Furthermore, the use of both modes proved useful to help to resolve ambiguity problems in the fitting. |
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It is sure to retain its ambiguity, its complexity, and its centrality in human life. |
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Uncertainty and ambiguity are as present in science as they are in most things. |
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In my opinion, since there is no ambiguity or uncertainty, the application of this rule does not arise. |
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The same person will tolerate ambiguity in one situation but not in another. |
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The potential for ambiguity aside, this was an offer that couldn't be refused. |
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Nowhere was this ambiguity more apparent than concerning the question of sovereignty. |
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It is true that there is some ambiguity in the clauses in question, as submitted by Mr. Jones. |
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Faced with the problem of holding the movement together, the republican leadership resorted to a policy of tactical ambiguity. |
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That is a difficult question, and its difficulty results from a deep ambiguity in our legal system. |
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In terms of lexical category ambiguity, languages do differ in the extent to which their word-forms are specialized for syntactic function. |
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Grandiosity, rigidity, and intolerance of ambiguity, and a tendency to obsess about things are among the traits associated with the dry drunk. |
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I am flexible and open in my thinking and in my approach to different situations and I am comfortable with ambiguity. |
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Due to the archaistic nature of the source material there remains some ambiguity. |
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It means rescuing Britain from mid-Atlantic ambiguity and locating it within the European value system of public welfare and social solidarity. |
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But where there is any element of ambiguity the inquiry must look at all relevant facts and circumstances in the round. |
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The governor also said laws are under review to preclude ambiguity and to close loopholes allowing suspects to evade arrest. |
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In many families naming tarantism was taboo, reflecting this ambiguity between condemnation and belief. |
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She finally accepted his ambiguity as normal teen behaviour and she moved on. |
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The claim is that the ambiguity can be resolved entirely in terms of syntactic scope. |
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He means that death repeals the whole implied adventure of being missing, and a certain tantalising ambiguity enters the picture. |
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The argument assumes that interpretation is a purely linguistic or semantic process until an ambiguity is revealed. |
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By now you'll have the feeling that within the trade there's murkiness, possibly deliberate ambiguity, and, many would claim, even shiftiness. |
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Learned scholars write massive treatises on contract changes, a testament to this general sense of ambiguity. |
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This precision and comprehensiveness also serves to dispel ambiguity and miscommunication in camp. |
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However, due to the ambiguity in the phylogenetic analyses, this divergence is shown as an unresolved trichotomy. |
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He pays me a sidewise glance, incredulous brows knitting an ambiguity, finding it almost unsporting to fold and venture a smile of concession. |
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Various elementary operations are studied to find whether they preserve unambiguity and inherent ambiguity of languages. |
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Perhaps it was part of a more general interest in undecidability, and ambiguity. |
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This uncertainty and ambiguity attracts people and offers multitudinous aesthetic associations. |
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Poetry in particular moves at a slant or tangent, taking advantage of the ambiguity of words, the various meanings to be found in them. |
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Traditionally, ambiguity in unfolding news requires flexibility to different aspects of the same story. |
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This ambiguity, and the unhealed wounds of slavery, are the real subject of Cassin's novel. |
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The 'story', if it can be called that, opens in mystery and proceeds through ambiguity, equivocation, and vagueness. |
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Creative ambiguity, economy with the truth, or is it just a case of different strokes for different folks? |
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Coherence, stability, and resistance to inconsistency and ambiguity are desirable ontological model characteristics. |
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The existing rules are so opaque it is difficult to avoid the impression they were drawn up in a spirit of opportunist ambiguity. |
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The original inspiration for this deluxe 21st-century version of the hemiola is the 19th-century's master of rhythmic ambiguity, Brahms. |
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There's little ambiguity about the adroitness of the guitarists' noise making, and their deft improvising takes the album in sundry directions. |
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With the chilliness of the air, the ambiguity of the wire cages and the moving shadows, something interesting is born inside the work. |
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But, beyond that, homonymy seems to have been, even for Plato, no more than a source of ambiguity for wordplay. |
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In its seeming ambiguity yet divine reality it remains free of the influence of humankind and our lusts. |
