Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Biljana Plavšić" ¶ 20
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

One and count
One must be careful here ; for instance, some analyses count an addition of two numbers as one step.
One way to divide various consequentialisms is by the types of consequences that are taken to matter most, that is, which consequences count as good states of affairs.
One way to divide various consequentialisms is by the types of consequences that are taken to matter most, that is, which consequences count as good states of affairs.
One was a count of perjury in a civil deposition in Paula Jones's sexual harassment lawsuit against Clinton ( by a 205 – 229 vote ) and an article which accused Clinton of abuse of power by a 48 – 285 vote.
* One count of supplying services to the Taliban
One of the more interesting applications of the MIPS architecture is its use in massive processor count supercomputers.
One common way of using dice to determine the dealer starting number is to roll three six-sided dice, and then count betting spots clockwise from the first position until the number on the dice is reached.
One may say that mass nouns that are used as count nouns are " countified " and that count ones that are used as mass nouns are " massified ".
One can reasonably say that Napoleon could count on no more than 450, 000 men in Germany — which left him outnumbered about four to one.
One document, issued by his widowed daughter Adelaide in 1090, refers to him as " count and margrave " ( comes et marchio ), but it is probably anachronistic.
One of them was a population count that found that 43 people were living there.
One of the most significant provisions of the law re-creating it was that which provided that officers and enlisted men detached from the army and transferred to the PC shall retain their identity and legal rights and obligations as officers and enlisted men of the army ; that the President may, at his discretion, transfer at any time any officer or enlisted man to and from the army to the Constabulary, respectively ; and that all services performed in the Constabulary shall count for all legal purposes as military service.
One of Terrace's colleagues, Laura-Ann Petitto, estimated that with more standard criteria, Nim's true vocabulary count was closer to 25 than 125.
One hand can count to twelve, two hands can count to 144.
One breaker, the " Fox ", would go and hide ( farm roads and forestry tracks were common ) and would be requested by the others to " Fox give us a count " the ' Fox ' would then count to five and the searchers would use their signal meters to determine how close they were.
One method is to count a half bathroom as ". 5 " and then add this to the number of full bathrooms ( e. g., " 2. 5 " baths would mean 2 full baths and 1 half bath ).
One count!
One of these inscriptions mentions a workmen's crew named " drunkards of the crown of Khufu " together with the note " year after the 17th time of cattle count ".
One such response is that of Alvin Goldman ( 1967 ), who suggested the addition of a causal condition: a subject's belief is justified, for Goldman, only if the truth of a belief has caused the subject to have that belief ( in the appropriate way ); and for a justified true belief to count as knowledge, the subject must also be able to " correctly reconstruct " ( mentally ) that causal chain.
Wins which did not count towards the Formula One World Championship are indicated by a pink background.
One of his first acts was to scrap the 1973 census, which was weighted in favor of the north, and to revert to the 1963 count for official purposes.

One and violations
ICFTU wrote that, " One of the most striking features of the violations that took place in Africa is the failure of governments to respect the rights of their own employees, both through the restrictions in law on organising, collective bargaining and strike action, and repression in practice.
One possible cause of a computer " freezing " is an infinite loop ; others include deadlock and access violations.
Such violations of Global Rule One have generally gone ignored by the Guild.
One common example of a fine is money paid for violations of traffic laws.
One of his most famous accomplishments was a preparation of a dossier that enumerated and provided evidence of instances of Human Rights violations by the Imperial administration of Cyprus and its agents.
Although Martin's contributions invariably featured outrageous events and sometimes outright violations of the laws of space-time, his strips typically had unassuming generic titles such as " A Quiet Day in the Park " or " One Afternoon at the Beach ".
One of the IOB's functions is to examine violations of the laws and directives governing clandestine surveillance.
One of the more controversial chapters in Human Rights First ’ s history began when the group took up the issue of how to address human rights violations committed not by governments but by non-state actors, such as corporations.
One, by Albert Bleckmann, director of the Institute for Public Law and Political Sciences at the University of Münster, objected to the lack of voir dire, the exclusion of evidence under the motion in limine, the fact that the government did not approach LaRouche about his tax situation before indicting him for tax violations, and concerns about double jeopardy because of the nearly identical charges in the Boston and Alexandria trials.
One approach would be first to define morality and then to say that moral emotions are the emotions that respond to moral violations or that motivate moral behavior ”.
* One or more violations of a Motor vehicle declared out of service order within a 10-year period: one year suspension.
" One of the reasons for his detention is his attempt to inform the United Nations of ongoing human rights violations in Burmese prisons.
One judge, Richard LeFevour, was convicted on 59 counts of mail fraud, racketeering and income-tax violations, getting 12 years in prison.
One of the principal activities of CJFE is the management of the International Freedom of Expression Exchange ( IFEX ), a global network of more than 80 non-governmental organisations that monitors free expression violations around the world and defends journalists, writers and others who are persecuted for exercising their right to freedom of expression.
One of the most often cited estimates counts 220 terrorist attacks from July to September 1974, which killed 60 and heavily injured 44, as well as 20 kidnappings Federal judge Norberto Oyarbide, who signed the extradition demand against former leader of the AAA Rodolfo Almirón, qualified in December 2006 the Triple A's crimes as human rights violations and the " beginning of the systematic process directed by the state apparatus " during the dictatorship.
One motive for lynchings, particularly in the South, was the enforcement of social conventions – punishing perceived violations of customs, later institutionalized as Jim Crow laws, mandating segregation of whites and blacks.
In 2010, Universal along with Alliance One International were accused of violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977.
One of the core activities of IFLA is the Committee on Free Access to Information and Freedom of Expression, which monitors the state of intellectual freedom within the library community worldwide, supports IFLA policy development and co-operation with other international human rights organisations, and responds to violations of free access to information and freedom of expression.
Alleged human rights violations are sometimes used by skeptics to argue that theOne Country, Two Systems ” policy is a failure.

