What is important for our purposes is the connection between the masked killer in the slasher film and the notion of the disappearing body. |
|
Particularly refreshing is the adoption in this volume of the notion of Eurasia as an integral ecumene of economic and cultural interaction. |
|
Viewers in those days were agonized by his notion of justice and fair play! |
|
Obviously, in our submission, it would embrace the notion of something more deep seated than an aberrance. |
|
This is distinct from the notion of selection deriving from pressures exerted by the biotic and abiotic environment inhabited by the organism. |
|
It is at this point when he abjures legal justice that he articulates the notion of a just revenge. |
|
However, some academics pour cold water on the notion of a machine-created universe. |
|
MacSwan's basic quarrel is with the widely discredited notion of semilingualism that, he argues, is perpetuated in Cummins' theories. |
|
I don't know if I buy the whole notion of Jedi as peaceful warriors only striking out in defence. |
|
The notion of wavicles only begins to hint at the strange realm of subatomic reality. |
|
He argued it's part of politics' race to the bottom to appeal to a dumbed-down notion of middle Australia. |
|
She even toyed with the notion of racing dogs in Ireland but gave it up as a bad job when she was forced to quarantine two dogs. |
|
The problem had something to do with their addled lead singer's curious notion of what constituted a promotional radio appearance. |
|
Architectural accents from a variety of periods enhance the notion of a sprawling rancheria evolving and expanding through the decade. |
|
Anaximenes' notion of successive change of matter by rarefaction and condensation was influential in later theories. |
|
Freud struggled to reconcile his notion of unconscious time with his Kantian and Newtonian view of the psyche. |
|
The Kantian concern with the beautiful was eclipsed by his notion of the sublime. |
|
The self-defeating nature of imperialism is slyly suggested through a dramatic reversal that exploits the notion of the white man's burden. |
|
Boutroux's topics range from rational numbers to an analysis of the notion of a function. |
|
Round here, we are not very keen on the notion of banning words of any kind. |
|
|
Finally, the qualitative data provide additional support for the notion of cue reactivity. |
|
Clearly, the notion of reading everything ever written is now entirely preposterous. |
|
The notion of agism is associated with discriminating attitudes toward people on the basis of their age. |
|
A certain notion of realism began not only to prescribe what could now happen, but to airbrush out what had actually happened. |
|
It will also have a different crime rate, divergent patterns of morality, a different standard and notion of what counts as political realism. |
|
In some ways, perhaps, it was easier to kill the king than it was to kill the notion of kingliness. |
|
It is not uncommon for strategists of reconciliation to mobilise the notion of sharing. |
|
The general notion of a well-formed formula is defined recursively as follows. |
|
Harris though seems to be rooted in the political discourse of thirty years ago with his notion of reds under the bed controlling everything. |
|
The notion of using molecules as the working elements of a computer goes back several decades. |
|
It's a kind of high doctrine of humanity that is the foundation of the notion of koinonia and belonging together. |
|
The hazelnut tree is associated with fertility while the ash tree carries with it the notion of barrenness. |
|
The whole notion of bilingual education in this context becomes problematic and worrisome. |
|
Jen is neither a typical villain nor a persona of heroic proportions in the conventional sense of chivalry inherent in the notion of wuxia. |
|
The answer came when one delegate rose to address the notion of political action by the labour movement. |
|
In view of such a unilateral rejection, it is amazing that anyone should continue to cling to the false notion of universal acceptance. |
|
The Huron word orenda, for example, is a complex word that is similar to the notion of prayer but is not quite as submissive as that. |
|
The notion of kin may be extended to those not related by blood or marriage with the tradition of naming godparents. |
|
On the whole, locally upheld cultural ideals support a notion of the relational or connective self. |
|
But also you have to get rid of this free-trade rhetoric and jargon, because it's kind of a religious devotion to the notion of free trade. |
|
|
It was the last myth that anyone needed, least of all those who loathe the notion of intractability. |
|
Gone is the notion of providing all services anytime, anywhere, which has been replaced with a more specific list. |
|
Here we see the notion of a law of nature that informs human society as well as nature. |
|
Instead the papers are permeated with a modernistic and very individualistic notion of gender. |
|
