We took special glee in laughing at all the ice-skaters' hilarious rig-outs and the obscure terminology that seems to go with that activity. |
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The fundamental theorem of calculus becomes almost obvious once the nonstandard terminology is invoked and interpreted in its full literality. |
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In trying to avoid American terminology, your album tries to translate everything into a Britishness. |
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But he uses the legal term of judge to describe the role of priest confessor, and that terminology is far from my mind when I give absolution. |
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With terminology cribbed from 1960s computerese, DNA was suggested as the source of both data and instructions. |
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Wedding and death ceremonies have pilfered their terminology from The Book of Common Prayer. |
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In fact the framework and terminology for information theory he developed remains standard today. |
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Obtuse terminology squashes out the real words, leaving you with a strange sense of emptiness. |
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In modern terminology we say that the set of valid formulas of first-order logic is recursively enumerable. |
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I realise that the army's history and terminology is an unknown jungle to many. |
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My use of declinist terminology notwithstanding, I do not necessarily share the pessimism. |
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Moreover, while frequent use of presentist terminology may aid in understanding, it risks misconstruing the nineteenth century. |
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How, exactly, does the terminology usually regarded by logicians as logical work in making it the case that one sentence follows from others? |
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The legal terminology for a ferry permit is called a special flight permit. |
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The questions required knowledge of some words, but also of an irregular verb form and some grammatical terminology. |
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Even if true, the impreciseness of this sort of terminology still leaves many questions unanswered. |
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By now you know all the terminology, but you don't know if a bouncing ball is a fumble until you watch it on replay from five different angles. |
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It delinks behavior from older terminology bracketing both structure and process. |
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Some background familiarity with philosophy is assumed, but no detailed knowledge of texts or terminology. |
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The complete quadrilateral is nothing but a 4-line in Morley's terminology. |
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I have no quarrel with your terminology except that it has connotations of teenage American witches in my mind. |
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Lay persons shouldn't be expected to understand medical jargon or complex terminology. |
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Australians drink coffee in smaller cups, our baristas tend to swirl the milk a little less, and we have completely different terminology. |
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Martin is a patient teacher and he familiarises us with sailing etiquette and terminology without overloading us with technical information. |
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If the substantive law of security could be more rational, so too could the terminology. |
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The first stumbling block for most students is the specialized terminology of agrostology. |
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What they did develop was an algorithmic approach to solving problems which, in our terminology, would give rise to a quadratic equation. |
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Anatomical terminology and slang exist in competing registers, and offer different possibilities for communication in such contexts. |
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Nevertheless, whatever the terminology employed, the fact remains that gaps or lacunae have been filled by resort to those principles. |
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New Zealand First often finds it difficult to distinguish why and how legal language and terminology can go down that path. |
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Such terminology may also be used for eclipses and occultations, along with their synonyms immersion and emersion. |
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A plaintiff, therefore, was originally just a person who made a complaint, but the word became a fossil of legal terminology many centuries ago. |
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The standard formulations of various scientific principles themselves contain mathematical terminology and involve mathematical objects. |
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While the perianth can lack the corolla, much of the terminology associated with the perianth deals with shapes of sympetalous corollas. |
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But, in precise religious terminology, the word was later confined to the sacrifice of an animal slaughtered for the sake of Allah. |
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In my terminology otherness or alterity is definitional, and specifically polar. |
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The terminology refers to firearms capable of firing fully automatically, regardless of size, weight, or other considerations. |
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In medical terminology, scalpels were long, thin bladed knives used mainly in surgical operations. |
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Both deal with the union of the microcosm with the macrocosm, although they might use different terminology. |
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In this respect, aspects of the Homeric terminology that relate to feasting are particularly interesting. |
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Baxandall's term is adapted from the style terminology for late Gothic, relating the sculpture to broader traditions of taste and craft. |
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Brink makes extensive use of native terminology to explain the essence of Mande aesthetics. |
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It is clear that we must proceed with great care if we are to employ this substantival terminology. |
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There is the problem of geographical diversity of tenurial forms and of terminology. |
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Students were required to perform individual self study of medical terminology. |
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Consumers may well be confused by the technical terminology surrounding lighting. |
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Tea terminology is a matter of concern to tea drinkers and also to cooks who are using tea as a flavouring. |
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I'd like journalists to be as creative as songwriters and come up with some new terminology. |
