The letter designation assigned to the process can be used for identification on drawings, tables, etc. |
|
However used or modified, I believe stilts have earned the designation of a legitimate and very unusual tool. |
|
Sure, each of these objects has an official numerical designation in a formally compiled catalog. |
|
The designation of laundress was nominal, however, because she did little in the way of washing. |
|
Volunteers who sign contracts specifying their tasking designation can be assigned to military units only upon passing proficiency tests. |
|
The combat data system carries out automatic threat evaluation and weapon assignment, target designation, and hard and soft kill co-ordination. |
|
Therefore, taxonomic designation based on only manus prints would be premature without associated pes impressions. |
|
The designation of rabbi is given when one receives rabbinical ordination, earned by passing extensive examinations on the Torah and Talmud. |
|
In Tibet, there is a separate designation for those who can detach themselves from their physical bodies. |
|
The Forest's designation as a National Park will not affect the rights of common, the New Forest Acts or the role of the verderers. |
|
These standard color designation names such as deep yellow and dark grayish yellow are hereafter printed in boldface. |
|
This designation also followed the state of Florida's highway beautification program, when the coreopsis was widely used for roadside plantings. |
|
The target designation data can be supplied by a radar or optronic surveillance system. |
|
Although many use the mobile clinic as a medical home, it does not purport to have that designation. |
|
The metaphorical designation incunabulum means that it concerns printing elements, one sees which lying still in its cradle or in the diapers. |
|
This designation was challenged by developers at the public inquiry but the inspector has backed up the planners. |
|
This numbering system is an arbitrary designation based on small amino acid sequence differences. |
|
This is the actual beginning of the renowned Seabees, who obtained their designation from the initial letters of Construction Battalion. |
|
The Old Masters owed their designation not only to superlative technique but also to their ability to represent the right subject. |
|
This designation shows the beginnings of organization and sharpening skills of the children. |
|
|
That the Anglican churches are episcopal churches is on the way to becoming a semi-official designation as well as a fact. |
|
A series of progressive restraints must be implemented to counteract the NPT'S discriminatory designation of nuclear and non-nuclear states. |
|
Now most buildings that retained vestiges of the colonial legacy in the city have had their design and designation changed. |
|
If an Official or employees is not known to the durwans at the entrance, he should enter his name and designation in the visitors' book. |
|
The latter designation is a misnomer, because a mild degree of ketosis often is present, and a true coma is uncommon. |
|
The most basic of all Burgundy appellations, this designation can be used anywhere throughout the region. |
|
It is also the event which explains more clearly than any other the place of assignment, designation and organization in the life of mankind. |
|
The council feels this land must be acquired if the designation as a nature reserve is to be successful. |
|
An individual drug's schedule designation is determined primarily by its habit-forming properties. |
|
A common antebellum designation for the country, these United States survived in the 20th century in folksy idiomatic usage. |
|
On September 8, the Thai legation in Washington DC, USA announced that the designation for the nation abroad would be Siam and not Thailand. |
|
Washing machines with the Energy Star designation are 50 percent more energy efficient than the current minimal allowable standard. |
|
This process has resulted in the designation of many psychotherapy treatments as being efficacious. |
|
That required a whole raft of equipment and apparatus to meet that designation. |
|
And I suspect that the box office return for the film will make that designation an even higher honor than it is today. |
|
He was the head of state for the ten years prior to the designation as President. |
|
There are several candidates for a designation of the father of the space age. |
|
The importance of the reserve for wildlife is acknowledged in its official designation as a Site of Special Scientific Interest. |
|
Another important provision of the new charter was that it eliminated party designation for candidates running for office. |
|
The obtaining request includes designation of a specific management information area. |
|
|
Under this review, the authority should consider whether further designation of conservation areas is called for. |
|
When the monument designation scotched that plan, predictions of economic doom rang through the county seat. |
|
Others show only a portion of a barrel containing the caliber designation in an ad. |
|
The officers say it should be given the go-ahead because it complies with the official designation of the land. |
|
Other trees at Anderson Cottage will be considered for historic designation along with those nominated by communities across the country. |
|
In order to get a permit-only parking designation, 67 percent of affected residents in a six-block radius must sign a petition. |
|
The voting machines and paper ballots for said election shall carry the following designation, which shall be the title and submission clause. |
|
Our buildings survive more than a century only if they are given a special historical designation. |
|
Chronometer is a designation given to a watch that has the highest standard of precision. |
|
Prime is the designation given to the most heavily populated planet in a system. |
|
As a result of the FBI designation, ICP was persona non grata in numerous places, including many potential Gathering sites. |