The notion of zombified masses sitting around accepting Novak's every word has always been a fond one. |
|
The notion of local residency was forged long before globalisation changed the living conditions of the world. |
|
Bloom's theory, by contrast, turns on the notion of involuntary imitation, and resistance to it. |
|
What they seemed to entirely be missing in their analysis is the notion of respectability. |
|
The Anglo-Catholics fall back on tradition and the theologically invalid notion of the priest representing Christ at the altar. |
|
She links knowing through hearing to the notion of responsiveness, in that hearing is more personal than seeing. |
|
It is this Burkean notion of rhetoric which animates the spaces of everyday life. |
|
In explaining his conclusion, Dixon, the strict legalist, relied on a broad political and philosophical notion of the rule of law. |
|
How would the uses of the prints in a devotional context revise Gauguin's notion of the function of his own sacred art? |
|
Some European researchers have now revived the notion of dissociative processes related to somatic states and functions. |
|
Albert Einstein first proposed the notion of antigravity in 1917 and later abandoned it. |
|
He too is the victim of the fashionable notion of rhetoric, logic and truth that was so widely admired at the time. |
|
The notion of integrating the goals of liberal education into students' majors was taken seriously. |
|
Interdisciplinarity and community are critical elements of this learning community's notion of liberal education. |
|
The rhythmic motives in Beethoven's Fifth Symphony suggest the notion of the knocking of fate at your door. |
|
It rather gives the lie to the notion of him as the swaggering self-confident leader of a superpower putting the world to rights. |
|
|
However, he was unable to articulate his thoughts on the subject in a manner that would transform that abstract notion of humility into reality. |
|
We might think of a notion of ascesis not only as articulated by Walter Pater but also as expressed in the work of scholars like Leo Bersani. |
|
How would you link his notion of the time-image, with its loosening of the sensory-motor connection, to the jazz-image? |
|
You can't have a notion of the rule of law and not have access to judicial review. |
|
The very notion of trying to sell Spanish cars labelled this man a fool and a loser. |
|
This led to a labor theory of intellectual production that was assimilable to the Marxist notion of the labor theory of value. |
|
Well, nobody's comfortable at first blush with the notion of not divulging everything. |
|
For the Actionists, as for the artists cited above, there is no notion of sacrilege or blasphemy. |
|
The notion of checks and balances as a safeguard against tyranny is something that I think can have applicability all around the world. |
|
Their didactic import encompasses salient aspects of Buddhist doctrine, especially the traditional notion of human transience. |
|
This is yet another complication to the notion of recreating authentically an Elizabethan performance. |
|
Some quarters in Pakistan continue to sustain the old notion of two-nation theory. |
|
They also have to buy into the notion of self care, rather than trust in magic bullets. |
|
The post-modernist movement challenged the Modernist notion of the avant-garde. |
|
My first thought on the notion of civilian use is the potential for financial hanky-panky. |
|
The junior leading men, admirable technicians to whom the notion of charisma is alien, don't appear destined for stardom. |
|
An example is the notion of eugenics, a painful memory in the history of science. |
|
As the brutal realities of civil war exploded the idealistic notion of America as a utopian paradise, romantic naturalism lost its allure. |
|
He switched to schmaltzy ballads that reinforced a cartoon notion of Greece. |
|
The girls all followed, smiling broadly at the notion of a cute, manipulatable guy staying in their house. |
|
|
In his conception of bad faith, Sartre is hitting upon the notion of responsibility. |
|
It is incompatible with the notion of a fixed term appointment that it is terminable at pleasure. |
|
He weighed in the next day with a piece in which he scorned the very notion of scientific inquiry because of its inherent limitations. |
|
The very notion of a textless manifesto has a mischievous and distinctively Italian flavor. |
|
Aquinas or any number of other theologians could have provided Luther with a richer notion of grace. |
|
Acceptance of the mass media entails a shift in our notion of what culture is. |
|
It did not say that, and we will not have a bar of the notion of people rumoured to have criminal backgrounds being treated as criminals. |
|
The use to which the wealth is put, and Jahangir's almost flippant attitude toward his riches, activates the notion of the ignorant barbarian. |
|
The notion of legal matrimony as a blessed union of souls is as misconstrued as it is unnecessary. |
|
But be that as it may, we'd no notion of bringing trouble like this down on your house. |