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In other words, you need to standardize your IT terminology, and you hire terminologists to do that for you. |
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She is sceptical of the Western rejection of the term matriarchy as a failed mirror-image of masculinist terminology. |
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I can refer to you by whatever offensive terminology I like without defaming you, seeing as you're a person of public interest. |
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The classification of tropical karst is highly complex, with a tortuous terminology derived from several languages. |
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Development of the science of metal toxicology has been seriously hindered by the use of incorrect terminology. |
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Robe 11 and Robe III refer respectively to interstadial Substages Sa and Sc according to the terminology of Schwebel. |
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For others, and particularly the formalists, there was virtually nothing but terminology. |
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The game is related to Euler's Knight's Tour problem since, in today's terminology, it asks for a Hamiltonian circuit in a certain graph. |
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Phonetics now has an International Phonetic Alphabet, with agreed parameters, but this is still far from true of wine terminology. |
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In this future setting mankind transposed modern nautical and naval terminology to their spacefaring starships. |
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As Martini used neither Latin terminology nor binomial nomenclature, his ideas were overlooked. |
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Wouldn't it be horrible if all of the confusion and speculation turned out to be just a mix-up in medical terminology? |
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Plainly, then, the modalists did not mean that Father is interchangeable with Son in terminology. |
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Glassman then quickly shifts the terms of discussion, managing both terminology shifts my sidebar describes in just six words. |
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Once again the title of the film serves as a vehicle for the introduction of ufological terminology into the public lexicon. |
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Special kinship terminology exists in both Tamil and Sinhalese for relatives in preferred or prohibited marriage categories. |
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She is cagey about the terminology, though, and doesn't use it in the book. |
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Walk into any ski shop these days, looking for a new pair of skis, and you'll be greeted by a blizzard of colour, shape and terminology. |
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Classification systems vary in terminology, but most distinguish on the basis of the severity of the learning disability. |
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Another weakness of the book is the absence of a section to familiarize nonexpert readers with molecular terminology. |
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Before we enter the mystical realm of organizational symbolism, first let me define the terminology. |
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If you call with a complaint or a problem try to use the correct nomenclature or terminology for the part or problem you are addressing. |
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Galileo adopted some of its terminology, and according to these scholars his method in science was borrowed from that source. |
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In modern terminology, they would sin venially by doing so, but only venially. |
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Two chief factors are those of narrowness of focus and imprecision of terminology. |
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And, what should it do now that the terminology has been naturalized into the vernacular? |
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Another topic to which Aristotle made major contributions was natural philosophy or rather physics by today's terminology. |
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The terminology of appearance and essence in Lukacs' critique of expressionism thus echoed his analysis of the outer archaism and inner modernity of naturalism. |
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We believed that concepts not included in most of the texts analyzed were not globally important enough to the area to be included in the core terminology. |
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Instead, each section introduces important ichthyological concepts and terminology, as well as numerous examples from a diverse range of ray-finned fish families. |
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The word is borrowed by analogy from the terminology of linguistic syntax. |
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I ask her about the terminology and whether she thinks being gay or trans is a choice. |
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According to Schober, this personalization process began way back in 1985 with the terminology itself. |
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The bad seed is the story of how Christine becomes aware that her daughter is, in modern terminology, a psychopath. |
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Despite the confusion on terminology, Grimes does appear to exercise solid technique with her shotgun. |
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The notion that we have to construct the idea of self and an authorial voice in such reductive pronoun-based terminology is, I think, a flawed one. |
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It's not so much that Popper disagreed with Carnap and other inductivists as that he restated their views in a bizarre and cumbersome terminology. |
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In the course of this work, Clark introduced the Ordovician stratigraphical terminology that is still in use in the Saint Lawrence Lowlands today. |
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Questions of terminology, international law, counterproliferation, multilateralism, military effectiveness, and ethical skepticism frame the developing dialogue. |
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Whether in science, philosophy, or religion, the use of recondite terminology has a tendency to impede the dissemination of useful concepts and theories. |
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An easy-to-read guide is circulating within the ranks, via email, offering a tongue-in-cheek explanation to terminology used by the Ministry of Defence. |
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There he was at Murray Park on Friday patiently informing us of the distinctions the continentals make over European trophies and the terminology utilised. |
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Even if someone was formal with him, they would have to be familiar with biochemical jargon and terminology, or Edward would act condescendingly to them. |
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Simpler terminology would be helpful, especially for people more concerned about immediate flooding than meteorological nuances. |
