The sport of biathlon combines the disciplines of cross-country skiing and target shooting. |
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It can be harmful for disciplines if they do not cumulate real knowledge because short-term interests drive them. |
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It is no surprise that Cornell is offering majors in disciplines so important to the wine industry. |
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Teams from different disciplines emphasise teamwork and cooperation in a modern hospital. |
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A freeride board bridges the disciplines and is thereby the more versatile design of snowboard. |
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Most psychics trained in three disciplines, usually telepathy, telekinesis, and another one. |
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Saivism values both bhakti and yoga, devotional and contemplative sadhanas, or disciplines. |
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Universities retain the right, under enterprise bargaining agreements, to do away with disciplines, groups of disciplines, indeed entire schools. |
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The content is of value across disciplines and not inconsistent with any of the major philosophical and theoretical schools of therapy. |
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The purpose of the disciplines of mindfulness is to do something about this absent-mindedness. |
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Our two sport disciplines, tenpin and ninepin, also have their own business structures. |
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In most disciplines at large research universities, tenure is directly related to the number of peer-reviewed books and articles one publishes. |
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For specific reasons, the employer chooses to continue the activity and then harasses, disciplines, or terminates the employee. |
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Volunteers from scientific and engineering disciplines are needed to serve as moderators, judges, timekeepers and scorekeepers. |
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The two subjects have developed such completely different disciplines and terminologies that it is hard to think of them together. |
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Open-mindedness, which is the fruit of mindfulness, forms the basis for the disciplines of insight. |
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Is it not in its nature to transgress the limits of knowledge, thus revealing dimensions of life beyond the reach of other disciplines? |
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Under the heading of inner texture Wachob engages primarily the disciplines of textual criticism and rhetorical criticism. |
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In working such a story out, the theologians were, it is true, assisted by other disciplines. |
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This pairing of allied opposites enabled writers to cross-fertilise the two disciplines and personalities to help build on-screen tensions. |
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A truly main class is usually susceptible to logical division into subclasses that are themselves known as disciplines. |
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The four disciplines of aquatic sports, namely swimming, water polo, diving and synchronized swimming are infelicitous and poorly represented. |
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Currently there is much interest in spiritual disciplines and the process of spiritual formation. |
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This text is an important contribution to a growing corpus on a volatile subject that has generated studies in several disciplines. |
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They receive training in classical ballet, but also take classes in flamenco, tai chi, modern, and other dance disciplines. |
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In the long free-style disciplines, he was invincible and made all national records. |
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She added that the close containment of the infection at the units was due to the enormous input of staff of all disciplines. |
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Student internships permeate academic programs across a wide variety of disciplines. |
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The three disciplines are run back-to-back and the winner is the first athlete to finish. |
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They make up Vancouver's Battery Opera, a company that intermingles the disciplines of dance, theatre and performance art. |
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They work in a variety of disciplines including ceramics, fibres, glass, mirror design, jewellery and photography. |
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Experts in three complementary and alternative medicine disciplines, acupuncture, massage therapy, and chiropractic, will also speak. |
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Yet the percentage of women in computing, the physical sciences, and engineering remains lower than in other science-related disciplines. |
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In short, the in-depth study of information and communication disciplines needs be encouraged among girls to inculcate in them e-readiness. |
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These connections were severed for a time when empirical psychology and speculative philosophy went their separate ways as academic disciplines. |
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The NEA brought together artists from different disciplines for two all-day colloquia to gather advice and information for the future. |
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And to facilitate enhanced interaction between lab disciplines, workstations needed to be collocated. |
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Various experts made estimates of the long-range computing power needed for their disciplines in units of petaflops. |
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Second, I regularly have lunch with a few perspicacious psychologists and faculty members in other disciplines. |
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There is a major problem with some views concerning new developments in anthropology and cognate disciplines. |
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I am seeing a trend toward openness and communication between the two disciplines as they gain a clearer understanding of their codependency. |
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Zoogeography integrates a variety of disciplines within ichthyology to explain patterns of fish distribution. |
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Central agencies opposed hypothecation in the absence of financial market disciplines. |
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The reason for this is that hypothecation reduces financial accountability in the absence of competitive market disciplines. |
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What impact has this glut of information had on the practice of the two disciplines of meteorology and climatology? |