|
The notion of searching and finding one's bashert, or soul mate, seems a little less mystical in this cool-eyed context. |
|
This is illustrated by the search for basophilia, using the cationic dye toluidine blue, and the notion of metachromasia. |
|
So the stark ontology of the mechanical philosopher is established a priori by appealing to a notion of intelligibility. |
|
Yet the notion of the thrusting career woman, starkly contrasted to the selfless home-maker, lurks unhelpfully in the background. |
|
I like the notion of a library as a treasure chest, since it operates as a dual metaphor. |
|
His notion of the mind as a self-regulating system is in line with modern ideas on cybernetics. |
|
In an attempt to recover some notion of dignity and self-respect, he encourages his wife to straighten out her life. |
|
Both oppose the contemporary notion of an independent, self-sufficient, wholly autonomous self. |
|
The notion of action signs in semasiological theory, for example, presupposes a view of human beings as meaning-making agents. |
|
However, this, too, does not really present a serious difficulty for the notion of time travel into the past. |
|
|
The Zen-derived notion of spontaneous improvisation became the essence of bebop, the post-war jazz movement. |
|
Arguments for tino rangatiratanga are addressed through an appeal to the notion of local sovereignty. |
|
You know, it's time to throw out this archaic notion of age 30 as old or beginning middle age or whatever it is that gets people in such a tizzy. |
|
He used the notion of a limit point to give closure axioms to define a topological space. |
|
What is the power of a computer which can change the very notion of the topology of the underlying circuit connectivity? |
|
In rejecting this challenge, the Court drew the distinction between the common law notion of lawful and unlawful belligerents. |
|
But for all the possible variants, the word and notion of shalom has a radical nuance in our church context. |
|
At this year's Hong Kong Book Fair, there will be a number of talks about the notion of trans-border literature. |
|
In this context, going beyond the form means transcending the notion of bread as commodity and examining the labor that made it possible. |
|
And a number of them just simply found this notion of beyond reasonable doubt impossible to comprehend. |
|
The notion of particularity serves both politically and epistemologically to blur the transmutation of socialism back into capitalism. |
|
It flows from the principle of autonomy and the minimalist notion of welfare already developed in Chapter 2 above. |
|
Their notion of identity means transposing the values of their own culture to here because they are afraid of integration and assimilation. |
|
I held on by him, for he had set me all of a tremble with his notion of a sail in sight, and watched for the Long-boat again. |
|
We're not going to have the Government use shoddy, tawdry little tricks to drum up the notion of fear and then fail on competence. |
|
Perper stressed the notion of survival and reproduction in defining biosocial functionality. |
|
The notion of social partnership contrasts with the tradition of class struggle and social mobilization. |
|
The substitutability principle is none other than a generalization of the very notion of tropology. |
|
But the ingrained assumption that we are legislator, judge, jury and executioner mocks any notion of global order. |
|
Will the press buy the notion of putting out these more moderate faces in the spotlight means that it's a more moderate party? |
|
|
But as a formation modularity lacks the notion of semiotic play and drift that is for many the overriding feature of postmodernity. |
|
The notion of despotism masquerading as liberation was part of the Victorian liberal stereotype of tsardom. |
|
The whole notion of enlightenment is talked of as some fugue like bliss state, with corresponding siddhis, or omnipotence or whatever. |
|
But what's different about this human depiction of God, this notion of monotheism, is that it transfers real material scarcity to divinity. |
|
Quantum mechanics contradicts the notion of real only if one takes a naive, simplistic view of reality. |
|
For in our account the notion of law-like connection is taken as a largely unanalysed primitive. |
|
It was here that the notion of Vote for Change as a moveable multi-artist feast first began to germinate. |
|
Now, just like with rock music philosophy, blues rests on the notion of the mythological, endless Saturday night. |
|
The entire notion of me lying in a hospital bed terrifies me, no wonder I find this bed uncomfortable. |
|
The notion of a slam is to return poetry to the people by transforming it into an interactive art form. |
|
Dembski sets out to fashion a workable notion of supernatural intervention. |
|
In a post-Puritan age, of course, the notion of trial and temptation has been transposed from its original religious setting into a moral thought pattern. |
|
