I have always had wonderful admiration for the sport and its great exponents. |
|
Their work as duettists has established them as exponents of contemporary music. |
|
The face-off was an ideal opportunity for enthusiasts to soak in the craft of these two acclaimed exponents. |
|
The most sophisticated exponents against encroachments of the central state were the English pluralists Figgis, Laski, and Cole. |
|
Based on the powers of Y and X, isometric exponents can be calculated and compared with the observed values. |
|
However, the leading exponents of the open source ethic predate these events by more than a decade. |
|
The Italian exponents of lyrical and geometric abstraction were based in Milan and Como, and often worked together with Rationalist architects. |
|
Gibbs and Heaviside had been early exponents of the vector calculus while its chief opponents had been Tait. |
|
I remember a raging debate being conducted in the letters pages of the newspaper between British and American exponents of the English language. |
|
For a rather unfortunate meme has lately infected the minds of some leading exponents of a naturalistic worldview. |
|
A series of concerts are held over the summer months featuring the finest living exponents of traditional music. |
|
Was this a casting disaster or a cynical trick by two of contemporary cinema's leading exponents? |
|
Despite its Olympic status, archery receives virtually no television coverage and its leading exponents earn next to nothing. |
|
He was one of the first to use exponents to represent powers and he used mathematics as a model for the natural sciences. |
|
They were the earliest exponents of the dialogic approach and encouraged a million flowers to bloom and a thousand schools to contend. |
|
Feted for her captivating abhinaya, she is regarded amongst the finest exponents of this dance form. |
|
By choosing appropriate mantissas and exponents, we can increase the resolution at shallower depths and degrade it at greater depths. |
|
In fact, the website points out that its early exponents were classically trained singers specialising in khayaal and thumri styles of singing. |
|
This player is one of the few living exponents of the nineteenth century Russian violinistic tradition. |
|
Its exponents want a modernising revolution from above, pioneered by both business and the government, promoting state capitalism. |
|
|
And hearing it played on the radio by the finest exponents remains a sublime experience for thousands. |
|
One approach to these complex verb forms might be to analyse exponents of progressive and perfective aspect as modifiers of the bare verb. |
|
To real Buddhists or Taoists or exponents of qigong, the Falungong is a joke, if not an insult. |
|
In other countries Klimt was hailed as a successful and important artist and one of the leading Austrian exponents of Jugendstil. |
|
Today, the group is one of the finest exponents of this genre of music, combining bhangra with reggae, a sound that people had not heard before. |
|
His career did not take off until the early 1960s, when he turned to sculpture and became one of the leading exponents of minimal art. |
|
He likes the low bounce and the faster courts and of course he has already proved he can beat some of the best exponents. |
|
Empirically, order is easily determined by summing the exponents of each concentration term in the rate equation for a reaction. |
|
As one of the leading exponents of non-standard car insurance it can call on a large number of insurers. |
|
The great exponents of hard SF in its heyday of the 1950s were Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke. |
|
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. |
|
For many decades it was the male swamis from India who were the most well-known exponents of Hinduism touring in the Western countries. |
|
The top exponents of this system are experts in grappling and knowledge of this skill would be very complementary to any martial art. |
|
Maybe the exponents of the 'equal return' principle should be taken literally. |
|
In western Europe the main exponents of primary and secondary coeducation were the Scandinavian countries. |
|
He went on to become one of the leading exponents of butoh in the world. |
|
And Posner notes, quite unobjectionably, that the entire field should not be rejected merely because one does not accept the views of its most aggressive exponents. |
|
In short, the basic functions are all there, except for exponents, which are astonishingly unavailable. |
|
The sculpture was among its main exponents, Puget and Parodi but Maragliano, author of many crucifixes held in various churches in Liguria. |
|
The discovery of the binomial theorem for integer exponents by al-Karaji was a major factor in the development of numerical analysis based on the decimal system. |
|
|
Race walking is as, if not even more, arduous than many other categories, yet exponents are seldom acknowledged in the same athletic conversation. |
|
By chance, he gravitated towards urban sociology and became one of its leading exponents. |
|
Its late-nineteenth-century exponents celebrated the convicts, diggers, and bush workers as bearers of a tradition of egalitarian, masculine solidarity. |
|
Time to rejigger those federal incentives. But don't expect exponents of abstinence-only to fold any time soon. |
|
Singer songwriter, teacher, author and Aragonese politician. He is considered as one of the most important exponents of the Spanish written song. |
|
The 90 years of Chaplin films is indeed an appropriate occasion to show their passion for the moving picture and one of its most memorable exponents, Charles Chaplin. |
|
The mathematical functions include the standards found on a good pocket calculator, such as exponents, logs, trig, matrices, as well as sigmoid, gamma and log gamma functions. |
|
It includes exponents of urban hip-hop, melodic rock, retro-country, guitar band anthems and even the power ballad. |
|
The text amply surveys the various cultural exponents of tattooing accompanied by excellent images. |
|
Dedicated exponents of free speech that they are, the site's editors have now banned one of the few centre-left people who ever posted on their message board. |
|
The shot's mechanical complexity means its exponents must perform at their best for longer than their opponents. |
|
The signal of measured dynamics can be reconstructed by a variety of fitting procedures, sum of exponents, polynomes, damped sinusoid function, etc. |
|
The degree of any term is the sum of the exponents applied to the variables within it. |
|
Such power laws with exponents close to 2 have been shown for several biopolymers, where the polymer concentration corresponds to that of gel preparation. |
|
They are the main exponents of a generation of bands who have given electronic music a solid spot in the Big Book of Music in the past 15 years. |