|
Achieving this designation in public policy requires identifying opportunities both as a specific agenda and as incidental to other APA activities. |
|
The Forest's designation as a National Park will not affect the rights of common, the New Forest Acts or the role of the verderers, who manage the commoning system. |
|
Such designation of a portion of any state trunk highway in any county as a controlled-access highway shall not be effected until after a public hearing in the matter shall have been held. |
|
To Connolly and Morris, Bulger was a TE, or top-echelon informant, the highest designation in the Bureau for a snitch. |
|
Chekhov has talked about this, that any designation besides writer was a diminishment. |
|
Some brands also carry the designation reposado, which translates literally as reposed or rested, which indicates that the tequila has been barrel aged to acquire its color. |
|
Though many people call her a liberal, it is not a designation she uses herself. |
|
Often, a biologist need only examine the pleopods to make a family-level designation, thus making the dorsal carapace features superfluous in the diagnosis. |
|
Of course, that designation would be vulnerable to manipulation. |
|
|
Maxwell previously told The Daily Beast that the reasons for his administrative leave designation had never been explained to him. |
|
The most famous such appointee was, of course, John, whose designation as chief justice was understood by one and all to be a powerful political statement. |
|
Since this showing would have given him an absolute majority in the 313-seat constituent assembly, it could have led to his designation as Prime Minister. |
|
He had said over and over that unless the historic designation granted earlier this year is overturned, the company will no longer negotiate with tenants. |
|
The new lots will be developed under the residential estate zoning designation which allows for larger, country-style properties with limited city services. |
|
This is outrageous and I call on you to change the official designation now before the trial for nidal Hasan proceeds any further. |
|
He remembered from his schooling on Denivan that that was the designation given to a region of ionic flux between the Denivan system and the Sigma Onias system. |
|
However, other ethnic communities do not call themselves by such a designation but identify themselves by their respective ethnic name such as Tajik, Hazara, Baluch, etc. |
|
This concern is evidenced by the very designation of the movement as Realism-a name significantly awarded by its own progenitors rather than by literary historians. |
|
For most criteria, primary orgasmic disorder fits the well-established efficacy designation, and secondary orgasmic disorder fits the probably efficacious criteria. |
|
Arginox Pharmaceuticals announced that the US FDA has granted orphan drug designation to Tilarginine Acetate Injection for the treatment of cardiogenic shock. |
|
Castle gave viva voce evidence of his qualification and designation. |
|
In addition, pathologists and coroners vary in their willingness to accept the sudden infant death syndrome as a designation for unexplained deaths. |
|
In Scotland many eldest sons are entitled to the designation of Master. |
|
When you're buying a used shotgun or a shotgun without removable chokes, don't believe the choke designation on any barrel until it has been measured with a bore gauge. |
|
They are elites, in short, even though they make less money and wield less power than others of that designation. |
|
This designation had not altered his sense of humor or the way he talked around reporters. |
|
Looking back, the designation appears and sounds absurdly portentous. |
|
Therefore I have joined those who today advocate the designation 'Southern Levant. |
|
Free Schools with a religious designation are also sometimes called Faith Academies. |
|
|
He has no illusions about the status of his numerical designation. |
|
In the wake of this designation, butchers in Bury sought to demonstrate their history of manufacturing and selling the product. |
|
Heavy industry is also sometimes a special designation in local zoning laws. |
|
Such a designation would mean that each new species becomes subject to separate conservation assessments. |
|
This designation is primarily applied by outsiders rather than the natives themselves. |
|
The group of small bodies that circle round the Sun, outside the orbit of Mars, are known under the designation of the planetoids. |
|
Pegsiticase has received Orphan Drug designation from the FDA for refractory gout, tumor lysis syndrome and Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome. |
|
How, then, does something become classical, and what does the designation impart upon things it adjectively modifies? |
|
To buttress its designation, the SPLC's report lists a number of unsubstantiated statements about gays by current and former FRC staffers. |
|
South Staffordshire Council is currently having all of its Conservation Areas reappraised to assess how relevant their designation still is. |
|
As an example, critics point to the doctor of nursing designation, which was easily confusable with a doctor of naturopathy degree. |
|
Redescription and lectotype designation of the stargazer, Uranoscopus kaianus Gunther. |
|
If the flood zone designation is not removed, Adevco has the option of paying the note or reconveying the excess land to Key Tronic. |
|
A time when the future of the profession is being redefined, we've come up with a designation that encompasses what CPAs really do. |
|
Fourteen years ago, the designation of a site as 'contaminated' was the kiss of death for developers. |
|
The descriptive term secretory carcinoma, therefore, replaced the original designation of juvenile carcinoma. |
|
District Court for the District of Columbia to attempt to reverse that designation. |
|
While the Company still has the designation of caveat emptor, it is committed to securing the removal of this status. |
