Now at the beginning of the twenty first century, healthcare and architecture are again inflecting each other in interesting ways. |
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They breathe life into living areas and offices, and create an individual theme, reflecting and inflecting moods. |
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The second characteristic feature of Basque concerns the finite verb, which acts as a summary of all the noun phrases in the sentence by inflecting for tense, voice, person, number, and mood. |
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The older Indo-European languages tend to be inflecting in this sense. |
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By inflecting its investment policy, SCOR Global Investments placed particular emphasis on the positioning of the investment portfolio with regard to major identified risks. |
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What comes across in each of his films is his capacity to reconstruct a series of arguments without inflecting them in any given, univocal direction. |
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It is partly this Southern influence that distinguishes him from other writers, the lilting accents of Kentucky and Tennessee inflecting his work. |
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Basque, a language isolate, is a highly inflected language, heavily inflecting both nouns and verbs. |
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Most forms are produced by inflecting the verb stem, with endings that also depend on the person and number of the subject. |
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Usually, the singular is the unmarked form of a word, and the plural is obtained by inflecting the singular. |
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But a Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, claimed inflecting casualties on 10 Afghan security personnel and capture of several areas. |
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By Winthrop Sargeant The New Yorker, March 14, 1959P. 91 The word referred to by psychologists as algolagnia means deriving a perverse joy from inflecting or submitting to the most squalid sort of human suffering. |
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