One and laws
One of the last remaining Sunday closing laws in the United States that covers selling electronics, clothing and furniture is found in Bergen County, New Jersey.
One of the major themes of the book is Yahweh's sovereignty and the importance of being loyal to Him and His laws above all other gods and sovereigns.
One can solve this problem by granting some degree of moral relativism and accepting that norms may evolve over time and, therefore, one can criticize the continued enforcement of old laws in the light of the current norms.
One particularly important physical result concerning conservation laws is Noether's Theorem, which states that there is a one-to-one correspondence between conservation laws and differentiable symmetries of physical systems.
" One of Lenin's challenges was distancing materialism, as a viable philosophical outlook, from the " vulgar materialism " expressed in the statement " the brain secretes thought in the same way as the liver secretes bile " ( attributed to 18th c. physician Pierre Jean Georges Cabanis, 1757 – 1808 ); " metaphysical materialism " ( matter composed of immutable particles ); and 19th-century " mechanical materialism " ( matter as random molecules interacting per the laws of mechanics ).
One of the first written laws in the world, the Code of Hammurabi was inscribed on a stele and placed in a public place so that all could see it, although it is thought that few were literate.
Meanwhile, international delegates proposed three additional clauses, which were adopted: One or more days for weekly rest ; equality of laws for foreign workers ; and regular and frequent inspection of factory conditions.
One possible solution is that God could know every possible life one might live, but allows for free will according to laws set in place that cannot be contradicted.
One view suggests that the motivation and purpose of the laws providing for the removal of Aboriginal children from their parents was child protection, with government policy makers and officials responding to an observed need to provide protection for neglected, abused or abandoned mixed-descent children.
One exception to these laws exists in Crown Casino, any player with a VIP loyalty card can still insert $ 100 notes and use the autoplay feature, whereby the machine will continue to play without player intervention until credit is exhausted or the player intervenes.
One challenge that the Green Party ( as well as other third parties ) faces is the difficulty of overcoming ballot access laws in many states.
Clause one is a " vesting clause ," similar to other clauses in Articles One and Three, but it vests the power to execute the instructions of Congress, which has the exclusive power to make laws ; " To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof.
One aspect of the gun control debate is the conflict between gun control laws and the right to rebel against unjust governments.
One example of the exercise of this device was to condition allocation of federal funding where certain state laws do not conform to federal guidelines.
One of the first laws that protected whistleblowers was the 1863 United States False Claims Act ( revised in 1986 ), which tried to combat fraud by suppliers of the United States government during the Civil War.
One newspaper alleged that ' ASIS regularly flouted laws, kept dossiers on Australian citizens ... and hounded agents out of the service with little explanation '.
One strategy in the search for the most fundamental laws of nature is to search for the most general mathematical symmetry group that can be applied to the fundamental interactions.
One form of norm adoption is the formal method, where norms are written down and implemented ( e. g., laws, legislation, club rules ).
One feature of BBN is that the physical laws and constants that govern the behavior of matter at these energies are very well understood, and hence BBN lacks some of the speculative uncertainties that characterize earlier periods in the life of the universe.
One of the most important works of this " First Dynasty of Babylon ", as it was called by the native historians, was the compilation of a code of laws.
One problem with these arguments is that these laws might restrict the ability of individuals to engage in actions without an identified victim and actually harm a larger society.
One innovation was the introduction of the forest laws and the setting aside of large sections of England as royal forest subject to the newly introduced forest law.
One of the laws he mandated called for citizens to wear traditional ethnic apparel, and another required wearing hair short or shaving the head, as opposed to the Chinese custom at the time of wearing hair long and knotted.

0.724 seconds.