|
Wooden clubs meet and bamboo poles clatter as with split second accuracy, the exponents display their skill in the centuries old martial art form. |
|
In English, Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll are its best-known exponents. |
|
Although we now think of logarithms as the exponents to which one must raise the base to get the required number, this is a modern way of thinking. |
|
They can solve routine problems involving fractions and per cents, recognize properties of basic geometric figures, and work with exponents and square roots. |
|
This approach to drapery was at odds with the spectrum of mainstream contemporary sculpture as practiced by both its most and least innovative exponents. |
|
|
John Taylor is acknowledged as one of the greatest hurlers ever to play for Laois and indeed one of the finest exponents ever to grace the ancient game. |
|
Its exponents fell in with Czechoslovakia. A mobilization of the Czechoslovak Army was declared on the territory of the insurrection. |
|
They are then completed thanks to the talents of leading applied arts exponents, the living expression of Italy's high artisan tradition. |
|
Martin Buber, partially under the influence of late nineteenth century romanticism, became one of the exponents of neo-Hasidism. |
|
Yet, the Spanish guitar virtuosi and the Spanish exponents of the instrument achieved their great success outside their native country. |
|
Alas, by this time, the early co-operation between exponents of Chaos had given rise to legal wrangles, literary sideswipes, and even magical battles. |
|
The stress exponents increase with indentation strain rate, and the effect of strain rate sensitivity on creep property of Al thin films in large indentation is slightly higher than small indention. |
|
However, both tendencies are taking place under harsh conditions which are based on two misunderstandings: the conservationist mentality of the folk music scene, and the disdain of jazz and classica exponents. |
|
Fraction computation is in familiar textbook format, and scientific notation can be viewed using the proper superscripted exponents. |
|
Deserving protection as the biotope of every democratic society, the theatre lives not only thanks to the antics of its exponents, but also thanks to public interest and childlike curiosity, and thanks to national policies. |
|
Medieval Schoolmen and their contemporary exponents generally consider inductive reasoning unproblematic. |
|
As early as the 1930s, cosmopolitism represented the smallest common denominator for the major exponents of this doctrine, whether they fled authoritarian regimes or came from the bourgeois upper class. |
|
The recently dubbed California Teacher of the Year had 26 raps explaining everything between exponents and improper fractions. |
|
It is particularly on the Old Continent that agitators of various political complexions are shouting death to the global economy and its exponents. |
|
Now we seem to believe that our values are ideally represented by shopping malls and massive office buildings, which are the homes of merchant bankers, commodity brokers and exponents of private equity. |
|
As the students are the only exponents of their own culture, the cultural immersion they experience makes it is easier for them to adapt to the new cultural environment. |
|
I have also, shown, however, that exponents of the intrinsic value theory and radical positions would criticize enlightened self-interest as too weak a position to really address our environmental problems. |
|
At least some exponents of self-esteem have concluded that people only feel badly about themselves because they have not lived up to their full potential. |
|
It was a destiny similar in many ways to that of two other exponents of the Nouvelle théologie: the Jesuit Henri de Lubac and the Dominican Yves-Marie Congar. |
|
Leading exponents of groups resident in Switzerland attempting to overthrow the government of their native country can cause political tension between Switzerland and those states concerned. |
|
|
Because Poiseuille's law is an algebraic equation with fractions and exponents, students with a solid understanding of algebra would have a learning advantage. |
|
Showcasing this elegant sport in such a majestic setting will help to increase the popularity of fencing in France and throughout the world, while leaving the world's leading exponents with lasting memories. |
|
So long as a dialogue goes on among reasonable people there is hope that the extreme exponents of racial separation within this partnership may moderate their attitudes. |
|
One of KOFF's core tasks is fostering partnerships between governmental and nongovernmental exponents of civil peacebuilding in Switzerland and the networking of Swiss and international players. |
|
However, the exponents of these are rarely to be found amongst the Sikhs who are conversant with all the Ragas in the Guru Granth Sahib. |
|
This found ready exponents in the universities, where the ecclesiological movement was forming. |
|
Chamber plays became popular in the early 20th century, with leading exponents being Max Reinhardt and August Strindberg. |
|
Early exponents of the sport included Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and France. |
|
Monarchs such as James IV were known for sponsoring exponents of the Northern Renaissance such as the poet Robert Henryson, and others. |
|
Notable exponents of Shetland folk music include Aly Bain, Fiddlers' Bid, and the late Tom Anderson and Peerie Willie Johnson. |
|
Five Hand Reel, who combed Irish and Scottish personnel, emerged as the most successful exponents of the style. |
|
Notable exponents of Shetland folk music include Aly Bain and the late Tom Anderson and Peerie Willie Johnson. |
|
Five Hand Reel, who combined Irish and Scottish personnel, emerged as the most successful exponents of the style. |
|
Participants include British and international exponents of mainstream and traditional jazz. |
|
The government has inherited inefficiency and the expansiveness of the administrative apparatus as well as the suspicion toward government officials as exponents of the old regime. |
|
Thomas Hobbes, George Berkeley, and David Hume were the philosophy's primary exponents, who developed a sophisticated empirical tradition as the basis of human knowledge. |
|
She has become one of America's foremost exponents of the romantic style in interior design. |
|
Professor Miller's careful research has thrown a monkey-wrench into the Einstein wheel, although it has far from discouraged the enthusiastic exponents of Einsteinism. |
|
In the 1930s, many exponents of this movement became irredentist, seeing annexation of the island to fascist Italy as the only solution to its problems. |
|