The main focus of the 1964 paper is the continuum hypothesis, an interesting case study for Godel's philosophical view. |
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Visible light is just a small part of a continuum of electromagnetic radiation that extends from radio waves to gamma rays. |
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It exists on a continuum with her other work in its carefully constructed ruminations on love bathed in her soaring contralto. |
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The only crack we see in the idea of the continuum comes from quantum theory. |
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They are arranged along a post-creole continuum which has acrolectal at one end and basilectal at the other. |
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Japanese Gothic plots typically place humans on a spiritual continuum, a karmic wheel, rather than in a divided world of good and evil. |
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I've always written about the gay experience as part of the continuum of the world. |
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At the other end of the age continuum, Luke Ladell had much his best game to date. |
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Generally, newly erupted lava domes grow in an endogenous regime of growth that represents a thermo-mechanical continuum. |
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The Kelso sand dune habitat is composed of a continuum of inclines, that vary from flat to steep. |
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Alluvial fans and related phenomena are depositional landforms which form a continuum. |
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The first factor is expressed on the continuum from introversion, through ambiversion, to extraversion. |
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His rigidity of thought means that this level of teaching must be professionally informed, monitored, and developed on a continuum at all times. |
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If there is a continuum of gradations between human and nonhuman, there is a continuum between the type human as well. |
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Human maturation is a gradual process, a continuum rather than a sharp change. |
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The lymphatic system is a physiological continuum, yet the inguinal lymph nodes are traditionally divided into two anatomical groups. |
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This continuum is then used as a grid in discussing the status of the varieties of Makua and their potential for language development. |
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The projectile weapons are more traditional cannons, and there is a continuum of muzzle velocities with different effective ranges. |
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In 1938, logician Kurt Godel proved that the continuum hypothesis is consistent with the standard axioms of set theory. |
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Thus the degree of formality or informality, in a schematic sense, moves in a continuum. |
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This approach to correct the continuum theories is being pursued elsewhere, but no explicit tests of its performance have been published. |
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Depending on the values of these three factors, a state is located somewhere on the continuum ranging from anarchy to polyarchy to hierarchy. |
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A full hierarchical perspective suggests a continuum of variation rather than a countable number of objects. |
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Consistent with continuum PB theory, the membrane is represented approximately as a semi-infinite planar low-dielectric slab. |
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Hermione mischievously disrupts the time-space continuum with a time machine which allows her to spy on herself from afar. |
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In set theory he made important contributions to the axiom of choice and to the continuum hypothesis. |
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There is a great deal of debate as to whether or not stimuli that are part of a metathetic continuum can be explained by the Power Law. |
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In a well-known textbook on the subject we find a continuum defined as a compact connected subset of a topological space. |
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A poem generally starts along a continuum that proceeds from syllable to word to phrase to line to stanza. |
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If, on the other hand, if we decide to not include the continuum hypothesis, then the situation is undetermined. |
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When a group limits its appeal to either extreme of the continuum, it is confined to a small portion of the market. |
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The results are consistent with the predictions of continuum elasticity theory for the strain of a point source subject to an applied force. |
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It follows that a continuum is neither a unity nor an aggregation of unities. |
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Two different continuum electrostatic models are formulated to describe the ion solvation inside the nanotube. |
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In taut, unrhymed triplets Pavlic demonstrates his deep appreciation for and understanding of the Black music continuum. |
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Gendered conceptions of parental belonging and place identity represent two extremes on the continuum of possible identifications. |
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Instead, new research finds that sexual orientations exist along a continuum, like colors in the spectrum of a rainbow. |
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The problem is presented as a continuum from normative forms of behavior to extreme and serious attacks. |
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All his work is in some way connected with the continuum of history and an exploration of Englishness. |
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But gender identity should be seen as a continuum, just like sexual orientation. |
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Of course, some films do try, trading on the idea of cryogenics or time travel to flash freeze their stars along the space-time continuum. |