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Mike used three examples of a correction of paleontology by molecular systematics and vice versa to show that both disciplines need each other. |
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Research in human geography and related environmental disciplines has not always done much better. |
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A few areas cut across disciplines and require particularly broad, horizontal swaths of expertise. |
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Phi Kappa Phi is a national honor society which recognizes superior scholarship in all academic disciplines. |
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Against the best the country could offer the Carlow participants excelled, bringing back a hoard of medals in several disciplines. |
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Walking the high wire between these two disciplines is what makes Jahn's latest work harder to classify, but more powerful. |
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We welcome proposals suggesting new subjects for review essays, both within and across disciplines. |
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Medicine and law were the first disciplines to professionalize their knowledge. |
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Many academic disciplines have defined keys journals in their field, but health education has failed to do so. |
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Both men draw not only from their own disciplines but from their knowledge of history, sociology, and literature. |
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These scholars are commonly based in universities and research academies in the disciplines of philosophy, history, and literature. |
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With such technology, individual scholars may even be able to afford to own the entire recorded knowledge of their disciplines. |
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Historians borrowed from such disciplines as political science, linguistics, economics, and philosophy. |
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The continuing development of comprehensive universities should allow them to extend their knowledge base in multiple disciplines and fields. |
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Different academic disciplines are characterized by their distinct approaches to substantiating knowledge. |
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When we go to Japan, we go there knowing all the rules and all the disciplines and how to participate in the game. |
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The increase in support was possible because many domestic programs are exempt from World Trade Organization disciplines. |
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It will be negotiated in conformity with the rules and disciplines of the World Trade Organisation. |
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The former were to be policed and controlled, the latter discouraged through the disciplines of increasingly marketized welfare. |
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They affirmed that existing and emerging regional trading agreements should be consistent with WTO rules and disciplines. |
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The group time must include some portion devoted to prayer and other spiritual disciplines. |
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Thirty-five sports disciplines and four cultural activities will be offered during seven days of competitions. |
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For many spiritually oriented folks, this can include providing compassionate service or maintaining spiritual disciplines such as meditation. |
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The ECDL is a computer qualification that certifies the holder's competencies in seven computer disciplines. |
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The disciplines of these students include psychology, computer science, English literature and optometry. |
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Since I'm on the ground as it were, I've direct access to many of the headmasters, teachers, and senior exponents of these disciplines. |
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I suspect that others have tried this in other disciplines, but I think this is pretty original for law casebooks. |
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Other disciplines have been brought to bear on the subject, including archaeology, cartography, and historical geography. |
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This is also having a chilling effect on students deciding whether to study these disciplines that can be easily offshored. |
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In his spare time, he practices and teaches martial arts and holds black belts in the Korean disciplines of tae kwon do and hapkido. |
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As a result a number of teams were put through a three-day activity that used the disciplines of abseiling, canyoning and whitewater rafting. |
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Initially trained as a classical comparative ethologist, he learned the disciplines of meticulous observation and objective description. |
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An increasingly isolated figure, he has come to rely on authorities whose expertise in the relevant disciplines is dubious. |
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Among her examples were bags, picture frames, and wall hangings in a variety of styles and work disciplines. |
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Students and teachers from all disciplines who can speak basic English are encouraged to apply. |
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Pacioli's four mathematical disciplines are the antique and medieval quadrivium. |
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The individuals, well known in their various disciplines, hail from spots all over the globe. |
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Among the renewed disciplines, one could list infinitesimal geometry, spheric geometry, and so on. |
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Indeed, when we attain higher consciousness through spiritual disciplines, we actually see or perceive divinity all around. |
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More troubling was the Jesuits ' lack of academic grounding in the new disciplines. |
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Participants then compete in five year-age divisions in all athletic disciplines including the marathon, cross country running and race walking. |
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The goal was to assess writing in the specific disciplines and to develop action plans for enriching student writing. |
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The day will explore a range of disciplines, including acupuncture, reiki and hypnotherapy. |
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Likewise, telemedicine might be cost effective for some disciplines such as dermatology and radiology but not for others. |
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Program management and the disciplines associated with it continue to be a problem in my opinion in most Western cultures. |
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The disciplines he learnt then, he says, are the ones he now imposes on the business empires he takes over. |
