceding the war sitting had not been eventless. Monsieur Sverbieff and the staff of the Russian Embassy were the victims of gross insults from the mob in</span> <em class="italics">Unter den Linden</em><span>, as they left their headquarters in automobiles for the railway station. Mounted police were present to "keep order," but their "vigilance" did not deter German men and youths from spitting in the faces of the Czar's representatives, belaboring them with walking-sticks and umbrellas, and offering rowdy indignities to the women of the ambassadorial party. In front of the French Embassy menacing crowds stood throughout the day and night, waiting for a chance to exhibit German patriotism at Monsieur Cambon's expense. When Señor Polê de Bernábe, the Spanish Ambassador, who was calling to arrange to take over the representation of France during the war, made his appearance, the mob mistook him for Cambon and was just prevented in the nick of time from assaulting the Spaniard. How the French Embassy finally got away from Germany, under circumstances which would have shamed a Fiji Island government, was later related for the benefit of posterity in the French</span> <em class="italics">Yellow Book</em><span>. When I read it months later, I remembered my first German teacher in Berlin, a noblewoman, once telling me, when I asked her how to say "gentleman" in German: "There is no such thing as a 'gentleman' in the German language." That was paraphrased to me by another German on a later occasion, when, discussing the ability of German science, so well demonstrated during this war, to devise a substitute for almost anything, he remarked: "The only thing we can't make is a gentleman, because we never had a proper analysis of the necessary ingredients." The Germans, in their communicative moments, always used to acknowledge that Bismarck was right when he called them "a nation of house-servants." It is impressively exemplified on their stage, which boasts the finest character actors imaginable; but when a German player essays to portray the gentleman, he is grotesque. He gropes helplessly in a strange and unexplored realm.</span></p>
/external/bluetooth/bluedroid/stack/rfcomm/
rfc_port_fsm.c
399
/* Send
credits
in the frame. Pass them in the layer specific member of the hdr. */
/external/chromium_org/chrome/browser/sessions/
tab_restore_browsertest.cc
531
// Restore tab with special URL chrome://
credits
/ and make sure the page loads
/external/libnfc-nci/halimpl/bcm2079x/hal/hal/
nfc_hal_nci.c
579
/* API used wants to limit the RF data
credits
*/
/external/libnfc-nci/src/hal/include/
nci_defs.h
271
#define NCI_CORE_PARAM_SIZE_CON_CREATE_RSP 0x04 /* status, size,
credits
, conn_id */
/external/libnfc-nci/src/nfc/nfc/
nfc_main.c
[
all
...]
/external/libpcap/
INSTALL.txt
300
CREDITS
- people that have helped libpcap along
/external/strace/
strace.spec
77
%doc
CREDITS
ChangeLog ChangeLog-CVS COPYRIGHT NEWS PORTING README
/frameworks/compile/libbcc/
README.html
212
p.
credits
{
/frameworks/compile/slang/
README.html
212
p.
credits
{
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