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As is so often the case, it is the use of the passive voice in the paragraph that leads you into ambiguity and trouble. |
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This oversimplification feels sloppy, and even if it does provide greater emotional closure, it reduces the ambiguity of the film's final shot. |
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Video teleconferencing obviates the need to collocate staffs and reduces ambiguity in commanders' intentions. |
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For example, Davis treats various kinds of ambiguity that are philologically quite different on more or less the same plane. |
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While Pinter the playwright may extol existential ambiguity and incertitude, Pinter the activist and dissenter has no such anxiety. |
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Carlson, who embraces the postmodern emphasis on incompletion and ambiguity, asks what it would mean to name God from a Heideggerian perspective. |
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On this account, it is the polysemy of the indefinite article that gives rise to the ambiguity of the indefinite noun phrase. |
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A further ambiguity lies in our inability to determine if this availability is merely visual, or if it involves possession in a physical sense. |
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His interest in gray is metaphysical as well as visual, for he cultivates ambiguity, indirection, and impermanence. |
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Altogether, the president's phrase and the media's speculation played out as a kind of orchestrated duet pivoting on ambiguity. |
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They lie in a grey area between conductors and insulators whose boundaries are somewhat unclear, and it is this ambiguity itself that is useful. |
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Where an ambiguity in an insurance policy is found, we will construe it in favour of the insured. |
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Social constructionism deals with ambiguity, contradiction, and multiple meanings. |
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This has coincided with an increasing methodological interest in contestation, ambiguity and uncertainty. |
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The scriptural principle inevitably had to negotiate an array of competing interests such as the linguistic and contextual ambiguity of the text. |
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Clearly, this is no accident of intimism, but the artist at play with ambiguity and abstraction. |
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Researchers have found that Conservatives typically are dogmatic, intolerant of ambiguity with beliefs rooted in fear and aggression. |
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All folk poetry has an irresoluble ambiguity based in its use of signed objects, plants, and animals. |
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Thankfully, they don't find resolution, and the film's touching final ambiguity, regarding the irretrievability of the past, is truly haunting. |
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While ambiguity is probably the most important feature of Nostradamus's prophecies, another notable feature is their dark, foreboding quality. |
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This is why communities of practice adopt formal vocabularies, so that ambiguity can be reduced and clarity improved. |
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And the story's darkness and moral ambiguity increase the film's power and appeal. |
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Such difficulty as the case presented turned upon the characterisation of the facts rather than upon any ambiguity in the statute. |
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All test questions are pretested and reviewed for ambiguity and bias by trained testing professionals. |
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Modern decadence and moral ambiguity are brought to the fore, with peerless acting by Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt. |
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It should be clear by now that the ambiguity of form and complexity of content in Seven Pillars are both foreshadowed in its dedicatory poem. |
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At least in recent years, statesmen have been reluctant to define national interests with anything other than Delphic ambiguity. |
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Containing yet transcending deception, the art of ambiguity in Chinese strategic tradition is the ultimate form of psychological warfare. |
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It is not an absolute clarity or an absolute absence of any possible ambiguity which is desiderated. |
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It's a nifty device too, because it reminds you of the show's discomfiting ambiguity. |
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These characters had an interesting ambiguity, somewhere between the believable and the discreditable. |
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No question has been raised as to any equivocation, ambiguity or uncertainty in the interpretation of that will. |
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This seemed to be an easy-to-resolve ambiguity, rather than anything that was going to exculpate anybody. |
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One of our goals is to explore this issue quantitatively in order to resolve this ambiguity. |
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The accent fallacy is a fallacy of ambiguity due to the different ways a word is emphasized or accented. |
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Sometimes, paradoxically, you can even use ambiguity to make the story more understandable or accessible. |
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It is a movie that struggles for significance as it fashions actuality out of ambiguity. |
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He uses the ambiguity of passageways and transitional spaces to construct an esthetic of anticipation. |
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It is both the recognizability of his subjects and their potential ambiguity that gives his work depth. |
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The recumbent figure, whose sexual ambiguity is iconographically unique, is one of several figural types conveying the myth of Hermaphroditus. |