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Needless to say, the distinctions form a continuum, rather than discrete categories. |
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In other words, these forms may correspond to different points on a continuum. |
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Continuity is the mathematics of calculus and physics but there's never been a theory of computation that deals with this continuum. |
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At one end of the continuum we have the notion of a population of organisms evolving into something else. |
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Joseph's book is not about trying to work out a happy medium on the nature-nurture continuum by analyzing secondary sources. |
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In 1907 he introduced special types of ordinals in an attempt to prove Cantor's continuum hypothesis. |
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In that book, Eisler identifies a continuum of patterns for structuring relations. |
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A significant simplification is obtained if the water molecules are replaced by a structureless dielectric continuum. |
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Their surrealness is contained within a careful continuum in which the lyrics play off one another both rhythmically and melodically. |
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In addition, the severity of the tumor growth appeared to follow a continuum paralleling the loss of the protein. |
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Many dark-eye phenotypes are not clear cut and often appear to represent a continuum of shades and hues of reddish brown. |
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The hymenoptera comprise a continuum from solitary life to tightly-structured family groups. |
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On the contrary, he does everything to avoid giving the space-time continuum an absolute status outside human perception. |
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The symplastic path is mediated by plasmodesmata which bridge the cell walls between adjacent cells so that a cytoplasmic continuum is formed. |
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I don't think pleasure need be seen as a one-dimensional experience, a uniform continuum. |
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Both assertions are statements of artistic merit, ranking performers and composers on a continuum from the worthless to the genius. |
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Most people are not always at either extreme of the continuum of outlook on life. |
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Dresden isn't a retrospective re-creation, because it exists in a separate continuum from the events that formed it. |
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There is no such thing as a perfect business decision, as a corporate life cycle is not an instance but a continuum. |
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In reality, of course, it is a continuum and with origins that go way back into antiquity. |
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In this study, the meanings women attached to food differed depending on where they were on the recovery continuum. |
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One could consider four assumptions as existing on a continuum with extremes at either end. |
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Our work in the area of food security follows a continuum, along which are different programming stages. |
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He keeps fretting himself into a frenzy on a race continuum, sliding between dynamic and charismatic, sinister and galling. |
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To formalists, it makes no sense to talk about whether the continuum hypothesis is true or false. |
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The turn of a corner, like the flick of a film frame, can redefine the nature of a disjunctive, heterogeneous spatial continuum. |
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Somewhere along the middle of this continuum lies self help groups and organizations. |
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This work attempts to consider and observe the continuum of personality between fetal and post-natal life. |
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The solvent and the electronic polarization of the protein are treated by a dielectric continuum model. |
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Differential expression of seasonal energetic adaptations generates a continuum in the trophic status of endotherms during winter. |
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The formation of a bleach continuum suggests the presence of a polarizable proton in the ground state that changes during the photocycle. |
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And the lo-fi continuum being celebrated here did in fact turn out to be a confederacy of introverts, if not to say solipsists. |
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It is more typical, however, to encounter a sample of artifacts exhibiting morphological characteristics along a continuum that are not easily sorted by discrete variables. |
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Similarly, an eliminative structuralist account of real analysis and Euclidean geometry requires a background ontology whose cardinality is at least that of the continuum. |
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The continuum of this work runs between prose, prose poetry and poetry. |
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Mr. Clay for the claimants on the other hand argues that in building contracts there is a continuum of decision makers spreading from certifiers to the House of Lords. |
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A prettyish girl, somewhere on the plump-curvy continuum, she dyed her hair a too-brash blonde, and years of peroxide abuse had reduced it to a frizzy, frazzled mess. |
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In place of anything resembling cheeriness he has a wickedly dark humour, a gift for satire and an imagination powerful enough to leap the space-time continuum in his fiction. |
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It is my impression that prosodic focus without syntactic reorganization is possible at other levels of the Creole continuum not at the basilectal level. |
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Politics understood this way is a continuum along a single dimension. |