Some politicians take recourse to a fudge, and sell the notion of India as a soft power. |
|
The dashboard and interior trim have been designed to set a new benchmark for the segment in terms of touch and feel quality, adding a new notion of prestige to the C-segment. |
|
The rush to judge kids on their good behavior has been accelerated by the notion of emotional intelligence. |
|
From early in its history, the United States rested on the notion of a large class of small proprietors and owners. |
|
Has the notion of solidarity escaped him in his flight for respectability? |
|
Indeed, in our modern mindset, we take the notion of the tormentor and merely blot it out, wishing away its existence without really addressing the underlying causes. |
|
It uses the narrative as a way to investigate the notion of architectural metamorphosis and redemption, and it does so by means of powerful installation pieces. |
|
In it, she draws from the Greek myth of Narcissus, the young man who falls in love with his own reflection, and plays with that notion of desire and passion for self. |
|
|
Somewhere along the line, the notion of birding as a hobby flew the coop. |
|
In modern or popular Kabbalah we have those practitioners who have added the idea of both an eleventh sephira and the notion of the dark side of the tree. |
|
One of the most active courts in history, the Warren court overturned the notion of separate but equal public education and ordered school desegregation. |
|
The notion of anarchy so appalled the conservative Reagan, he came out against Briggs, and it was defeated. |
|
In contrast to previous research, the results of the current study did not support the notion of an increase in self-esteem following the incorporation of body art. |
|
Basically, the biggest comedy blockbuster of the summer ridiculed the very notion of the summer blockbuster itself. |
|
Day-Lewis often returns to the notion of play when talking about his work. |
|
Philosophers trained in modern logic may accordingly feel that there is something either obscure or else superficial in the notion of irreducibly tensed predication. |
|
The immediate problem with these reformulations of doctrine, of course, is the extent to which they fulfill Ritschl's notion of a revelational rediscovery. |
|
I find the notion of the proposed boycott loathsome and frightening. |
|
The university's masterplan for the campus was initially based on the notion of a single interconnected megastructure, similar to the Free University of Berlin. |
|
The notion of an autonomous government or investment spending that does not rely on or affect private sector savings is part of the multiplier's myth. |
|
They also tapped into the notion of a fair go, and whilst the media image of them as bludgers had sunk in, the Australian people said that the government was not being fair. |
|
But at the time I was so pessimistic that the notion of staying and fighting just seemed like an empty gesture. |
|
Both were protests against bulimia and the culture's notion of body image. |
|
The second moment of our antinomy introduces the notion of a concept. |
|
I'd always tee-heed at the notion of attending a fan convention. |
|
For this reason, it has been identified with the notion of deity in numerous cultures and finds symbolic expression in such universal configurations as the mandala. |
|
This notion of fashion as a kind of wearable narrative is in evidence at industry gatherings like frieze and Art Basel. |
|
The notion of specificity in linguistics is notoriously non-specific. |
|
|
The notion of the South as a rural idyll begins with the Arcadian visions of artists such as Samuel Palmer and John Linnell, inspired by the Kent landscape. |
|
There is no notion of San Francisco's tumultuous and venerable gay history. |
|
He is immediately answered by the female spectator who is obviously up-to-date with recent critical developments and the Lockean notion of tabula rasa. |
|
The familiar notion of the press as a watchdog for government only arose much later. |
|
But Brooke was out of step with the New Left and its notion of radical chic. |
|
The politics of class war are safely neutered by storylines that feature an egalitarian, uniting notion of decency. |
|
His notion of synchronicity is that there is an acausal principle that links events having a similar meaning by their coincidence in time rather than sequentially. |
|
But it was also this notion of how much attention our relationship had gotten, this kind of Camelot feel to it. |
|
It beguiles the notion of free thought, and the idea that academic freedom stands above political difference. |
|
They embraced the notion of a growing America, whose economy could be expanded for the benefit of the majority. |
|
I will argue that the validity of the notion of deponency is questionable in light of a closer look at the function and meaning of the middle voice in Greek. |
|
The notion of a possible hurricane in South Florida in late August was not exactly a state secret. |
|