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If there is ambiguity or unclarity with relative which, the same ambiguity or unclarity exists with relative who. |
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In any case, there should be no chance of ambiguity, or any other sort of unclarity, so long as the relative clause is properly punctuated. |
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Yet they maintain just enough ambiguity so that the audience is left still puzzling over the piece afterwards. |
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So any question of ambiguity is really dealt with in accordance with those ordinary principles. |
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The result of giving the words their ordinary meaning is not absurd or unreasonable, nor is there ambiguity or obscurity. |
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I was very interested in seeing that the ambiguity of the novel was replicated in the movie. |
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And that question is the catalyst for all the ambiguity throughout the film. |
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This moral ambiguity is present throughout The Hunger Games, in a myriad of guises. |
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Lucente's work indulges passive meaninglessness and unfocused ambiguity. |
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Note that I'm not denying that languages can and do differ in their relative amounts of homophony, word-sense ambiguity and lexical category ambiguity. |
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This 2-0 was a clear-cut win, a sharp slice through a loaf, no ambiguity, no crumbs. |
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The right-left ambiguity ratio, measured using 5-m trihedrals on both sides of the flight track, is about 10 dB for a single antenna element on receive. |
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Advancing age has occasionally brought resolution, more often just a little understanding, to many of these riddles, but not necessarily to the resilient ambiguity of history. |
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It has also reminded me vividly of my schooldays, when the intellectual horizon of Chilean adolescents had more than a sliver reserved for paradox, mystery and ambiguity. |
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We talk about sexual openness and sexual ambiguity, yet the current psychological ideal of phallic masculinity is as rigid and coercive as it ever was. |
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It's an epic rife with gender ambiguity and masked identities. |
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The initial ambiguity solution will be lost and must be redetermined. |
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That is to say, there are referential and quantificational uses of indefinite descriptions and these are a reflex of a genuine semantical ambiguity. |
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Is it a puzzle to be solved, or is the ambiguity meant to stand, irresolvable? |
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Although he is not generally mealy-mouthed about such things, Trollope deliberately, it seems, casts a pall of racial and national ambiguity around Melmotte. |
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Fortunately, for the advocates of both schools of thought, the brief text contains sufficient ambiguity to support a colorable claim for either position. |
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Their authority is fundamentally illegitimate to begin with, meaning defiance carries no moral ambiguity, even if the physical consequences for the defier are deadly. |
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This impact derives from its subtlety, ambiguity and non-literal nature. |
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And clever software guys will write beaut ambiguity resolution algorithms that can choose the best multifrequency combinations from the signal zoo out there. |
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In fact there is an ambiguity to several of these benefactions. |
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Tidal waves of scholarship have broken over Plymouth Rock, leaving behind little but ambiguity. |
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Yet even this ascription of purity was streaked with ambiguity. |
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An art object that draws the viewer's attention to these realities, and leaves no room for ambiguity in their identification, can be an assaultive and disturbing experience. |
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So, fair enough, a little diplomatic ambiguity can help you get around such problems. |
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There is little room for ambiguity and certainly no cathartic moments. |
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Perhaps my ambiguity is a sign of undigested thought, but I don't deny it. |
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No one wants to go through life in a state of moral and existential ambiguity. |
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But diplomatic ambiguity that translates into equivocation and weakness is not helpful at all. |
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Introduced in July 1999, the software ignores misspellings, interprets incorrect phraseology or unclear terminology, accepts ambiguity and expects error. |
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The ambiguity revolving around the event made it a poor candidate for a final showdown. |
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It is Fevvers' ambiguity which allows her to elude the appropriative gestures of spectators and would be captors. |
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Since there are potentially many different ways to carry out this analytic continuation process, there are questions of ambiguity and redundancy. |
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What I like is a certain ambiguity in a story, but I've come to understand over the years that that drives most people absolutely batcrap! |
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It is with this ambiguity in mind that one can begin a serious deconstructive, or doublehanded, reading of Levinas's work. |
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In such cases, a court must analyze the various available sources, and reach a resolution of the ambiguity. |
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Once the ambiguity is resolved, that resolution has binding effect as described in the rest of this article. |
