Interesting trivia and movie minutia will grace your screen as you watch the film. |
|
We're loading our lives with so much minutia that our creative thinking suffers. |
|
Stuffed with obscure allusions and historical minutia, his novels are not the type you take to the beach. |
|
Frankly, I find the minutia of everyday life much more interesting than the glaring important life changing events that shape our lives. |
|
If anything, this is a lively book that doesn't bog the reader down in minutia, or gloss over important details. |
|
I am loathe to discuss in person the minutia of the show with strangers or, indeed, friends. |
|
Collectively, these details are referred to as minutiae — an average human fingerprint may contain as many as a hundred and fifty minutia points. |
|
The X and Y pixel coordinates of the intersection of the three legs of each minutia can be directly formatted. |
|
Determination of the minutia direction can be extracted from each skeleton bifurcation. |
|
Similarly, the location of the minutia for a bifurcation shall be the point of forking of the medial skeleton of the ridge. |
|
This standard defines three identifier numbers that are used to describe the minutia type. |
|
Some folks might question how much of the minutia of the Copyright Act needs to be discussed. |
|
Thanks to the Internet and its blog-happy pages, we see people obsessing, everyday, on the minutia that makes for the discovery of previously unheard of entities. |
|
If the three legs of the ridge were each thinned down to a single-pixel-wide skeleton, the point where the three legs intersect is the location of the minutia. |
|
This number is an overall expression of the quality of the finger record, and represents quality of the original image, of the minutia extraction and any additional operations that may affect the minutiæ record. |
|
I record it just as the farmer grandmother of a friend used to log the minutia of the seasons of her food preparation and storage, housekeeping, mending and laundering. |
|
If your eyes glaze over at the mention of minutia such as pressing, caps, oak style, and retention of clusters, Etienne's goals for all of this may have more meaning. |
|
The first information item is the minutiae index number, which shall be initialised to '1' and incremented by '1' for each additional minutia in the fingerprint. |
|
A minutia is an event that occurs in a regular flow of papillary ridges. |
|
In good neighborhoods he is part of the scenery, like a mailbox, but in bad neighborhoods, he is looked upon with positive appreciation... Describes the minutia of booking a perpetrator, especially fingerprinting. |
|
|
Each version is captivating, yet the unabridged edition is sometimes weighed down with minutia in the depiction of each agonizing step. |
|
Justice Scalia's opinion for the Court wades deeply into the minutia of the law of class actions, but the reason for the case's demise is really fairly simple. |
|
The position or location of a minutia representing a ridge ending shall be the point of forking of the medial skeleton of the valley area immediately in front of the ridge ending. |
|
A '2' indicates that for each centre minutiae, ridge count data was extracted to the nearest neighbouring minutiae in eight octants, and ridge counts for each centre minutia are listed together. |
|
So far, the highest-rated words include lugubrious, caterwaul, abstruse, minutia, cad, and Czechoslovakia, which is no longer a country but still a word. |
|