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Introduced in July 1999, the software ignores misspellings, interprets incorrect phraseology or unclear terminology, accepts ambiguity and expects error. |
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A one-day workshop to give DTP operators a good understanding of printing impositions covering terminology, folds and folding systems, plotting imposition layouts etc. |
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Such changes in medical terminology often reflect new cultural attitudes. |
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Recent advances in our understanding of Palaeozoic tectonics, and in the precise dating of tectonic events require exact definitions of terminology. |
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There is a sheep-like tendency among ornithologists to play follow-the-leader with regard to the terminology in this field, and I am as guilty as anyone. |
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So far, attempts to create universal terminology standards or automate the translation between different terminologies have met with limited success, Kaufman says. |
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I've labeled the charges as q and q-bar for quark and antiquark, but that's modern terminology that might not have been present in the early days of string theory. |
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Unfortunately, molar nomenclature was developed for therian mammals, and some of the terminology turns out not to work very well at this fundamental level. |
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Clear terminology, wide margins with boxed highlights, frequent topical headings and the overall layout of the book is very user-friendly for browsers. |
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All sides agreed that it was brought down by a Buk antiaircraft missile, also known as a SA-17 Grizzly in NATO terminology. |
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Although foreigners frequently denoted many smaller summer palaces as seraglios, in the early eighteenth century the terminology was usually associated with Topkapi Palace. |
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Instead of the usual weather forecast laden with meteorological terminology, journalists at the Paris daily have taken to publishing more realistic reports. |
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Furthermore, economic methodologists have created an in-house adaptation of terminology and a way of arguing which makes even the well-intentioned philosopher-listener lost. |
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This terminology was originally introduced by Huxley as part of his concept of memetics analyzing the transmission of cultural information. |
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This division has been appropriated in modern terminology describing the divisions of Germanic languages. |
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Roman engineering had the same effect on scientific terminology as a whole. |
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Latin is a synthetic, fusional language in the terminology of linguistic typology. |
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This system of terminology, however, is not convenient for southeast Anatolia and settlements of the middle Anatolia basin. |
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The historical importance of Roman law is reflected by the continued use of Latin legal terminology in many legal systems influenced by it. |
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The Indonesian language inherited many words from Dutch, both in words for everyday life, and as well in scientific or technological terminology. |
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Several Cornish mining words are used in English language mining terminology, such as costean, gossan, gunnies, kibbal, kieve and vug. |
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The organisations, buildings and terminology remain unique to each country. |
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Most Machiguenga lack personal names. Members of the same tribe are individuated using kin terminology. |
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This may have been influenced by the Greek and Latin terminology of the time used for pagans. |
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The French terminology is tied closely to the original meanings of the terms. |
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This terminology is more common in England, Australia, Canada, Scotland, Wales, etc. |
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His later work in linguistics is much more idiosyncratic, using terminology and addressing questions unique in his era. |
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He expressed grave suspicions of adjectives, nebulous terminology, and all language that might be subjective. |
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The classifications, as with much cricket terminology, can be very confusing. |
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That may be so re the actual terminology but closer examination of the sources does indicate a much earlier expression of the idea. |
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The titles and insignia of other ranks in the RAF were based on that of the Army, with some alterations in terminology. |
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In Canada, each province creates its own system of local government, so terminology varies substantially. |
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There are also differences in the terminology used between the jurisdictions. |
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In 1990, the Press Council adjudicated against The Sun and columnist Garry Bushell for their use of derogatory terminology about gays. |
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As used by him, these concepts are difficult to translate into modern terminology. |
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In law, an alien is a person who is not a national of a given country, though definitions and terminology differ to some degree. |
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In the terminology of glaciology, ice age implies the presence of extensive ice sheets in both northern and southern hemispheres. |
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Much Latin terminology has entered into Old Irish and into the legal system, such as a type of witness teist from Latin testis. |
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Several Cornish mining words are still in use in English language mining terminology, such as costean, gunnies, and vug. |
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The two movements are widely similar both in terminology and in ideology, although there are a few key differences. |
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Some archaeologists use the lowercase letters bp, bc and ad as terminology for uncalibrated dates for these eras. |
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The use of the word fjord in Norwegian, Danish and Swedish is more general than in English and in international scientific terminology. |
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Myers went over the top in the clubhouse, berating a reporter who questioned Myers' terminology. |
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As indicated in the table below, each basin uses a separate system of terminology, which can make comparisons between different basins difficult. |