Drawing on the Renjaminian notion of translatability outlined above, I will now explore the difficulties inherent in translating Manzoni's I promessi sposi. |
|
There was no gunpowder found on her skin, supporting the notion of a shot not fired at extreme close range. |
|
But I think my favourite part of his talk was the notion of urban cooling or making perfectly good leisure space into workspace through mobile computing. |
|
Now, its descendent organizations are dedicated to advancing the 20th-century throwback notion of the primacy of the nation-state. |
|
The problems with this concept include the role of food enzymes in digestion, their survival through gastric acidity and the notion of a body pool of enzymes. |
|
He laughed at the notion of the White House calling Greenwald and imploring him to hold off on publication. |
|
Challenges of this kind confront their notion of who they are, puncturing their complacency and wounding their egos, so that they are rarely able to resist responding. |
|
The play's more engaging theme is found in the moral struggle the characters encounter as they wrestle with the notion of integrity in the face of their grasping egos. |
|
|
She deploys Roland Barthes's notion of readerly and writerly texts to contextualize Bulosan's social realism and Yamamoto's heretofore overlooked experimentalism. |
|
So you're interested in turning your PC into a digital video recorder, but the notion of opening your computer to install a TV-tuner card gives you the shakes. |
|
The most basic and important concept the two writers share is the notion of literature as mystery, as multilevelled expression with hidden meanings. |
|
They have worked to toxify the very notion of disability benefit. |
|
The whole notion of the transporter, which is admittedly one of the favorite devices in this mythos, created scores of problems in a dramatic context. |
|
In it he arrives at the startling notion of the Great War as one that was pre-mourned. |
|
But one man's notion of a masterwork may be another's idea of a folly. |
|
A year ago the notion of a huge and lucrative Facebook IPO looked like a slam-dunk. |
|
I suppose if you get obsessed with the notion of being a writer more than the writing itself, that would be bad. |
|
Hay suggests, intriguingly, that Romanticism is predicated on a notion of friendship. |
|
For me the notion of mixing the warm light of fire with the cool light of dusk, that created a color palette. |
|
And those now have very little to do with any notion of excellence, either of character or of comportment. |
|
Now we have the notion of an adjunction, along with its unit and counit. |
|
Ataman uses film to explore the notion of true confessions and reportage. |
|
As Puar further pointed out, this notion of a global gay identity is easily manipulated. |
|
Each piece is untitled, thus amplifying the notion of uncharted discovery. |
|
The last piece of this puzzle is the notion of an adjunction. |
|
For a mere generation, UK-wide public policy had matched the notion of Scottish egalitarianism, at least moderately. |
|
But by then, the police were a living joke, the punch line to a thousand donut jokes and a grafting, bribe taking tarnish on the notion of civil service. |
|
His justification for considering himself the ultimate team player yet eschewing the notion of collective responsibility in public forums is that he is from another era. |
|
|
A strong believer in the notion of rule by divine right, Charles I, King of England and Scotland, persecuted religious dissenters. |
|
The notion of Tindall in a pinny sounds as likely as Heather Mills in a yashmak. |
|
This, from a Baptist, who explores the notion of otherness in the context of the differences he encounters with and within his own tradition. |
|
On my view, the notion of moral oughtness or duty is not explicable simply in terms of the concepts of goodness and badness. |
|
Yet Paul has consistently entertained the notion of teaming up with Assad. |
|
Mind you, those biccies can't come cheap, and the latest subject for the suits to chew on is the notion of sin-bins. |
|
The notion of winning has a typically English mordancy attached to it. |
|
For a notion of autonomy that is more contentful, and is less variable, is also a notion that is in competition with other things we hold dear. |
|
Ironically, the pressure for the money shot corrupts the notion of having regular people talking about regular issues. |
|
With Geithner, it all goes to the whole notion of creditworthiness. |
|
Admittedly, asseverating the very notion of complete freedom goes against the very purpose and scope of that to which the notion refers. |
|
The very notion of a surrealist theater remains today difficult to grasp, even for the most knowledgeable and astute critic. |
|
I don't like the notion of reading all these sobby stories, that this team isn't doing good because such-and-such a star is injured. |
|
To most people, the notion of a C-section being like a rape is shocking. |
|
The American Gaming Association, an industry lobbying group, has also pushed back against the notion of oversaturation. |
