The most difficult task for the mothers was to explain the concept of abstract nouns and mimetic words in Korean. |
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The shape and colour of Phloeidae are such that they are homochromous with the tree trunk or mimetic, resembling patches of lichens. |
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To test the validity of the open-state model, molecular dynamics simulations in octane, a lipid bilayer mimetic, were carried out. |
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The crystalline mirror reminds us that the images of the dream vision are not mimetic representations but allegorical figurations. |
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Paradise Lost is also, of course, filled with mimetic sound effects, onomatopoeia and mimetic syntax, which only work if the poem is sounded. |
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Among the several biological mimetic systems, cyclodextrins represent one of the most simple ones. |
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To convey it, Velazquez passed beyond mimetic rendering to composing with signs of identity when he pictured the Lady with a Fan. |
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Their mimetic intention, unlike that of most mimetic art, does not depend on images in the viewer's memory. |
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In the standard Western division of genres, mimetic resemblance is the first criterion of portraiture. |
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The evolution of language required major additions to the cognitive structure of the mimetic mind. |
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Britten's setting is mimetic and operatic, the piano part consisting of a stylisation of the boy's fiddling, notated on one stave only. |
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The present tense of the actual verbs in the dialogue, like the mimetic form of direct rather than reported speech is a dramatic illusion. |
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We predicted, based on the egg mimicry hypothesis, that robins and catbirds would eject white cuckoo eggs and accept mimetic blue cuckoo eggs. |
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Many of his works feature astonishingly mimetic renditions of fruits, flora, and vessels, as in the Bacchus. |
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The Mendelian genetics of mimetic color patterns in Heliconius have been well studied using crosses between races and species. |
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Only if one accepts the claims of the naturalness of Renaissance artificial perspective can we accept photography as a mimetic representation of the world. |
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His essay is in part a polemic against the mimetic theory of art, or against any theory which takes the image to be the basic constituent of the work. |
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Though imitation should forge some mimetic relation between Ladies and Belphebe, her absolute exceptionality denies the possibility of this relation. |
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There is only mimetic desire, which is triangular, involving an obstacle which intervenes in any relationship which is ostensibly the self responding to an other, or the self-communing with itself. |
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For this reason, Convectair offers a wide range of heaters in white, mimetic white and greige, all of which melt into the interior design. |
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She deprives language of its mimetic function, confining it to the site of its utterance and apprehension rather than using it as a tool to comprehend the world. |
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The Greco-Roman mime was a farce that stressed mimetic action but which included song and spoken dialogue. |
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A mimetic path of development trajectories followed by industrialised countries in the past, using their different stages as milestones? |
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Mimetic learning: mimetic learning is a way of learning through creative imitation. |
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On the one hand, early modern Italy witnessed a proliferation of new techniques of representation that transgressed against earlier, more mimetic ways of seeing and listening. |
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Because of the double bind in which models place their disciples, conflicts inevitably arise from mimetic rivalry, leading to the threat of violence. |
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The staged contrast reveals an acute awareness of this double bind, this problem of representing mimetic desire while remaining insulated from it. |
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So does Meditations in Green, but its incoherence feels purposeful, mimetic. |
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Seeing and knowing could not be made congruent in mimetic painting. |
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With no mimetic elements, the basket dance of the Tewa Pueblo rites includes invocations for plant growth and for the transmission of the gift of human life. |
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Hogan argues that drama, traditionally seen as mimetic, also has an important diegetic component. |
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An incretin mimetic works to mimic the anti-diabetic or glucose-lowering actions of naturally occurring human hormones called incretins. |
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Due to its wide range of movements and postures, and the mix of rhythmic and mimetic aspects, it lends itself well to experimental and fusion choreography. |
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The negative impact entailed by the delay in reduction policies in the developing and emerging countries is of the same order of magnitude as the gain we have seen in the non mimetic scenario over the reference scenario. |
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By establishing a rating agency specific to agriculture, momagri also intends to remedy to the deficiency of the current system leading to mimetic ratings that lack genuine independent judgment. |
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Prophetic knowledge relies on the functions of the faculty of imagination, i.e., its mimetic function and its role in the particularization of universal truths. |
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The roles of cIAP1 and cIAP2 in EAE will be further established by systemic administration of a new type of drug called a SMAC mimetic that selectively reduces levels of these anti-apoptotic proteins. |
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Both maintain that poetry is mimetic, both treat the arousing of emotion in the perceiver, and both feel that poetry takes its justification, if any, from its service to the state. |
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The predominant idea, at the time of photography's emergence, of a mimetic or analogical equivalence between the subject represented and its photographic image is straightaway challenged. |
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Girard has elucidated the mimetic, indeed acquisitively mimetic and potentially violent, character of a great deal of human desire. |
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This scenario was elaborated with the same assumptions as in the non mimetic scenario, but with delaying by 5 years the carbon value trajectory for the emerging and developing countries. |
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Shklovsky saw the solution to the automatization of mimetic language in poetic language. |
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Like the awkward bumpiness, this bold standing out is phallic but not mimetic. |
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The segment is devoted to the mimetic virtuosity of the male lyrebird. |
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Fabulators liberate the plot from its mimetic function postulated by Aristotle and rediscover its significance as a necessary element of the literary artifice. |
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Some drugs in these classes already have been approved, most notably the incretin mimetic exenatide, an inhaled insulin, and the amylin analogue pramlintide. |
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As the Truth, Jesus is contrasted with the distorted mimicker of truth, Satan, the father of lies, who, in the mimetic cycle, falsely accuses the one to be scapegoated. |
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Her new book is a celebration of oddness and uniqueness in translations that come about as the result of some sort of slippage from the mimetic into the non-mimetic. |
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