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In terms of the product continuum, they have enabled users to personalise their trainers, creating designs and patterns within a tightly bounded shoe design. |
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The defilements lead to unskillful actions, which generate karma, the infallible operation of cause and effect in the mental continuum of each individual. |
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A good axiom, he felt, should help mathematicians settle not only the continuum hypothesis but also many other questions about Cantor's hierarchy of infinite sets. |
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Here you see his representation of the blog continuum as a sparkline. |
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He studied continuum mechanics, lunar theory with Clairaut, the three body problem, elasticity, acoustics, the wave theory of light, hydraulics, and music. |
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When teaching students, I describe the processes of spermatogenesis, ovulation and fertilisation as a continuum with implantation and early pregnancy development. |
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Blues music, as he sees it, is simply part of a continuum of black pop. |
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The results agree with predictions from the free area model for monomers and dimers, and the hydrodynamic continuum model for tetramers, pentamers, and hexamers. |
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These are the two opposite extremes in a continuum of scenarios that differ with regard to the relative contributions of horizontal and vertical transmission. |
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For some, the turmoil of the age was part of a longer historical continuum, the realisation of ancient pre-Conquest Celtic and English prophecies. |
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Extending the photograph beyond the compass of the glance into a continuum, he presents more information than a single frame could be expected to contain. |
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For this purpose, we employ complementarily the techniques of molecular modeling based on a continuum solvent model and an experimental approach to probe for the HA stability. |
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These classifications place the rocks into pigeonholes which, although useful, tend to conceal the fact that there is a continuum of rock compositions. |
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Figure 4 provides a framework for these broad categories of policy instruments, arranged along a continuum in terms of their degree of compulsoriness. |
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Symbolic, spiritual, human and bacterial life are placed in a continuum. |
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By extending our continuum beyond the ultimates of audacity and nugacity, we shall find ourselves confronted with propositions which are not only unremarkable but devoid of interest whatsoever. |
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Sukuma and Nyamwezi, spoken in western Tanzania, form a dialect continuum. |
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Each is a biological continuum with symptomatic disease at one extreme. |
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In our view, these can usefully be measured along a continuum, from red to green light positions, with some bias today towards the middle ground of amber. |
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Transcending the nugacity end of the continuum, we would enter into the area of necessarily, analytically, logically, notationally, demonstratively, absolutely-true propositions or tautologies. |
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Its manifestations will be categorized by two numerical scales of severity that aim to locate each individual on the continuum. |
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Let's create a new acute care continuum, with the emergency physician leading the charge. |
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This bullying continuum illustrates the progressive escalation from harmless banter to bullying and criminal behaviours. |
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To the man who stands belongingly in this continuum, no event that may be predicated of him is inappropriate. |
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The continuum is dynamic through the action of modulating feedbacks and feedforwards. |
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The fly personae in these films influenced a wave of black contemporary youth who resurrected flyness and its continuum in hip-hop culture. |
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In most regions, the speakers use a continuum from more dialectal varieties to more standard varieties according to circumstances. |
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The German dialect continuum is traditionally divided most broadly into High German and Low German, also called Low Saxon. |
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However, all German dialects belong to the dialect continuum of High German and Low Saxon. |
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The Roman presence in Scotland was little more than a series of brief interludes within a longer continuum of indigenous development. |
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Broad Scots is at one end of a bipolar linguistic continuum, with Scottish Standard English at the other. |
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The Brethren movement today consists of around a thousand assemblies in the United Kingdom, forming a very diverse continuum. |
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Most modern business theorists describe a continuum with pure service on one terminal point and pure commodity good on the other. |
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Old West and East Norse formed a dialect continuum, with no clear geographical boundary between them. |
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In a dialect continuum, isoglosses for different features are typically spread out, reflecting the gradual transition between varieties. |
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The choice of standard is often determined by a political boundary, which may cut across a dialect continuum. |
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The various local dialects then tend to be levelled towards their respective standard varieties, disrupting the previous dialect continuum. |
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The Romance languages of Italy are a less arguable example of a dialect continuum. |