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Each route affords opportunities to see and buy from artists of all disciplines. |
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These types of lists exist in many disciplines and act as benchmarks on which to guide one's collection development activities. |
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In our age of increased specialization, Smith demonstrates the unexpected energy that is generated from the synthesis of disciplines. |
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Herbert aims to agglomerate intellectual movements in various disciplines and show the deep connections that make them part of a single episteme. |
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This conversion experience then rippled through science, changing the boundaries of disciplines, reallocating resources, and so on. |
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It proved, she claims, that imagination can be valuably researched in a variety of disciplines, not least evolutionary studies and archaeology. |
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These techniques sometimes require the input of other surgical disciplines such as neurosurgery and cardiothoracic surgery. |
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Among the different disciplines, disbelief in the existence of God was not correlated with any particular area of expertise. |
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Interested Emirati artists can explore a range of art disciplines including visual arts and film, paintings and mixed-media installations. |
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Furthest away are other science disciplines that would be grouped in different broad categories from psychology, like physics and chemistry. |
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In summary, this is an excellent volume that I recommend without reservation to biologists in all disciplines. |
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The disciplines in the race include hiking, running, kloofing, tubing, cycling, swimming and a few surprises. |
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Some disciplines are pioneering groundbreaking research on ethical behaviour. |
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The 10 other respondents were from a wide range of disciplines, including academia, radiology, endocrinology, and clinical neurophysiology. |
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Later, he returned to Bach's work alongside artists from a variety of disciplines, reinterpreting each suite for a series of films. |
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This committee will consist of experts from a range of different disciplines, and half its members will be lay people. |
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Some academics eventually renounced their hostility to subject disciplines. |
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Changes in training have to be made to reorient the focus of both disciplines. |
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The programme will include sporting disciplines such as basketball, netball, cricket and football, among others. |
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The theater becomes a site of self-forgetfulness for audiences who experience a reprieve from disciplines associated with memory. |
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Research modalities such as immunohistochemistry, tissue culture, electrophysiology, and molecular biology are widely used in both disciplines. |
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In addition, residents in all the medical and surgical disciplines received a survey. |
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Maybe the respective disciplines have differing aims anyway and can't be synthesised? |
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A total of 344 athletes competed in the three disciplines of this sport, freestyle, Greco-Roman and women's wrestling. |
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Erik's mannerisms were very much like one who was raised under both the disciplines of a soldier, but also the restraints of a gentleman. |
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Teachers across disciplines will highlight math elements in history, social studies and English. |
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Proposals from all disciplines of the humanities and social sciences are welcome. |
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Many of these are taken from other disciplines and used as a rough theoretical model onto which we graft our own ideas and practises. |
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Four years at college used to develop well-rounded individuals, mature athletes with knowledge of a world beyond their own disciplines. |
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Other disciplines and artistic representation are an inevitable and necessary part of the mix. |
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His theology and his disciplines were rigorist, but he as a man who lived them himself with great commitment and dedication. |
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Writing about design across the design disciplines is on the rise, but graphic design writing is not keeping pace. |
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Like many disciplines, history stays alive through novelty spins, Romantic History, psychohistory, the school of the annales and oral history. |
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There is often a fear that research that crosses fields and disciplines will be treated unfavourably. |
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For instance, aquatics is comprised of four disciplines including diving, swimming, synchronized swimming, and water polo. |
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The games have had disciplines like cycling, aquatics, golf, tennis, soccer, wrestling, martial arts and figure skating. |
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The identified disciplines are mountain biking, sea kayaking and rogaining. |
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They share this preoccupation with other disciplines and interdisciplinary subject areas in the humanities. |
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Good multidisciplinary working depends on good communication within teams and across disciplines. |
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Their bodies, thinned by rigorous fasting and scarred by the disciplines of self-mortification, were decently concealed by long dark robes. |
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The checks and balances and disciplines that keep intolerance in check may also go. |
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It will say that truth and honesty were the basic disciplines of scientists such as Jones. |
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And our supremacy in dance is largely through one of its own disciplines, modern dance. |
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Adjoining rooms in the new gallery play host to an extensive collection of artworks in a variety of disciplines. |
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The people communicate with him by way of ascetic disciplines on certain sacred mountains. |