|
Certainly his clothes support this notion of impending takeover. |
|
It is the notion of preconstruction that determines which of the two copulae has to be used. |
|
The war has polarised the European countries, and the Indians are fighting for independence, fostering the notion of Gandhism. |
|
He also summarizes string theory, the expansionary model of the universe, and the notion of multiverses. |
|
United by the notion of the nudest nudist, the very phrase appeals to a sense of authenticity by connoting the self stripped back. |
|
|
Teachers report children of seven turning up in nappies because the notion of lavatory training escapes their begetters. |
|
These works read as a self-reflexive literalization of the notion of the copy. |
|
Having glimpsed spruikers and slithey-sales people at work on American TV shows the notion of a radiomicrophone arose. |
|
In just a few minutes of discussion with him, it became apparent to me that the notion of turning Holly's sugar beets into gasohol was absurd. |
|
Science is founded on the notion of the rationality and logicality of nature. |
|
This political maneuver wanes on the doctrines of presentment and bicameralism, and the very notion of majority rule. |
|
It is this notion of growth as a movement out of and beyond the private space of childhood that the Bildungsroman indexes. |
|
Could you talk a minute about the notion of being an unreliable narrator? |
|
For many, the notion of meeting Duncan Bannatyne, from the TV series Dragons' Den, is enough to make them a nervous wreck. |
|
Or may it even be regarded as a partitive genitive in the sense that the notion of God forms part of life on earth? |
|
Derivatives give an exact meaning to the notion of change in output with respect to change in input. |
|
Spain does not divide its nationals by ethnic group, although it does maintain an official notion of minority languages. |
|
The notion of common denominators for several religions and traditions of India was already noted from the 12th century CE on. |
|
Advertising promoted the notion of how the UK 2011 census would help to shape Britain's future in areas such as healthcare and education. |
|
An important idea in the definition of a university is the notion of academic freedom. |
|
The neopositivists subscribed to a notion of philosophy as the conceptual clarification of the methods, insights and discoveries of the sciences. |
|
Marx's notion of communist society and human freedom is thus radically individualistic. |
|
The beginnings of the sonata form took shape in the canzona, as did a more formalized notion of theme and variations. |
|
The current notion of state sovereignty contains four aspects consisting of territory, population, authority and recognition. |
|
However, during the later part of the 19th century and early part of the 20th century the notion of a distinctive Welsh polity gained credence. |
|
|
The new power of the monarch was given a basis by the notion of the divine right of kings to rule over their subjects. |
|
The notion of a free trade system encompassing multiple sovereign states originated in a rudimentary form in 16th century Imperial Spain. |
|
Jinnah rejected the notion of a united India, and emphasised that religious communities were more basic than an artificial nationalism. |
|
Religious law refers to the notion of a religious system or document being used as a legal source, though the methodology used varies. |
|
The UK social security system is characterised by a residual welfare state model based on the notion of market dominance and private provision. |
|
Within this historical contexts, the notion of reproductive rights has developed. |
|
Others, like Charles Taylor and Will Kymlicka, argue that the notion of the autonomous individual is itself a cultural construct. |
|
Thomas disliked being regarded as a provincial poet, and decried any notion of 'Welshness' in his poetry. |
|
As with the dialectic, Marx began with a Hegelian notion of alienation but developed a more materialist conception. |
|
Consequently, neoracists substantiate their position with an essentialist notion of culture or way of life. |
|
In essence, without the notion of nondog qualities against which to compare inequalities, we could have no concept of dog. |
|
Many clans have often claimed mythological founders that reinforced their status and gave a romantic and glorified notion of their origins. |
|
However, during the latter part of the 19th century and early part of the 20th century the notion of a distinctive Welsh polity gained credence. |
|
What hath been generally agreed on, I content myself to assume under the notion of principles. |
|
Unfortunately, there is a nugget of truth to the notion of black and Hispanic tensions but, like politics, the friction tends to be very local. |
|
The entire notion of cheerleading is just a sexist attempt to try to objectify the female body. |
|
The notion of overfishing hinges on what is meant by an acceptable level of fishing. |