|
Type species Calactodrillia chamaeleon Kilburn, 1988, by original designation. |
|
This is dearly a boastful designation, rather than an attempt at toponymic accuracy. |
|
|
Taxonomic study of the genus Campylobacter and designation of the neotype strain for the type species, Campylobacter fetus Sebald and Veron. |
|
Those who have achieved the CMB designation comprise the CMB Society membership. |
|
However, the FDA review process may be speedier for Orphan Drugs than those which do not receive Orphan Drug designation. |
|
He said the district didn't appear to be making progress on its decadelong under-performing state designation. |
|
Top-branded mozzarella carries the designation DOP meaning it has certain protection and quality guarantees. |
|
A soon-to-be-retired administrator has received the designation of Dean Emerita from the Terra State Community College Board of Trustees. |
|
The designation of these homicides as 'gay-hate' killings was avoided as a prior classification of the sexuality of each victim. |
|
By the end of the 15th century, however, the Scottish dialect of Northern English had absorbed that designation. |
|
The area covered by the designation comprises the land between the mean low water mark and the top of the cliffs or the back of the beach. |
|
Changes in a nation's political regime sometimes result in the designation of a new capital. |
|
The unique environment of Snowdon, particularly its rare plants, has led to its designation as a national nature reserve. |
|
A Member who does not register a designation of identity shall be deemed to be designated Other for the purposes of these Standing Orders. |
|
This designation has been applied to the economies of Singapore, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and the People's Republic of China. |
|
A significant number of modern anthropologists and biologists in the West came to view race as an invalid genetic or biological designation. |
|
Some of Argentina's national symbols are defined by law, while others are traditions lacking formal designation. |
|
The designation 'Low' to refer to the region returns again in the 10th century Duchy of Lower Lorraine, that covered much of the Low Countries. |
|
The designation of individual clan tartans was largely defined in this period and they became a major symbol of Scottish identity. |
|
After the 11th century, Scotia was used mostly for the kingdom of Alba or Scotland, and in this way became the fixed designation. |
|
This rank is only held by those lairds holding official recognition in a territorial designation by the Lord Lyon King of Arms. |
|
Before this date, the Covenanters were usually referred to as Supplicants, but from about this time the former designation began to prevail. |
|
|
This formal designation allowed radiometric dates to be obtained from samples across the globe that corresponded to the base of the Cambrian. |
|
This designation was applied to smaller submarines such as the Delta class. |
|
Formal consultations on the proposal began in 1970, and in 1971 the Countryside Commission proposed a revised boundary for the designation. |
|
Support for the designation was expressed by the Ramblers Association, Youth Hostels Association, and Cyclists' Touring Club. |
|
This was the first time such a recommendation on national park designation had not been accepted. |
|
Of the 417 sites managed by the National Park Service of the United States, only 59 carry the designation of National Park. |
|
In place of AONB, Scotland uses the similar national scenic area designation. |
|
Some of these dozens of names have been adopted for specific reference, often given the same designation as the overall work, lex. |
|
The significance of the County of Flanders and its counts eroded through time, but the designation remained in a very broad sense. |
|
The designation is sometimes found used informally in respect of the county as whole. |
|
Almost a third of Cornwall has AONB designation, with the same status and protection as a National Park. |
|
Some are simply not affiliated with any grouping, whilst another, larger, grouping is given the official designation of crossbenchers. |
|
Three units still maintain their militia designation in the British Army, two in the Territorial Army and one in the Army Cadet Force. |
|
Rock climbing ropes come with either a designation for single, double or twin use. |
|
In Europe we are used to the late Roman name 'Palestine,' and the designation 'Palestinian Archaeology' has a long history. |
|
In modern times, however, the name 'Palestine' has exclusively become the political designation for a restricted area. |
|
The EU regulates the use of different protected designation of origin labels for olive oils. |
|
During the Reform War, the major player was Ignacio de la Llave whose name is part of the state's official designation. |
|
The designation is more racial than cultural, and is evident to physical appearance. |
|
From the 6th century, the imperial chancery of Constantinople normally reserved this designation for the Bishop of Rome. |
|
|
This designation does have a legal status different from that of the 50 states. |
|
Nicaragua's abundance of biologically significant and unique ecosystems contribute to Mesoamerica's designation as a biodiversity hotspot. |
|
Keswick's old inns and their successors include many listed buildings, mainly Grade II in designation. |
|
This designation might have been first used in the early 20th century by Brookman, an English pencil maker. |
|
This designation includes the crime novels, spy novel, historical romance, fantasy, graphic novel, and science fiction. |
|
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the designation of Dartmoor as a national park, in 2001 the DNPA planned a number of initiatives. |
|
The designation is highly sought after, with over 40 communities submitting bids at recent competitions. |
|
The designation was incorporated into the name of many of these older publicly run institutions. |