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This is distinct from a girl group, in which the female members are solely vocalists, though this terminology is not universally followed. |
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Unfortunately, there is little consensus on terminology for these informal properties. |
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Since eastern Francia could be identified with old Austrasia, the Frankish heartland, Louis's choice of terminology hints at his ambitions. |
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Under his grandson, Arnulf, the terminology was largely dropped and the kingdom, when it was referred to by name, was simply Francia. |
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This terminology therefore dropped out of use after the Goths were displaced by the Hunnic invasions. |
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In general, the terminology of a divided Gothic people disappeared gradually after they entered the Roman Empire. |
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A command in military terminology is an organisational unit for which a military commander is responsible. |
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The terminology used to describe varieties of spoken Nahuatl is inconsistently applied. |
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However, these words have developed a separate meaning in the context of equine terminology, used to describe temperament, not body temperature. |
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This terminology reflects their pronunciation before the Great Vowel Shift. |
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From an articulatory perspective, that terminology is incorrect, as murmur is a different type of phonation from aspiration. |
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Others object to this usage, arguing that this terminology obscures the universality of public worship as a religious phenomenon. |
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The word's use in rhetoric is closely based on the Greek terminology used by Aristotle in his concept of the three artistic proofs. |
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This usage reflected the terminology used in the Cranmerian 1552 Book of Common Prayer. |
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In these works the language is already sophisticated and technical, well equipped with its own legal terminology. |
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In some jurisdictions, the terms mens rea and actus reus have been replaced by alternative terminology. |
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Property law is characterised by a great deal of historical continuity and technical terminology. |
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A further reason for the distinction is that legislation is often drafted employing the traditional terminology. |
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The terminology of juristic literature was conservative and tended to preserve notions which had lost their practical relevance. |
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In 16th Century Europe Lutheranism and the Protestant Reformation advanced property rights using biblical terminology. |
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Much of the early study of geology began in the British Isles, whence much of the terminology is derived. |
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It was impossible to avoid pagan terminology altogether, however, and the Seventy relaxed their vigilance when dealing with poetry. |
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I think public interest price would be more accurate terminology but I suggest the rebutters are the ones advocating PIV is market value. |
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Using bibliometrics to support your selection of a nursing terminology set. |
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New terminology such as bottom feeders, vulture funds and white knights is indicative of real estate acquisitions have changed. |
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More than just a simple terminology dictionary, TALK THE TALK offers a history of language's modern evolution. |
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Kara Warburton is IBM's chief terminologist and the chair of the Localization Industry Standards Association's terminology group. |
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New terminology used in RDA is highlighted, providing a good starting point in helping the cataloguer to understand the new terms introduced. |
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For Gandhi non-violence means far more than what is implied by the apparent negative terminology. |
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This section is useful in introducing the reader to linguistic terminology and methodology, such as internal reconstruction, suppletion, etc. |
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Lewis writes in a direct, lucid style, with none of the obfuscatory terminology so often found in economics literature. |
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The intended audience of the article has at least a basic understanding of GIS and related terminology. |
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In my previous work on Pseudotremia I followed the terminology concerning gonopod structures established by Shear. |
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Following Aristotle's terminology, the causes of education may be divided according to their final, formal, material, and efficient causes. |
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This issue of ambiguity of terminology has been well noted in information retrieval. |
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A novel terminology, potential water retention capacity, which seeks to relate between pre-silage materials and effluent production is proposed. |
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According to Kasser, this is terminology used in Sethian Gnosticism and indicates that Jesus is from the divine realm and is the son of God. |
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Arendt's reading of Aristotle suggests, however, that there is an underlying set of issues, perspectives and terminology common to the Ethics and the Poetics. |
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There is variation in terminology among research on LGBTQ issues. |
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Five introductory chapters explain basic kinesiology terminology, how to palpate, bones and bony landmarks and their palpation, and how muscles function. |
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I was familiar with the challenges of making appointments, the medical terminology, the objectiveness of medical professionals, hospital environments, and medical routines. |
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An application was handed in by the Syktyvkar State University and the project to create school terminology in Finno-Ugric languages was among the winners. |
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In particular, his discussion indicates the fuzziness of all terminology, and, thus, Klein is too sure about the undesirability or desirability of different concepts. |
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Burke's intention is to comprehend more fully Paul's use of familial language in 1 Thessalonians by an investigation of such terminology in antiquity. |
