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Used Traditional Gregorian: used traditional Gregorian Reform and Aftermath. Inaccuracies n the Julian calendar led to the promulgation of alendar reform by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582. Confusion persisted, however, both between East nd West and within Western churches them-elves. Because of the importance of the Council, he Orthodox church in the East continued to set xed feasts by the Julian calendar, 13 days be-ind the used traditional Gregorian calendar, and the Greek and lost Orthodox churches did not adopt used traditional Gregorian =form until 1924. The Russian Orthodox and ame Old Calendarists, however, still celebrate xed feasts according to the Julian calendar.The revival of interest in used traditional Gregorian chant by the monks of Solesmes in the 18th century led to their devising ways of trying to put these impon¬derables into a system they could use, but its historical basis is still much controverted. Sol¬esmes scholarship, however, has made available the manuscripts needed to study used traditional Gregorian chants as they were first written down, before they be¬came influenced by the rise of polyphony and subsequent aesthetic concepts. See Also Traditional Techniques:There are various ways of creating color effects that lend interest to a bland expanse of wall. You can either work with traditional paints commercially prepared, or you can create your own effects with readily available latex or eggshell paints, tints and pigments. Traditional techniques include sponging, colorwash, rag-rolling, ragging on, dry-brushing and liming. These methods involve the use of a base coat to cover the Wall or ceiling followed by a glaze or tint applied in various different ways.Photography has redefined the nature of time and motion with continuous recording techniques, by which images are constantly registered from a continuously changing vantage point. Here traditional perspective is restated, vanishing points become straight lines, and the photograph is not made from any discrete place or at any specific time.
On The Other Hand See Traditional Spok-n:French loan words such as cancheler, chan-'cellor, and cumpanie, company, were present al¬ready in Old English. The Normans who con¬quered England were descendants of Norsemen who had settled in northwestern France and had respect for "correctness," and the critics placed jreat emphasis on it. However, the differences between written and spoken English were con¬siderable. It remained for the dictionary makers }f the 18th century and the schoolmasters of the 19th century to attempt to close that gap, and to mpose what are known as "spelling pronuncia-ions" in place of the language's traditional spok-n forms.This step had two pur¬poses. In the first place, it would be possible for two thirds of the country's children, those from the Mandarin-speaking provinces, to read and write in a close approximation to their moth¬er tongue rather than in an additional literary idiom. Secondly, the remaining one third would learn the standard dialect, thereby helping to unify the spoken language. While the pai-hua movement made relatively slow progress from a quantitative point of view, by the 1930's it had succeeded in establishing the prestige of the spok¬en idiom. It had been most successful in litera¬ture and science, though somewhat less so in the fields of business and government. |
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