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In the south, the continuum starts in northern Afghanistan, northward to the Chuvashia. |
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The Turkic continuum makes internal genetic classification of the languages problematic. |
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They are not considered to be Hindi despite being part of the same dialect continuum. |
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The Breton language has several dialects which have no precise limits but rather form a continuum. |
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Multilingualism in computing can be considered part of a continuum between internationalization and localization. |
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On one end of a sort of linguistic continuum, one may define multilingualism as complete competence and mastery in another language. |
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The fact that the borders of normality are on a statistical continuum, and always moveable, accounts for the historical dynamic of normalism. |
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There are no clear boundaries between the dialects because they form a dialect continuum, varying only slightly from one village to the next. |
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Goidelic languages historically formed a dialect continuum stretching from Ireland through the Isle of Man to Scotland. |
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The whistles and pulsed calls that pilot whales make seem not to fall into distinct types, but rather can be arranged on a continuum. |
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Several processes may combine to form and rework a single moraine, and most moraines record a continuum of processes. |
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Until the 16th century, Danish was a continuum of dialects spoken from Schleswig to Scania with no standard variety or spelling conventions. |
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In most cases the heavy influence of the standard language has broken the dialect continuum. |
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Along with Swedish and Danish, Norwegian forms a dialect continuum of more or less mutually intelligible local and regional variants. |
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These fossils serve as a reminder that taxonomic divisions are human constructs that have been imposed in hindsight on a continuum of variation. |
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The nature of the muscle is so stiff, it is almost as hard as bone to touch, as if it were the continuum of the skull. |
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At the same time East Flemish forms a continuum with both Brabantic and West Flemish. |
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Globalization can be located on a continuum with the local, national and regional. |
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Different national standards derived from a dialect continuum may be regarded as different languages, even if they are mutually intelligible. |
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The broad, general and cultivated accents form a continuum that reflects minute variations in the Australian accent. |
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Many of the changes that occurred were areal, and took time to propagate throughout a dialect continuum that was already diversifying. |
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Scottish Standard English is at one end of a bipolar linguistic continuum, with focused broad Scots at the other. |
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The span of a speaker's command of the continuum generally corresponds to social context. |
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Cuestas, homoclinal ridges, and hogbacks comprise a sequence of landforms that form a gradational continuum. |
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No less bold or all-encompassing is this new book, in which Diamond considers the opposite end of the continuum, civilizations that collapsed. |
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You have to slip through an earthquake in the time continuum to enter a series of 3D worlds and blast away oncoming armies. |
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Sestanovich, describes foreign policy and diplomacy in a continuum cycling between periods of maximalism and retrenchment. |
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He feels he is part of a community and sees his slipware in a historical continuum. |
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This effort is a comprehensive, multifaceted approach that navigates the entire criminal-justice continuum,'' Police Chief William Bratton said. |
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Because chondrosarcoma lies on a continuum between benign chondroma and malignant sarcoma, making a histologic diagnosis can be difficult. |
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Both of them he sees on a continuum of subliterary genres that can also include the tales of robbery or magic in the Met. |
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There is a continuum between parasitic and symbiotic where a symbiont is able to use the host without hurting it at all and gives back. |
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The post-creole continuum and decreolization are well-established and well-documented phenomena in creole linguistics. |
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If the deployment of computers in K-12 is viewed on a continuum, the room with 30 desktop computers is the starting point. |
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Plasmodesmata are unique to plants and form an intercellular continuum for the transport of solutes, signals, and ribonucleoprotein complexes. |
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This longitudinal electromagnetic energy flux is massless as it is due to distortion, not dilatation, of the spacetime continuum. |
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Presbycusis phenotypes form a heterogeneous continuum when ordered by degree and configuration of hearing loss. |
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In the Eulerian formulation, the movement of the continuum is specified as a function of the spatial coordinate and time. |
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Variation along the shybold continuum in extremophile fishes. |