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Of course, increased funding would allow more supporting geoscience and hence assure broader buy-in from a wider spectrum of disciplines. |
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Women and minorities are distinguished by their lack of presence in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics disciplines. |
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Perhaps most notable is the lower representation of these groups in doctoral degrees overall, but particularly in the STEM disciplines. |
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Portland cement manufacturing incorporates many disciplines, from engineering to chemistry to geology to computer science. |
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In many instances, these three basic physical sciences even overlap, giving rise to joint disciplines such as astrophysics and chemical physics. |
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The mobile laboratory will be able to address many problems arising from the use of the disciplines of pathology, dermatology, and allergies. |
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The essays are the individual or collaborative work of 21 academics from a variety of disciplines, mainly geographers. |
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While this may be a simplified description, it provides a useful shorthand to examine the very different approaches of different disciplines. |
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Studies of employee attrition across multiple disciplines would also be helpful in identifying common problems and shared solutions. |
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But they forget the kind of tapas, intense spiritual disciplines, which were done by those ancient sages. |
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Other disciplines moving in the same direction are physical therapy, occupational therapy, optometry, and audiology. |
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Choreographer, curator and video artist, he likes to combine disciplines to subvert our preconceptions. |
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In the spiritual traditions of China, Taoism, Confucianism and Buddhism, practices and disciplines for refinement of the spirit are common. |
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If this were a book uniquely on the spiritual disciplines, this would be an understandable minimization. |
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With the exception of history and art history, graduate students and contingent faculty teach more than half of the courses offered in the disciplines studied. |
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Experts hailed from disciplines such as agronomy, exercise physiology, endocrinology, metabolomics, and rheology, among others. |
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Where you dabbled in so-called spiritual disciplines, you now ardently devote. |
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Instead, it surely refers to a state of total stillness and even abnegation, an ideal that religious adepts of all disciplines have long aspired to. |
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The humanities were once divided administratively and intellectually into discrete disciplines, but they are no longer treated as separate fields of study. |
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Historically NHS employees pay and terms and conditions were determined by General Whitley Council and 38 different functional Whitley Councils for different disciplines. |
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If organic gardening, solar power, agroforestry, and other disciplines can be thought of as tools, then permaculture is a toolbox in which they can be organized for best use. |
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Data from organic farming, appropriate technology, agroforestry, soil science, aquaculture, and a dozen other disciplines all support the techniques organized by permaculture. |
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Networking with experts in other disciplines and collaborating with statisticians should be recognized as an important way to conduct research and disseminate findings. |
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All surfing disciplines were on show from kneeboarders, to longboarders and the overall quality of the riders on display was the highest I have seen. |
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Such observations are, of course, true and we economists often deserve such a back-of-the-hand treatment, even by sinners and reprobates from other social science disciplines. |
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Field sports, including shooting, stalking and fishing, have long been an integral part of life in Scotland and many disciplines are synonymous with the country itself. |
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It's plain silly to compartmentalize the disciplines, as if a botanist couldn't talk to an economist, a geologist to a rhetorician, or N. A. Chomsky to G. W. Bush. |
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Because of this the martial disciplines are linked with a fixed set up of ritualistic procedures and are often performed within a monastic and rigid code of conduct. |
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Simple arithmetic predicts that funding for pulmonary and critical care research may fall considerably below that of other clinical disciplines in European countries. |
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Acres of land had been left wasting, livestock and citrus farming had lost their way and the workers had been retrained in professional and academic disciplines, he said. |
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Astrochemistry is a broad and interdisciplinary emerging field at the intersection of the traditional disciplines of chemistry, physics, and astronomy. |
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Overall, the book will provide a helpful resource to new investigators who are studying the atherogenic process and also to scientists in other disciplines. |
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In the case of the 3G auctions, the mania induced them to jump in with the madding crowd and ignore risk-averse, time tested investment disciplines. |
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There are four disciplines on a scale from technical to speed, with slalom the most technical and the downhill the fastest. |
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Plate tectonics and tectonophysics are disciplines of Earth Science which describe the motions of the Earth's crust and the associated driving mechanisms of such motion. |
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None of the older disciplines had to legitimate themselves theoretically. |
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One would hope that they'd bring the same disciplines to the process of politics that they should have in the legal profession and are bound by similar ethics. |
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Rather than appearing as esoteric ideas or arbitrary constructs, the disciplines of modern Biblicists are seen as logical, sensible, even exciting. |
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Aboard the Station, research has been conducted in bioastronautics, physical sciences, fundamental space biology, space product development and space flight disciplines. |
