Ordinary matter and dark matter loosely track each other in space, but not in a one-to-one ratio. |
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And yet, ciphers based on one-to-one substitutions, also known as monoalphabetic ciphers, can be easily broken by frequency analysis. |
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The majority of rotations had a one-to-one ratio of students to preceptors. |
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The one-to-one dialogue gives children the chance to practise speech, something not achieved by plonking them in front of a television set. |
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Of course one-to-one correspondences would detract from the richness of the book. |
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He volunteers two days of his time a week, counselling clients on a one-to-one basis and facilitating group psychotherapy and healing sessions. |
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It combines group therapy, one-to-one counselling and personal assignment work. |
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Chun then crochets forms that are not necessarily one-to-one equivalents of Mondrian's paintings but are very clear transcriptions of his work. |
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The shows have been packed to the proverbials, with punters lining up to get some one-to-one time with their gag gurus. |
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Anne, a dinner lady, and her husband, a painter and decorator, say Leanne needs 24-hour one-to-one care. |
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The boy is already receiving help at school but the family is trying to get him statemented so he can get one-to-one teaching. |
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Telephone networks are optimized for synchronous and one-to-one communications. |
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After all, like direct marketing, interactive advertising can be one-to-one. |
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A one-to-one ratio is ideal, according to the American Cancer Society. |
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For a Harry fans, this is like a one-to-one tussle between God and the Devil himself. |
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However, in our one-to-one yesterday, sans-manager, it soon became apparent that she was fibbing big-style. |
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This is where an independent visitor can give much-needed positive one-to-one support to reset the balance. |
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Managers annually appraise the employees reporting to them in one-to-one meetings. |
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The Namibian dollar and the Lesotho loti both circulate at a one-to-one ratio with the South African rand. |
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In any case, it would be advisable to use young children's fingerprints rather for one-to-one comparisons than for one-to-many comparisons. |
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This one-to-one approach allows the internet user to buy only the cover he really needs. |
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The display pixel electrodes are connected to source electrodes of said thin film transistors in one-to-one correspondence. |
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The Premiership is hallmarked by fast and fierce football and one-to-one marking. |
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Furthermore, I was having a one-to-one with my trainee, and he had absolutely no right to interfere in that process. |
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We noticed that in a smaller school you have more of a one-to-one with the teachers, and the school is like a community. |
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It's much more intensive than a normal pre-school and he really benefits from the one-to-one. |
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It was enough to start a career that 10 years later would have her talking one-to-one to the leader of her adopted home. |
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At a one-to-one with a panel of cricketers on Sunday, the boys shot some questions which the professionals had a hard time answering. |
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To his amazement, the two kinds of plants occurred in a one-to-one ratio. |
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On the other hand, although any map between fields is one-to-one, it is fairly difficult to write down all the maps between any given pair of fields. |
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With a lower than one-to-one ratio of presenters to participants, many potential entrepreneurs had time to seek in-depth assistance from experts in a number of fields. |
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This only works if there is a one-to-one ratio of viewers to displays. |
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Watch springs would have been one of the very few items that would have produced the necessary one-to-one million ratio between the cost of steel and the value of the output. |
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The simplest way to plot expression data is in a two-dimensional scatter plot and to calculate the correlation coefficients of all one-to-one combinations of experiments. |
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In most developed nations, the ratio is one-to-one or lower. |
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Things may change rapidly in the world of business, but a few things are timeless, such as the famous one-to-one ratio of suckers born per minute. |
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Police say in such circumstances it would be unwise to restrain the patient on a one-to-one basis and it is better to summon help. |
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Since he died gestalt therapy has continued to develop, particularly in the area of one-to-one work not carried out in groups. |
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It will let you do any linear one-to-one loop transformation, and all you have to do is be able to generate code from the answer it gives you. |
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We'd need a one-to-one ratio of professional refuters to loonies, just to keep up. |
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We always lament how big parties have killed the good old one-to-one conversation. |
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The nursery nurses and auxiliary staff spend a lot of one-to-one time with him. |
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Two algebraic varieties are said to be equivalent if there is a one-to-one correspondence between them with both the map and its inverse regular. |
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Discussions are limited in time, and have little of the to and fro that would occur in a one-to-one real-time discussion. |
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The gate bus lines are connected to gate electrodes of the thin film transistors on each row in one-to-one correspondence. |
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Apart from Cambridge, no other universities offer undergraduates one-to-one tutorials. |
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I'm now teaching part-time at Kingston University, one-to-one tutorials with dyslexic students. |
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The very fact of depicting at one-to-one carries special representational weight. |
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There is a one-to-one relationship between days with large cash shortages and his workdays. |