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He focused on the role of the fairies, who have a mysterious aura of evanescence and ambiguity. |
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Edmund Spenser was born in East Smithfield, London, around the year 1552, though there is some ambiguity as to the exact date of his birth. |
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Resilience includes having an internal locus of control, persistence, tolerance for ambiguity, and resourcefulness. |
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The flowering of Baroque culture shows the ambiguity of this historical period. |
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Nevertheless, there was considerable ambiguity surrounding the role of women in the church. |
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The satellite carrier total phase can be measured with ambiguity as to the number of cycles. |
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Thus the triple difference result eliminates practically all clock bias errors and the integer ambiguity. |
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The full range of ambiguity of structure may occur, especially if mosaicism is present. |
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Some authors deconstruct the distinction between ethnic nationalism and civic nationalism because of the ambiguity of the concepts. |
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A fixed or prototypical word order is one out of many ways to ease the processing of sentence semantics and reducing ambiguity. |
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The functional motivation for the implementation of DSM and DOM is to avoid ambiguity as to what is subject and object in transitive clauses. |
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So, it has been proposed that the accusative system arose from a functional pressure to avoid ambiguity and make communication a simpler process. |
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This rule change eliminates the ambiguity that existed with the EBR exemption on teleselling with this method. |
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His speech was made with such great ambiguity that neither supporter nor opponent could be certain of his true position. |
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Central to such psychic self-preservation is a strategy of ambiguity, dissemblance, and porosity. |
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The reason for rabbinic ambiguity toward the Maccabees is rooted in the post-Hanukkah saga of the Hasmoneans. |
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This issue of ambiguity of terminology has been well noted in information retrieval. |
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However, there is ambiguity in diagnosing an infarction before the influx of inflammatory cells. |
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This fact occasionally creates some ambiguity or prompts some usage discussion. |
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Mimetic isomorphic mechanisms include the tendency for companies to model other organizations when faced with an environment of ambiguity and uncertainty. |
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Because the details of the violent row between him and Celine Cawley were shrouded in ambiguity, he may smugly feel he has won the day and beaten the system. |
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These problems and paradoxes arise in both natural language statements and statements in syllogism form because of ambiguity, in particular ambiguity with respect to All. |
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The patent claims a device that spectroscopically measures tissue at a high resolution while avoiding cross talk, or ambiguity, between measured locations. |
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The ambiguity does not exist in languages that employ echo answers. |
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Note also that the inflectional endings mean it is not necessary to include the subject pronoun, except for emphasis, or to avoid ambiguity in complex sentences. |
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This approach to doctrine, as it clashes with an Erasmian acceptance of relative ambiguity, is a critical influence on Protestant attitudes to speculative interpretation. |
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Gamboni's thesis is that 'Gauguin prioritizes ambiguity or bistability. |
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It was more likely a result of ambiguity between hiem and him etc. |
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Being subjected to this mantra once more re-evokes the perseveration we routinely suffer in the moral ambiguity characterising our supposedly post-politics milieu. |
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Other critics, like William Empson, view it as a more ambiguous work, with Milton's complex characterization of Satan playing a large part in that perceived ambiguity. |
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It is the ambiguity of language only which can make this proposition appear either doubtful or paradoxical. When properly explained and understood, it is almost self-evident. |
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Cardinal Ratzinger noted that ambiguity is the mark of the demonic. |
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This eliminates the ambiguity associated with the integral number of wavelengths in carrier phase provided this ambiguity does not change with time. |
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This ambiguity was eliminated with the enactment of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948, which came into force in April 1949 and declared the state to be a republic. |
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The language might be fraught with word ambiguity or sentence amphiboly. |
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Strategic ambiguity is purposefully avoiding clarity of communication to contuse the reader or listener into believing one's argument has more validity than it actually has. |
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This is a constant source of ambiguity and confusion when trying to define, understand and explain Puerto Rico's political relationship with the United States. |
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Variant vocalizations are, in any case, common in early biblical interpretation, and the possibility of deliberate ambiguity is certainly worthy of further exploration. |
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