|
No central religious authority exists to impose a particular terminological designation on all practitioners. |
|
The designation is hardly exact, for the centre was at Toulouse and in the neighbouring districts. |
|
Only in the study of literature is the early modern period a standard designation. |
|
What is now called Latin America, a designation that came into usage in the later nineteenth century, was claimed by Spain and Portugal. |
|
Modern historians have extended the term to a geographical designation. |
|
Most likely, as validated by a National Historic Landmark designation, the precise place of Drake's landing is Drake's Cove at Point Reyes National Seashore. |
|
The combined motorway was given the designation M25 which had originally been intended for the southern and western part of Ringway 4 and the M16 designation was dropped. |
|
Some countries use the official language designation to empower indigenous groups by giving them access to the government in their native languages. |
|
The idea for what would eventually become the AONB designation was first put forward by John Dower in his 1945 Report to the Government on National Parks in England and Wales. |
|
The designation indicates the importance of recognising and preserving the area's distinctive qualities, for the benefit of present and future generations. |
|
In 1846, the English zoologist John Edward Gray, ignoring Lesson's designation, named Rudolphi's specimen Balaenoptera laticeps, which others followed. |
|
In the visual arts and architecture, the term 'early modern' is not a common designation as the Renaissance period is clearly distinct from what came later. |
|
|
Such a designation could mean enhanced fishery management, though the state already classifies walleye as a gamefish and stocks them in a number of state lakes. |
|
Mercia is still used as a geographic designation, and the name is used by wide range of organisations, including military units, public, commercial and voluntary bodies. |
|
The mine designation was disinformation to conceal its function. |
|
The county was expanded in 1835 to include suburbs such as Clifton, and it was named a county borough in 1889 when that designation was introduced. |
|
The 2015 Michelin Guide awarded eleven restaurants in Germany three stars, the highest designation, while 38 more received two stars and 233 one star. |
|
This became the commonly used designation in Greek for the sea. |
|
Although Hausmanis favors the designation dramatikis, a playwright is interchangeably called dramaturgs and dramatikis, often in the same paragraph. |
|
As of 2010, the N34 is the next unused national primary road designation. |
|
List of current and previous assembly parties by designation. |
|
As for mononymy, in the context of standardization, the notion that a concept ought to have only one designation seemed both reasonable and desirable. |
|
According to Eugene Goyheneche the name Baiona designated the city, the port, and the cathedral while that of Lapurdum was only a territorial designation. |
|
The database of users of dynamic IP addresses should contain identification data of users, date and time of designation of IP address and stop of its use. |
|
It was designated the European Grand Prix five times between 1950 and 1977, when this title was an honorary designation given each year to one Grand Prix race in Europe. |
|
But unless you hold both a valid CPA certificate and are licensed by your state, you may very well be violating state laws by using the designation in any of these instances. |
|
The Uptime Institute, Moscow, the global data center authority, awarded DataSpace Tier III Facility Certification, the first such designation in Russia and Eastern Europe. |
|
After the Norman Conquest, this power was retained by the bishop and was eventually recognised with the designation of the region as the County Palatine of Durham. |
|
The local dialect of German is commonly called Ruhrdeutsch or Ruhrpottdeutsch, although there is really no uniform dialect that justifies designation as a single dialect. |
|
The second would allow them to list that they are a civil law notary, a designation that allows them to assist in Hague Convention issues worldwide. |
|
Food and Drug Administration has granted orphan drug designation to its synthetic human secretin, RG1068, for use with magnetic resonance imaging of the pancreas. |
|
In the 15th and 16th centuries, the designation was used for land owners holding directly of the Crown, and therefore were entitled to attend Parliament. |
|
|
Various etymologies have been proposed, including Ruotsi, the Finnish designation for Sweden, and Ros, a tribe from the middle Dnieper valley region. |
|
There is no hard rule on the actual revenue designation at this time. |
|
Melioidosis is the etiological designation of a spectrum of clinical manifestations caused by the gram-negative bacillus Burkholderia pseudomallei. |
|
The designation of Livingston in the 1960s attracted new light industries to the area, with high technology and pharmaceutical companies moving into the town. |
|
Both nature reserves have Site of Special Scientific Interest designation, as do the Duddon Estuary and Sandscale Haws to the north of the borough. |
|
Often employing a stream of consciousness discourse, Near to the Wild Heart has been described as Joycean,, but this designation has to do more with form than content. |
|
The trade name Rochlitz Porphyr is the traditional designation for a dimension stone of Saxony with an architectural history over 1,000 years in Germany. |
|
Lectotype designation is justified under article 74.1.1 of the ICZN in order to fix the status of this specimen as the sole name-bearing type of this species. |
|
It has the E174 designation and is approved in the European Union. |
|
The Canadian Wildlife Service maintains a number of National Wildlife Areas in the Bay of Fundy including a proposed designation of Isle Haute in the middle of the Bay. |
|