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The school nurse could have a routine drop-in time in the school where there was an option of a one-to-one for the pupils to talk about issues that are bothering them. |
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If researchers will have significant unsupervised one-to-one access to children, the selected candidate's police record should be checked. |
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Instead of having to go through medical examinations and being seen by a confusing variety of different people, they get their own one-to-one nurse. |
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He doesn't seem to mind that to shout abusively at someone on a one-to-one basis, for no other reason than they disagree with what he's saying, is bad manners. |
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Perhaps it would not be without interest for the Commission either to hear a personal account of the situation on a one-to-one basis. |
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Such identification enhances NSK's one-to-one relationships with users by, for example, automatically populating forms with the user's data. |
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The days when book orders had a one-to-one ratio are gone, but the company is still confident it can achieve a reasonable lead time of between six to 12 weeks. |
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Twelve mentors worked together with their mentees on a one-to-one basis toward predefined goals. |
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Google Mail, or Gmail, had been a private, one-to-one web-based e-mail service, but was abruptly melded with a new social networking service. |
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There is a one-to-one correspondence between vapour pressure and dew point. |
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Its members met prisoners either in their living quarters or on a one-to-one basis. |
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A tailor-made agenda of political, economic and sectoral reforms is established on a one-to-one basis, with each partner. |
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It uses an architecture with a bus structure, which ensures that the one-to-one communication between the guest machines and the parent machines happens very efficiently and very safely. |
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Neolane provides the only conversational marketing technology that empowers organizations to build and sustain lifetime one-to-one dialogues, dramatically increasing revenue and marketing efficiency. |
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Even email as a conversation tool is really only ideally suited for a one-to-one situation where we have to keep in mind that it is asynchronous: the receiver might first read your mail three days from now. |
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Now, with high-speed digital technology and the width necessary to print newspapers in their original format, it is possible to apply the successful one-to-one target model of direct mail to the newspaper industry. |
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Rachel and Dave signed up for another marriage course, which saw them meeting up with six other couples for five weeks for group discussions and one-to-one talks. |
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One private midwife has seen a five-fold increase in inquiries from mothers-to-be who want to give birth at home or be guaranteed constant, one-to-one attention in hospital. |
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Children who gain one-to-one assistance from a teaching auxiliary are having that withdrawn as head teachers were forced last week to lay off valued staff. |
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However, given the differences in the basic nature of the test requirements, it is not believed to be possible to provide one-to-one correspondence between the two sets of tests. |
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Syndicate IQ's Trigon Engine creates a one-to-one connection between the syndicator and the end consumer of syndicated content. |
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It expected, at launch, a one-to-one exchange rate with the birr, but Ethiopia refused to touch the new currency, insisting that all large transactions should be in dollars. |
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It offers one-to-one personalized training that enables the student to learn at his or her own pace, make mistakes and correct them without any loss of face. |
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The one-to-one relationship may in fact exist under certain conditions, but that is because pathways from other receptors have been blocked or occluded by inhibitory processes that keep the line clear for a given cone. |
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The technology is optimized for one-to-one connections while allowing one-to-many connections using a star topology. |
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What workers need to take away from this research is that the unique experience of some people makes one-to-one attention an extremely important part of treatment. |
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In contrast, Liam popped into ZSL London Zoo for a bit of one-to-one action with the zoo's Madagascan ringtail lemurs. |
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Each of the codewords of each of the first sets is codeword-mapped to a second codeword of the common component code using a one-to-one codeword-mapping. |
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You may recall the public outcry earlier this year when Google abruptly melded Gmail, its private, one-to-one web-based e-mail service, with a new social networking service. |
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Drawers at seat height double as a bench for one-to-one conversations, whilst a filing cabinet can be a convergence point for passing on information to one's colleagues. |
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The Kumon method uses a mixture of study evenings, home learning and one-to-one support, concentrating on improving study habits, concentration and confidence. |
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The Allies wrote off 80 percent of the deposits that remained frozen after the June reform but had been designated for ultimate one-to-one conversion to deutsche marks. |
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Mountain View Joinery is reaping the benefits of receiving expert one-to-one business support through the Welsh Assembly Government Regional Centre Service. |
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Ms Miller now plans to introduce one-to-one consultations with animal reflexologists, homeopathists and behavioural experts from the Cullercoats shop. |
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Cantor was able to show that aleph-one, the next higher number to aleph-zero, counted sets that could not be put into one-to-one correspondence with the rational numbers. |
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Alison's prize is a one-to-one meeting with Save the Children's director of campaigns Kirsty McNeill, and Emma's is a vlogging experience with the experts. |
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One such example is the phenomenon of cyberhate. Cyberhate is a unique phenomenon because it does not necessarily involve negative one-to-one communication. |
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Most present algorithms can only morph between topologically similar shapes of which an obvious one-to-one mapping can be easily found between the source and the target. |
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