The former kind of clause I shall call ceteris paribus clause, the latter one closure clause. |
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Producers need to recognize that added weight means lower prices, ceteris paribus, and may increase fleshiness which was found in this study to be discounted. |
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This average is then assumed to be constant one year into the future, ceteris paribus. |
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The free flow of information is ceteris paribus efficient, and we believe in it. |
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In every case, ceteris paribus, trade is greater within each institutional area than between two areas, separated by a border. |
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A sentence of one-year in custody is, ceteris paribus, more onerous than a six-month sentence or six months of probation. |
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Furthermore, illustrates it with some examples, proves that the transformation preserves the ceteris paribus property and presents some complexity results. |
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Therefore, ceteris paribus, there is no reason why the Russian exporting producers would apply lower prices if the existing measures were repealed, considering they have managed to sustain much higher prices before. |
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Finally, ceteris paribus, firms in the agroprocessing and textiles sectors are less frequently involved in new product and new process development than those in the pharmaceutical sector. |
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Markets rely, in the old phrase, on ceteris paribus to work efficiently. |
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This is certainly an intuitively plausible correlation which one would, ceteris paribus, expect to find. To see it confirmed will be encouraging to those managing the processes of service delivery improvement. |
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Theory typically proceeds with an assumption of ceteris paribus, which means holding constant explanatory variables other than the one under consideration. |
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