The Parliament on Tuesday gave its approval for bifurcation of the Trust into two companies. |
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But there was a price to be paid, one of fragmentation, or at least bifurcation. |
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Perhaps this parallel interhuman development, this bifurcation in the value of communication, is most telling. |
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Both play and opera form an examination of the neurotic bifurcation between fantasy and action. |
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In tandem with these developments, however, there emerged a form of bifurcation in the handling of the group as a concept and organisation. |
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In this connection, he also reiterated the demand for bifurcation of the Cement Factory from the parent organisation. |
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The first is a different refraction for the two polarization components at the lens surfaces, which causes a ray bifurcation at each lens. |
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However, she does not accept his theory of class bifurcation as the sole element in the perpetuation of class bifurcation. |
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Glomus tumor is a vascular neoplasm arising from the paraganglia around the carotid bifurcation, the jugular bulb, or the tympanic arteries. |
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At this level the bifurcation of the abdominal aorta into common iliac arteries has almost been completed. |
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The first bifurcation is shortly above the transition from the syncarpous to the apocarpous zone, the second bifurcation is somewhat higher up. |
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Note that this is not the complete bifurcation diagram, because bifurcations involving unstable or negative equilibria are not included. |
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We evaluated the tracheal wall, whereas previous reports used bifurcation specimens from lobar or segmental bronchi. |
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As each plant had a bifurcation, two measurements were obtained per leaf stage for each plant. |
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However, it is unclear whether these paired last branches are due to poor preservation or to an original bifurcation. |
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The left common iliac artery is seen at the point of bifurcation into external and internal iliac arteries. |
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In many ways there was a kind of bifurcation of social history in the field of Latin America. |
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I am convinced that we are approaching a bifurcation of similar magnitude that is connected to the explosion of information technology. |
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New dedicated bifurcation devices may have an important, though limited role. |
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The four species of owls divide into two strongly supported clades, corresponding to the widely accepted bifurcation of the owls into two families, Tytonidae and Strigidae. |
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Determination of the minutia direction can be extracted from each skeleton bifurcation. |
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Similarly, the location of the minutia for a bifurcation shall be the point of forking of the medial skeleton of the ridge. |
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A second design goal in dedicated bifurcation stents is to fully scaffold the ostium of the side branch. |
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Examination reveals a rubbery, nontender mass at the level of the carotid bifurcation, along the anterior border of the sternomastoid, more mobile laterally than vertically. |
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All the rays are trifurcated at their tips and repeatedly furcated into three branches, but some of the last branches are the result of bifurcation. |
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Oddly enough this bifurcation resonates beyond just the speed of our Internet connection. |
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This bifurcation decays and falls to pieces when productive labor, in its totality. appropriates the special characteristics of the performing artist. |
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This one-side riddled basin can even persist beyond the blowout bifurcation, contrary to the previously reported riddled basins which exist only below the blowout transition. |
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Before 1953, procedures such as stellate ganglion block, cervical sympathectomy, thrombectomy of occluded carotid arteries, and carotid bifurcation ligation, were used. |
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So we see bifurcation between classical languages used by the former, such as Persian, Sanskrit and English, and the regional languages and dialects that the common folk used. |
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This cultural bifurcation is aggravated by the fact that between our two warfighting cultures, one human-centric and one technology-centric, the latter currently predominates. |
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A bifurcation here allows cars to race ahead through another tunnel. |
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The numerical results demonstrate the evolution of cellular cell bifurcation of cylindrical detonation, and indicate that new cellular cells are generated from the self-organized transverse waves. |
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The three legs of every skeleton bifurcation must be examined and the endpoint of each leg determined. |
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After considering the weak center problem, ulteriorly we investigate the bifurcation of critical periods from a weak center. |
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With this bifurcation, we see evidence of rising inequality across younger and older families. |
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This has led some authors to speak of a bifurcation of models in terms of early and late childbearing. |
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It is clear that all bifurcation lesions are not alike, however sub-populations have similar lesions. |
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The Court found that the Tribunal was entitled to decide remedy and liability together without bifurcation. |
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This aspirational element should be the centerpiece of the Republican message in this age of growing class bifurcation. |
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Every time you do it you should decide the scope you are going to absorb and to which point of bifurcation you are going to make the absorption. |
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The only way to do it now, until we learn more is to absorb it in the heart, to absorb it and take it to a point of bifurcation. |
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Another case is bifurcation, where the watershed is effectively in the river bed, a wetland or underground. |
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The snake's heart is encased in a sac, called the pericardium, located at the bifurcation of the bronchi. |
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There are rare cases of river bifurcation in which a river divides and the resultant flows ending in different seas. |
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Studies in the late 20th century suggested a similar bifurcation in the family. |
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It is the bifurcation of knowledge into science and «the rest» that has served to misguide many among the educated in the two-thirds world and irresistible for a more textured millennium already upon us. |
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The angle of the minutiae is determined by constructing three virtual rays originating at the bifurcation point and extending to the end of each leg. |
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A multi-stem tree does branch off directly above the ground, but the stems are clearly recognizable and the bifurcation on the stems usually starts higher up compared to shrubs. |
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With the peritoneum open the ureter is then retracted medially, and the artery is ligated 2.5 cm distal to the bifurcation of internal and external iliacs. |
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They do not fit neatly into the Robin Hood bifurcation between rich and poor: their cash barely covers outgoings but they sit on large illiquid assets. Housing debt is one reason people end up short of cash. |
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Given this bifurcation of jurisdiction, it is possible that a single pension plan may provide benefits to employees in both federal and provincial jurisdictions. |
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Systemic transformation is not immediate and abrupt but, in the language of the sciences of complexity, takes the form of a bifurcation occurring in a period of transition characterized by chaotic fluctuations. |
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For example whether an event is a true bifurcation or a ridge ending. |
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In many countries, creative thinking and innovative policy relevant to business and human rights has been impeded by adherence to a reified and increasingly stale bifurcation of voluntary and mandatory means. |
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We soon expect the indiscriminate selling of the fourth quarter to give way to bifurcation, as investors seek companies capable of maintaining, or at least quickly restoring, profitability. |
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Notwithstanding the challenges presented by the bifurcation of human resource management, the RCMP does not apply the authorities it does have in a manner consistent with modern management practices. |
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In3 attendees will get a chance to see firsthand the next generation in bifurcation stenting. |
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Several chapters then cover dynamical systems theory, bifurcation theory, statistics, regression analysis, and Fourier transforms. |
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Stress probes at different initial axi-symmetric stress states have been carried out to exhibit bifurcation domain in the Rendulic plane. |
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And it is interesting to investigate the preservability of bifurcation under the numerical discretization. |
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The carotid body is a chemoreceptor located in the adventitia posteromedially to the bifurcation of the common carotid artery. |
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These tumors, located in the hepatic duct bifurcation, are treated by excising the extrahepatic biliary tree, with or without lymph nodes. |
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It expanded into the sella turcica, eroded through the skull base into the left carotid space and extended down to the bifurcation of the left common carotid artery. |
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The branch that originated off of the RAA was spatulated and sewn over the defect in the main renal artery and the other branch to reconstruct the bifurcation. |
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A midline abdominal incision was made and the descending aorta above the renal bifurcation was cleared of adjacent tissues and a snugger was placed. |
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They have observed that application of magnetic field reduces the strength of stenosis at the apex of bifurcation, shear stress and increases the velocity of blood flow. |
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