However, the profiles of the posterior probability distributions were proximate. |
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The 60 cities with federally reported dietary levels of radioactivity are often not proximate to nuclear sites. |
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All of the men we interviewed lived in areas that are proximate to the U.S., with regular access to American media. |
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Another theorist has labelled similar effects in social organization more generally as mediate and proximate structuration. |
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He imagines the past not as something temporally distant, to be recalled, but as something spatially proximate, to be touched. |
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This is thought to be a proximate explanation that results in the tropics being more biodiverse than the temperate zone. |
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The proximate causes of this revulsion against liberalism in Italy, Germany, and elsewhere are not far to seek. |
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Acting in furtherance of interests which were self-motivated and self-fashioned, he freed himself of proximate, merely fashionable, pursuits. |
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This proximate composition of the water may therefore be rendered centesimally as follows. |
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While the three proximate hypotheses differ, they are not mutually exclusive and all associate clonality with the high shore. |
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The scale yields a social age and a social quotient, which can be considered a proximate intelligence quotient. |
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The determinative issue is whether the proximate cause of the loss was the fire or the act of vandalism. |
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Seasonal variation in the moon's path through the night sky changes the variance in ambient moonlight between proximate new moons and full moons. |
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So, its causal relationship with the primary negligence is very proximate and most immediate, in our submission. |
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We discuss our findings with respect to proximate and ultimate hypotheses regarding the causes and significance of polyandry in female birds. |
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There is no theory which would suggest that the men who are proximate to these children would be other than consanguine kin. |
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Symbols overlap where sampled populations are sympatric or geographically proximate. |
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At the same time, calcium-rich annulated spheroids appear at the apical ends of the proximate and middle enterocytes. |
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The proximate causes of these movements are internal to the turnspit, the projectile, and the clock at the time of the movement. |
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The Inspectors observe, however, that self-reliance can be pursued at present only as a long-term goal and not as a proximate possibility. |
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We cannot wall off the plight of those whose lives are proximate to our own. |
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Even among those who rank, at least by economic criteria, as middle-class, the most proximate precedent for their dress style is that of medieval varlets. |
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In theatre your contact with your audience is immediate and proximate. |
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If the proximate causes of that crisis have abated, the underlying challenges facing Timorese youth remain very much in place. |
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For a moment let us observe that instrumental music, when used in the public worship service, is for the immediate and proximate accompaniment of congregational singing. |
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In his view, the proximate cause of this wealth decline was subprime and predatory lending. |
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The rising cost of health insurance is the proximate cause of middle-class income stagnation. |
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But it will not stop the mentally ill from reaping carnage because the proximate cause of their carnage is disease, not hardware. |
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A falling dollar and trade spats were the proximate causes of this latest rally. |
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In each of 8 areas downwind and proximate to closed nuclear power plants, infant deaths declined in excess of national trends during the first 2 yr following shutdown. |
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While oral-history interviews are inevitably determined by retrospection, letters reflect immediate concerns and retain a proximate link with the past. |
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It brings out the distance and doubt that festered within the proximate intimacy of the Marston family. |
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In other cases, it is taking on more proximate cause issues, such as problems at the level of communities and municipalities. |
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The project will enable 14 family units or individuals to enjoy a good standard of accommodation, proximate to all facilities and close to their native communities. |
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One has two ways to evaluate the regional importance of a proximate cause of deforestation. |
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Defence expenditures are a third category of proximate indicator of global stability, and for our purposes regional stability. |
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Much of the empirical research on fixed income, equity, and foreign exchange markets says that order flow is indeed a proximate driver of price. |
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The increased number of divorces and births outside of marriage is now considered the proximate cause behind these tendencies. |
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For example, where there are proximate levels of need, responses are not necessarily proportionate. |
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We have here proximate indicators that tell us something about the regional stability of central Asia and the Caucasus. |
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In 2004, the more distant of the two would have had to pay only 1.3 times the air freight price paid by the proximate exporter. |
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As such proximate environments cause people to make decisions based on existing situations and anticipated situations. |
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These areas, however, are all proximate to infrastructure such as bridges and do not take into account other variables that may increase the risks. |
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The proximate spark was apparently a parking dispute. |
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This fact raised the legal issue of whether Sutton's negligence in permitting Hunt to leave work while intoxicated was the proximate cause of the accident. |
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One of the grounds of appeal argued by the employer was that even if it had been negligent, its negligence was not the proximate cause of Hunt's injuries, due to her having had more to drink at the pub before the accident. |
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In South America, forests are most often cleared to grow cattle and soybeans while in South-East Asia, cultivation of oil palm and exploitation of wood products are the leading proximate causes of deforestation. |
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The species is named for the large hollow thorns on its branches, but is best known for the symbiotic relationship that it shares with creatures in its proximate environment. |
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In proximate preparation, especially today, the engaged must be given formation and strengthened in the values concerning the defense of human life. |
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The 18-24 cohort shows a sharp increase in automobile fatalities over the proximate age groupings. |
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Compared to many other factors that contribute to an endangered species, nutritional stress is the most proximate cause to population decline. |
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These have helped in finding the proximate causes of circadian and seasonal cycles. |
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Some jurisdictions recognize five elements, duty, breach, actual cause, proximate cause, and damages. |
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The United States generally recognizes four elements to a negligence action, duty, breach, proximate causation and injury. |
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For example, a crime involves harm to a person, the person's action must be the but for cause and proximate cause of the harm. |
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Determination of proximate composition, fatty acid content and aminoacid profile of five lesser-common sea organism from the Mediterranean Sea. |
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The two countries are proximate to each other and many Saudis and Bahrainis have familial relations. |
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They said that Hyderabad is a small district whose all four talukas are proximate to each other. |
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There are both distal and proximate causes which can be traced in the historical factors affecting globalization. |
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By the 1840s, Ireland was so dependent on the potato that the proximate cause of the Great Famine was a potato disease. |
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The plaintiff need not allege or prove proximate cause, which would indicate that the result of the defendant's actions was reasonably foreseeable. |
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Unfortunately, Alba appears out of her element in both roles, particularly with respect to her attempt to proximate believable accents for her characters. |
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In addition these points of high ground are proximate to the Elsick Mounth, an ancient trackway used by Romans and Caledonians for military manoeuvres. |
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Cultivation, proximate composition and mineral content of Sclerotia. |
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The proximate cause was OPEC's sextupling of the price of oil. |
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It exists in differing degrees among many related or geographically proximate languages of the world, often in the context of a dialect continuum. |
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However, we can address maladaptive shoulds by examining the differences between prior events, causes, proximate causes, and moral responsibility. |
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Forrester is generally recognized as the first appearance, although ironically in this case the judge found the victim to be the sole proximate cause of the injury. |
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By contrast, football is widely considered to have been the final proximate cause for the Football War in June 1969 between El Salvador and Honduras. |
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Pei's handsome plate-glass windows looks even rosier than usual, a cloying and false alternative to the more proximate industrial existence that Flavin evokes. |
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Proximate preparation is all that transpires generally from, say, late October through December, in terms of anticipations and plans. |
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Proximate cause means that you must be able to show that the harm was caused by the tort you are suing for. |
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Proximate control and adaptive potential of protandrous migration in birds. |
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Proximate composition, fatty acids and lipid class composition of the muscle from deep sea teleost and elasmobranch. |
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Proximate causes of sexual size dimorphism in the iguanian lizard Microlophus occipitalis. |
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