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Many of the Far North Coast's most accomplished riders will be on hand to show off their skills in the disciplines of showjumping, eventing and dressage. |
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The blue team dominated the day-long event winning in six disciplines, soccer, pool, table tennis, tug of war and volleyball while their rivals won chess, draughts and rugby. |
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The disciplines being used are drawn from mathematics, navigation, and communication. |
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Each team must register in one division in either trap, skeet, or clays or any combination of those disciplines at their home gun club or shooting facility. |
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For adherents of some disciplines, using the resources allotted to them by academia to produce arcane, unread tomes may be fine, but this isn't doing feminism any good. |
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The next trick deals with exploiting the differences between the natural sciences and disciplines like linguistics, properly part of the humanities. |
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In addition, recognizing the growing influence of psychoanalysis and social psychology, they enlisted the new prestige of those disciplines in order to make their case. |
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Master's and doctoral programs are offered in neuroscience disciplines such as neurogenetics, neurochemistry, neuroimmunology, neuropharmacology, and experimental pathology. |
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The book is intended-and it succeeds admirably-as a sourcebook to inform and inspire mental health, pastoral, and human-service professionals of all disciplines. |
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You posit that talking about the aesthetics of scent in traditional aesthetic terms makes scent subservient to other disciplines. |
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It is a broad theme that cuts across academic boundaries and builds linkages between disciplines to form a humanistic understanding of the many dimensions involved. |
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Similar findings on the frequency of errors were noted for the other disciplines of laboratory medicine testing, such as transfusion medicine, microbiology, and hematology. |
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There is also a track surface to provide a run-up for the javelin meaning the only disciplines the facility cannot currently play host to is the hammer and pole vault. |
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One wonders, however, whether the old-timers on the population-policy team will be able to learn the new disciplines necessary in these circumstances. |
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Chiropractic and osteopathy are two medical disciplines involving bodily manipulation that have fought long and hard for respectability within the health care system. |
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Self-regulation would be fine in an environment in which the normal disciplines of the market, including bankruptcy in some extreme cases, were allowed to function in full. |
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The move away from national capitalisms to a more uniform system based on market disciplines has contributed to the undermining of the legitimacy of governments in Europe. |
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Success seems to be a goal for all disciplines of psychology. |
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The best he could do was borrow concepts and words from other disciplines. |
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If a good father disciplines his child to teach him, and a bad father punishes his child to let out frustration, a terrible father shows no interest at all. |
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This time out, however, he disciplines himself to reach the goal. |
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Tonal language allied to a myriad disciplines adding or subtracting elements continues to thrive with no apparent plot to destroy it or make it illegal. |
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It aims to develop technologies across a wide range of disciplines including superconductivity, nanotechnology, data storage, photonics and power electronics. |
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The system of ethics and disciplines found within Patanjali's yoga sutras includes tapas, which means fire and refers to the passionate commitment to practice. |
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To its followers, heritage offered a free ticket into a past liberated from the schoolmasterly disciplines of chronology, narrative, and moral judgment. |
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By combining, synthesizing, and reinterpreting research from many different disciplines and paradigms, he has supplied a rich source of variation. |
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A synthesis of many disciplines, hydrology is the science of water, its properties, its circulation, and its distribution in Earth and atmospheric systems. |
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Women who attend women's colleges tend to major in science, mathematics and technology disciplines in greater numbers than women who attend coed institutions. |
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This situation calls upon us to reflect upon how the pragmatics of interdisciplinarity differ in those institutions where disciplines are not tightly departmentalized. |
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Well-rounded students are conversant in many disciplines, she said. |
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For his part, Pacioli understood the mathematical disciplines to be arithmetic, geometry, astrology, music, perspective, architecture, and cosmography. |
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A Clinician's Guide is part of a growing countercurrent within psychiatry, psychology, and allied disciplines, aimed at redressing the shortcomings of that legacy. |
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Inevitably she broadened her repertoire to take in mainstream as well as early works and now admits that the two disciplines have cross-fertilised. |
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As with the youth project, Phase II is designed to give a true taste of professional theatre and all its disciplines, including backstage and front of house. |
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The purpose of the meeting will be to foster discussion of new ideas and develop associations between ideas drawn from different disciplines in earth science. |
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Will it link with other disciplines in the earth sciences, particularly the environmental earth sciences, capturing interest broadly throughout the community? |
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Matisse was not one to rest on his laurels, and he continued studying various styles including primitive art, and the work of painters in other disciplines. |
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Today's forest companies employ scientists from a variety of disciplines including hydrologists, wildlife biologists, geomorphologists, and dendrologists. |