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In contrast, like its perspective on race and ethnicity, social work's cultural discourse on class ran a continuum from celebrating diversity to problematizing it. |
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The proposed HSL project will include a continuum of senior services designed to allow seniors to age in place and receive appropriate supports to meet their needs. |
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Regional variation in spoken Bengali constitutes a dialect continuum. |
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An individual's functioning can be conceptualized on a continuum, with one end being more adaptive and healthy and the other end being more maladaptive and less healthy. |
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By analogy with CREOLE studies, John Honey posited a LECT continuum, ranging from the basilect to the acrolect, with many people reaching a paralect stage. |
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Scottish Standard English, a variety of English as spoken in Scotland, is at one end of a bipolar linguistic continuum, with broad Scots at the other. |
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The period of the FE eigenmode, corresponding to the highest eigenfrequency, is the shortest one, but still finite, while that of the continuum model tends to zero. |
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The highest eigenfrequency of the FE model is related to dimensions of the smallest element appearing in the mesh while that of the continuum model tends to infinity. |
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Finally, since many of the lines appear to depolarize the continuum polarization, some means of accounting for this effect must be brought forward. |
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I also trust ACOEM to grasp the need to root out undercare as much as overcare, and to address work-injury recovery as a continuum of care, not just isolated events. |
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Occupying the middle of the continuum, ostrichism can occur under the guise of several other approaches.This stance ought not to be equated with ostrichism. |
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Across the healthcare continuum, a range of tools and practices help to identify and stratify high-risk, high-cost patients and determine appropriate interventions. |
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I view this continuum as a Mobius strip, with no defined beginning or end. |
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The goal is live up to one's self-view however that appears across the moral continuum from being very uncaring and unjust to very caring and very just, the researchers said. |
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In classical physics, energy flows in a continuum, but in quantum physics it comes in chunks or quanta, which can only be described mathematically. |
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Only if all of these mechanisms fail will there be hypothyroidism, the first adverse effect in the continuum of effects resulting from perchlorate ingestion. |
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Like every parliamentary form of government, there is no real separation between Legislature and Executive, rather a continuum between them due to the confidence link. |
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When a Creole language exists alongside its lexifier language, as is the case in Belize, a continuum forms between the Creole and the lexifier language. |
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A continuum of possibilities could possibly be defined between precisely enunciated and staccato styles of speech based on variations in pragmatics or timing. |
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Broad Hindi is a large dialect continuum defined as a unit culturally. |
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The varieties of English spoken across Great Britain form a dialect continuum, and there is no universally agreed definition of which varieties are Northern. |
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They are part of a continuum, reflecting variations in accent. |
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A continuum of complex morphology of language may be adopted. |
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The gods of polytheism are in many cases the highest order of a continuum of supernatural beings or spirits, which may include ancestors, demons, wights and others. |
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It exists in differing degrees among many related or geographically proximate languages of the world, often in the context of a dialect continuum. |
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Low German is a part of the continental West Germanic dialect continuum. |
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Dutch Low Saxon used to be at one end of the Low German dialect continuum. |
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Scandinavian languages are often considered a dialect continuum, where there are no sharp dividing lines between the different vernacular languages. |
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This continuum may also include Norwegian and some Danish dialects. |
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The eastern Romance continuum is dominated by Romanian in many respects. |
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In the Yugoslav republic of Macedonia, a standard was developed from local varieties within a continuum with Serbia to the north and Bulgaria to the east. |
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Standard varieties may be developed and codified at one or more locations in a continuum, a process known as ausbau, until they have independent cultural status, or autonomy. |
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These styles shade into each other, forming a stylistic continuum. |
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The basic idea of Continuum is that activating the body's fluid system boosts our creativity, flexibility, and vitality. |
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Unlike the Anglican realignment movement, the churches of the Anglican Continuum do not seek to be accepted into the Anglican Communion. |
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Stalking Horse by Continuum is a new a commissioned by the and Portland Green Cu Projects. |
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Participation rates rise sharply with the county's level of ruralness as measured by the Department of Agriculture's 1995 Rural-Urban Continuum Codes classification scheme. |
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