There will be a focus on training practices, skill repertoires and recruitment for managerial, technical and engineering groups. |
|
Languages have alphabets, or character repertoires, but computers deal with digits. |
|
I did not have the rich reading repertoires of my fellow English dons and I had a much stronger social-political awareness than most of them. |
|
Because this opening is a mainstay in the repertoires of tens of thousands of amateurs. |
|
As well as performing items from their own repertoires, both choirs will sing together on two pieces. |
|
These platforms can include other music publishers' repertoires or the entire repertoire of existing societies. |
|
Goffman successfully shows that all members of society employ complex repertoires of interaction skills to control and sustain ongoing social relations. |
|
She knew how to adapt to the repertoires of each country, and sang in many languages. |
|
Whatever the method adopted, the rule of non-discrimination between the national and international repertoires must be respected. |
|
His works are represented in the repertoires of over eighty dance companies around the world. |
|
To encourage the diversity of musical repertoires, to support the diversity of motion picture expressions, to promote local talents and enhance heritage are objectives shared by the various business in the group. |
|
The categories of gagaku music have varied over time as Japanese foreign relations have shifted and as new repertoires have been incorporated into the tradition. |
|
Therefore different cell lines containing different repertoires of enzymes will glycosylate the same protein in a cell specific manner. |
|
Here we outline the main institutional repertoires of integrationists and accommodationists, and the debate between supporters of the two approaches. |
|
Charles Rosen's new book investigates the piano's cultural history, its repertoires and institutions and its crucial impact on the history of music. |
|
And today's repertoires might at least feature once-exotic dishes such as pasta. Nor has the tradition of family eating declined as much as is commonly supposed. |
|
Joshua Feltman, the head of a chapter in New York, recently began hosting open-mic nights, where groups who share musical repertoires take turns on stage. |
|
Males with larger repertoires had chicks that were heavier at fledging, and more of these chicks survived to breed than offspring of males with smaller repertoires. |
|
Belugas and dolphins have incredibly varied vocal repertoires. |
|
The organisation also wanted to encourage change in the repertoires of the theatres, and to encourage more female dramatists, actors and stage managers to appear in the coming years. |
|
|
These contracts tend to privilege the more commercial and profitable musical repertoires and may lead to the disappearance of the smaller organisations that deal with authors' rights. |
|
Her proposal, which safeguards local repertoires, does seem to us, however, to be a little too favourable to distributors and thus carries the risk of dumping, to the detriment of rightholders. |
|
In addition to their respective repertoires, the two groups will also perform several musical numbers together, offering colourful and highly rhythmical entertainment. |
|
The source of the sdAbs is a newly constructed, high quality, phage display library comprised of the variable domains of the heavy chain antibody repertoires of a camel, a llama and an alpaca. |
|
In comparison with the OR gene repertoires in rodents and dogs which are macrosmatic animals, primates are thought to have relatively fewer number of intact OR genes and higher fraction of pseudogenes. |
|
Encouraging diversity in musical repertoires and cinematographic expression, developing local talent and promoting cultural heritage are among the many objectives shared by the different activities of the group. |
|
Ultimately, you're rather left with the impression that all you've done is check out whether Dutronc still has one of the greatest repertoires of French chanson. |
|
The handbook thus recombines the key-concepts, the repertoires of strategies and the suggestions of activities in the form of practical fact sheets. |
|
Fostering the diversity of musical repertoires, encouraging all kinds of cinematographic expressions, promoting local talents, and enhancing cultural heritage are all objectives shared by the various professions of the group. |
|
The Commission therefore had concerns that the merger would give Universal the ability and the incentive to increase prices for online rights as regards Anglo-American repertoires. |
|
Acoustic Traits Female European starlings prefer males with large repertoires which indicate developmental stress. |
|
The Principals and Flutes, though historically found on a single manual, have here been spread over two manuals, thus allowing for the performance of other repertoires in addition to the early Italian. |
|
When their repertoires weren't to do with ethnomusicology, they were usually dominated by theatrical singing known as Kalon' ny fahiny, also referred to as Malagasy operetta and mainly found on the island's high plains. |
|
The peptide repertoires of HLA-B27 subtypes differentially associated to spondyloarthropathy differ by specific changes at three anchor positions. |
|
While less gregarious canids generally possess simple repertoires of visual signals, wolves have more varied signals that subtly inter grade in intensity. |
|
Items from the shanty and sea song repertoire have been brought into the repertoires of performers of folk music, rock, and Western classical music. |
|