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Fidelity writers' terminology that includes words like embezzlement and forgery is being broadened to include hacker terms like spamming, spoofing, smurfing and pinging. |
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This collection is for the specialist familiar with English common law, the legal terminology of cartularies, and an understanding of feudal land tenure. |
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Healtheon has licensed the Metaphrase Enterprise Vocabulary System to manage medical terminology and improve the search capabilities within this consume portal. |
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Despite the terminology, Morris dancing is hardly ever competitive. |
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Oil shale and shale oil terminology contains a lot of contradictions. |
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Joiner's terminology, an individual must simultaneously experience thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness, which together generate suicidal ideation. |
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But, we cannot talk just in terms of the spot size because the recompilation of the images is 3-D and the terminology used in this technology is VOXEL, or volume pixel. |
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It assumes knowledge of basic algebra terminology and methods and experiences in factoring second-degree polynomials, concepts of analytic geometry, and functional notation. |
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The terminology for reservoirs varies from country to country. |
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Methods and the terminology to describe the steps of making hay have varied greatly throughout history, and many regional variations still exist today. |
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Judgments are thus ramified and ramifiable. Adopting Peircean terminology, the artwork is indefinitely translatable into interpretants of great variety. |
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Aristotle's terminology in this aspect of his theory was deemed vague and in many cases unclear, even contradicting some of his statements from On Interpretation. |
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This terminology reflects the historical pronunciation and development of those vowels, but as a phonetic description of their current values it is no longer accurate. |
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The terminology used to denote the particle is also inconsistent. |
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Australian English is particularly divergent from other varieties with respect to geographical terminology, due to the country's unique geography. |
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The Conlang mailing list has developed a community of conlangers with its own customs, such as translation challenges and translation relays, and its own terminology. |
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Similarly, adjective phrases and adverb phrases function as if they were adjectives or adverbs, but with other types of phrases the terminology has different implications. |
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Gerasimov also translated Ars grammatica by Aelius Donatus, juxtaposing the Latin grammar against that of Church Slavonic and proposing a terminology for Slavic grammar. |
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The wide range in the percentages of aromatic compounds that may be present in each concentration means that the terminology of extrait, EdP, EdT, and EdC is quite imprecise. |
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As cattle terminology in use amongst the few modern Bantu pastoralist groups suggests, the Bantu migrants would acquire cattle from their new Cushitic neighbors. |
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The terminology for these in the 16th century was still not standardised so the terms used here are those that were applied by the Mary Rose Trust. |
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Rules and norms for marriage and social behavior among kinsfolk is often reflected in the systems of kinship terminology in the various languages of the world. |
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As a result, a pirate ship still had the usual terminology found on merchant ships, but the role each ranking sailor would play on the pirate ship was not the norm. |
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However, there is considerable confusion of terminology, and tulips may have been subsumed under hyacinth, a mistake several European botanists were to perpetuate. |
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Welsh law was a form of Celtic law with many similarities to the Brehon law of Ireland and particularly the customs and terminology of the Britons of Strathclyde. |
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A terminology has evolved covering the early years of the Earth's existence, as radiometric dating has allowed real dates to be assigned to specific formations and features. |
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One of Ireland's native Gaelic games, it shares a number of features with Gaelic football, such as the field and goals, the number of players, and much terminology. |
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Hume argued that the dispute about the compatibility of freedom and determinism has been continued over two thousand years by ambiguous terminology. |
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At this time, the terminology for the genre was not settled. |
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Tamil's standard metalinguistic terminology and scholarly vocabulary is itself Tamil, as opposed to the Sanskrit that is standard for most Aryan languages. |
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The Indian religions are distinct yet share terminology, concepts, goals and ideas, and from the Indian subcontinent spread into East Asia and southeast Asia. |
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Much of the terminology and classifications are taken from it. |
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As to the standard Imperial terminology that was used, the words were localized for different elements used in construction and varied from region to region. |
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Isaac Bonewits introduced a terminology to make this distinction. |
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Understanding the context of its associated terminology is important. |
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In fact, many lodges praised the Grand Architect, the masonic terminology for the deistic divine being who created a scientifically ordered universe. |
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Austin introduced terminology that has since become ubiquitous when he talked about locutionary, illocutionary, and perlocutionary acts of speech. |
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In contemporary terminology he used in his experiments both crossed and parallel plane polariscopes, turning the test object between the polarizing devices. |
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But as the graecism of the title Anatomice indicates, Benedetti sought to develop a medical terminology based on ancient authors, often by transliterating Greek terms. |
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As often happens in archaeological terminology, this is a holdover from antiquarian use, and Stonehenge is not truly a henge site as its bank is inside its ditch. |
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