|
Contrary to the popular notion of snakes being slimy because of possible confusion of snakes with worms, snakeskin has a smooth, dry texture. |
|
There was also a larger notion of community as, generally, several families shared a place where they wintered. |
|
The institutionalization of these devices cultivated the notion of terror from above. |
|
|
Another occasionally used criterion for discriminating dialects from languages is the sociolinguistic notion of linguistic authority. |
|
Examples include the rise of the notion of efficiency in terms of human productivity, and the challenges of bioethics. |
|
From an early date the East Frankish kingdom had a more formalised notion of royal election than West Francia. |
|
The European and the anthropological notion of consanguinity, of blood relationship and descent, rest on precisely the opposite kind of value. |
|
The notion of a distinct northern European race was also rejected by several anthropologists on craniometric grounds. |
|
Internal colonialism is a notion of uneven structural power between areas of a state. |
|
The notion of the Levant has undergone a dynamic process of historical evolution in usage, meaning, and understanding. |
|
Parallel to this is an interest in the notion of post factum documentation, that is, when the 'designerly' drawings have supposedly stopped. |
|
Organization relied on reciprocity and redistribution because these societies had no notion of market or money. |
|
We show that this model is meaningful for the notion of presortedness, while still being mathematically tractable. |
|
This is consistent with the general notion of hegemony and imperium of historical empires. |
|
Perhaps even more significantly, with the advent of the Reformation, the notion of Christendom as a unified political entity was destroyed. |
|
Given the notion of a lexeme, it is possible to distinguish two kinds of morphological rules. |
|
The notion of syllable is challenged by languages that allow long strings of obstruents without any intervening vowel or sonorant. |
|
She does not fully articulate the notion of discourse status and its relation to accent marking. |
|
The term may have arisen from the notion of a clumsy or rough manner of speaking. |
|
The 1559 Book retained the truncated Prayer of Consecration which omitted any notion of objective sacrifice. |
|
In that latter sense, Buddhism is of course atheological, rejecting as it does the notion of God. |
|
In cognitive linguistics, the notion of conceptual metaphor may be equivalent to that of analogy. |
|
Greek philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle actually used a wider notion of analogy. |
|
|
In all of these cases, the wide Platonic and Aristotelian notion of analogy was preserved. |
|
In its answer to this last question, the Supreme Court formalizes the notion of judicial review. |
|
The concept of tradition, as the notion of holding on to a previous time, is also found in political and philosophical discourse. |
|
Originally, the notion of in rem jurisdiction arose in situations in which property was identified but the owner was unknown. |
|
A notion of the transcendent, supernatural, or numinous, usually involving entities like ghosts, demons, or deities, is a cultural universal. |
|
In fact, the very notion of restraint has become an aberration. |
|
The notion of the smaller or sociocosmic universe is integrally tied to the Puranic notion of dharma. |
|
In written sources, the notion of ethnic Turkishness originated with European enthusiasts in the mid-nineteenth century. |
|
With the notion of uncorrelatedness for random variables under the sublinear expectation, a weak law of large numbers is obtained. |
|
None of these findings support a notion of clear national boundedness and an intrinsic preference of people for one group or another. |
|
The denaturing and mechanizing of the biological kingdom eliminated intrinsic value and replaced it with John Locke's notion of utility value. |
|
This notion of relating to our media as servomechanisms raises the question of human agency. |
|
Edward Said's notion of the complicity between colonialism and Orientalism is well known. |
|
Color charge is a fundamental property of quarks, which has analogies with the notion of electric charge of particles. |
|
At one of the dim cross-roads they had made a misturn, and were now wandering around without the slightest notion of where they were going. |
|
We examine the notion of anticonfinement in the context of the singularity analysis of discrete systems. |
|
We extend to the category of crossed modules of Leibniz algebras the notion of biderivation via the action of a Leibniz algebra. |
|
It was a little vain, perhaps, but the notion of cronehood sent me immediately to my mirror. |
|
I was forced to rethink my notion of disadvantagedness and to define disadvantage in more than economic terms. |
|
An important tool for the study of laterally complete Riesz spaces is the notion of the dominable set, which is introduced next. |
|