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Such joint programs are more common in colleges than in research institutions, where working assumptions generally operate within departmentalized disciplines. |
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Therefore, some psychophysiologists are getting more and more interested in parapsychological research, and there is an advantageous exchange between those disciplines. |
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Both disciplines understood their purpose to be the evocation and presentation of intended affections, thereby to persuade and to edify the listener. |
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The role of the active production and consumption of various forms of media on the ethnic groups and diasporas has long been debated among scholars from different disciplines. |
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The relevant historical materials suggest that this emergence derived from the deep embeddedness of survey photography in an instrumental matrix of graphic disciplines. |
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Professional disciplines avoid intruding on the personal values and behaviours of members as long as they do not bring discredit to the profession. |
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Emmanuel said a St Lucian team will be preparing for an exchange visit from St Vincent, in mid-December, to engage in a variety of sporting disciplines. |
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Subject areas were progressively expanded to embrace the burgeoning disciplines of ethnomusicology, electronics, performing practice, gender studies and much more besides. |
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While bringing insights from other disciplines to ethology and ornithology, John also used ethological concepts to approach problems in other fields. |
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While providing an environment in which students can work with top experts in specialized areas, the project also aims to expose them to other disciplines. |
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When students arrive at a university their identity must shift towards scholarliness as they join the culture of their disciplines. |
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The Qatar Army Skydiving Team has several different skydiving disciplines placing among the top nations in the world. |
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Instead, fear chastened it into accepting the disciplines of its new leader, Mr Neil Kinnock. |
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The Royal Society serves as the national academy for sciences, with members drawn from different institutions and disciplines. |
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Attendees will be able to network with their CFO and CIO peers and attend informative sessions from both the IT and finance disciplines. |
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Secondly, it's the only book that distills what true success demands into 7 easy to understand street smart and executable disciplines. |
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It recalls econonophysics and sociophysics as disciplines within which the effective parameterization of trends is possible. |
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By the same token, literary studies ought to aspire not merely to exemplify but also to complexify research in other disciplines. |
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Wilson's consilience, view scientific knowledge as an interconnected fabric of fields and disciplines. |
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The book would be useful for students and technologists in all disciplines and specialties to help understand sonographic imaging. |
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Before, people either had a hard-shoe or a soft-shoe studio, but now we're seeing more people offering multiple disciplines in a single space. |
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Theologic und Philosophic treats the complex relationship between the two disciplines from philosophy's roots in ancient Greece to Kant. |
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Big names including Master Sken, Anne Quinlan, Dave Jackson, Mike Tobin and Vinnie Shoreman gave seminars in varied disciplines. |
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Research into this prehistoric settlement is controversial, with differences of opinion in many academic disciplines. |
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The event includes 12 individual and four team sports involving 24 disciplines. |
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However, this curriculum included auxiliary historical disciplines such as palaeography, heraldry, numismatology etc. |
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Meanwhile, synchronised swimmers will fly in from Egypt and China to take part in solo, duet and team disciplines. |
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In fact, information literacy transcends course content and can be developed through course work in all disciplines. |
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Different breeds of horses have developed that excel in each of the specific disciplines. |
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History, theology, and anthropology become metonyms for a continually expanding array of disciplines and subdisciplines. |
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People perhaps suggest expanding the horizons of computer science with meta-knowledge derived from perspectives from other disciplines. |
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This is partly because the final match in all three disciplines often takes place concurrently in the same day if not in consecutive days. |
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A total of 339 graduates received bachelor degrees in the disciplines of Electrical, Mechanical, Mechatronics and Computer Engineering. |
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While the MDiv program trains on a broad range of disciplines, the other trains for specific situations, particularly cultural ones. |
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The UAE has sent athletes to compete in the swimming, futsal, chess, bowling and cue sports disciplines. |
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These disciplines could range from the series of different gas leak detection methods to vacuum valuation methods for hermetic seal validation. |
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The four Junior disciplines, boys' and girls' singles and doubles, provide limited opportunities to achieve a Grand Slam. |
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The development of the Organization that Learns was systematized by Senge into five disciplines. |
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Initially the DDP is being launched from Fall 2010 in the disciplines of Management Sciences, Computer Science and Electrical Engineering. |
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Lipid biomarkers provide unique information to disciplines such as paleoceanography, paleoecology and biogeochemistry. |
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Such a dual origin for Paleo-Indians has major implications for all disciplines involved in Native American studies. |
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The 2012 Summer Olympic programme featured 26 sports encompassing 39 disciplines and 302 events. |
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The survey would help DCI to improve the dental profession and regulate paradental disciplines which have changed the face of dentistry. |
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Meaningfulness tries to replace structures, standards and disciplines with self-regarding emotion. |
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American schools, for the most part, continue to teach in highly departmentalized, isolated ways with minimal connections across the disciplines. |
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In the under-13 events, established player Rachel Bogan took all three disciplines with ease. |
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Among the disciplines on display at the convention are juggling, poi, diabolo, devil sticks, unicycling, trapeze and glass walking. |
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Aveva PDMS is a proven 3D design application that supports our plant engineering and design disciplines. |
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The peer reviews highlight the top quality resources for their academic disciplines. |
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She'll introduce the five disciplines that distinguish Multipliers from Diminishers and provide practice tips for leading like a Multiplier. |
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A record 59 nations were represented by 4,104 athletes, 3,714 men and 390 women, in 19 sport disciplines. |
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Swimming, diving and water polo are considered three disciplines of the same sport, aquatics. |
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Different philosophical trends as found in disciplines such as Nominalism, Realism, Phenomenalism, Significs, Semiotic, Logical Positivism, etc. |
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However, in all disciplines the student is obligated to produce and publish a dissertation or thesis in book form. |
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The UCU will expand the current program of the LTA by opening several more departments and institutes in the humanities and social disciplines. |
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The number of publications is often debated and varies considerably between the various disciplines. |
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My discomfort stemmed from the inherent gulf between the two disciplines. |
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The only sport on the Olympic programme that features men and women competing together is the equestrian disciplines. |
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Public Health Service in 1966, its history is much shorter than that of many other disciplines. |
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In this exam, they have to prove their command of disciplines considered necessary for pursuing such study. |
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These disciplines include, but are not limited to freestyle, speed and style, step up, quarterpipe and parallel freestyle. |
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The Olympic Games programme consists of 35 sports, 30 disciplines and 408 events. |
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Until recently, production control and quality assurance in foundries have been viewed as separate disciplines. |
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To be sure, other disciplines are much more eponymy prone than is economics. |
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The competition included several disciplines from the ancient Greek Olympics. |
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Its disciplines include men's and women's artistic gymnastics, rhythmic gymnastics, trampoline and tumbling, and acrobatic gymnastics. |
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Hypertext is highly significant for all disciplines that are concerned with the creation, dissemination, storage, and philosophy of information. |
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The editors both work in paper disciplines, so the book's museological vision includes archiving as well as the collection of objects. |
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Theorists and practitioners in a broad range of disciplines acknowledged their debt to Ruskin. |
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As new disciplines and challenges immerge within the build environment sector, the need for new knowledge, skills and competencies arises. |
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Encyclopedias of at least one volume in size now exist for most if not all academic disciplines, including such narrow topics such as bioethics. |
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A number of speakers from various disciplines from art to government gathered to talk about the state of the arts industry in the United Kingdom. |
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Consequently, they have many options to specialize in and to explore their chosen disciplines in depth. |
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Social philosophy, ethics, and political philosophy all share intimate connections with other disciplines in the social sciences. |
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How might we encourage future generations of students in all disciplines to internalize a more positive ethical code? |
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The term can, however, be used for a variety of different disciplines or fields of study. |
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Typical areas include apprenticeships and other vocational qualifications in many disciplines, such as childcare, farming, retail, and tourism. |
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Other horse breeds developed specifically for light agricultural work, carriage and road work, various sport disciplines, or simply as pets. |
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The city performs much better than the national average in both disciplines. |
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The art of Iran encompasses many disciplines, including architecture, stonemasonry, metalworking, weaving, pottery, painting, and calligraphy. |
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Both of these fields represent an overlap of the disciplines of astronomy and chemistry. |
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It helped promote and organize new disciplines and it trained new scientists. |
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The ethnographic method is used across a range of different disciplines, primarily by anthropologists but also occasionally by sociologists. |
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Paleoanthropology combines the disciplines of paleontology and physical anthropology. |
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Several aspects of ornithology differ from related disciplines, due partly to the high visibility and the aesthetic appeal of birds. |
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There are both competitive events and pleasure riding disciplines available. |
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In Athens some older youths attended academy for the finer disciplines such as culture, sciences, music, and the arts. |
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