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consequence and eight
As a consequence, the German M1898 Mauser rifle and attached sword bayonet was a full eight inches longer than the British SMLE and its P1903 bayonet, which used a twelve-inch blade.
During this period Agrelot developed his first comedic character, Torito Fuertes, the mischievous eight year-old of a family comedy show sponsored by Borden, Inc. and its evaporated milk ( the name Torito Fuertes was a pun on " strong calf ", a desirable consequence of drinking good milk ).
A local report stated, ' One day last week eight American visitors who were staying at one of the principal hotels left somewhat hurriedly in consequence of their being unable to gain admission to the castle '.
The use of eight bits for storage in older video games has had the consequence of it appearing as a hard limit in many video games.
The stipendiary came into the court about a quarter past ten and stated that Peace had attempted to escape that morning on the journey from London to Sheffield, and that in consequence of his injuries the case would be adjourned for eight days.
One particular issue of consequence was the eight hour day, and miners conducted strikes in the gold and silver mines at Clear Creek, Cripple Creek, and Telluride, and in the coal mines of Las Animas County.
As a consequence of its definition, the Sobel operator can be implemented by simple means in both hardware and software: only eight image points around a point are needed to compute the corresponding result and only integer arithmetic is needed to compute the gradient vector approximation.
As a consequence, the vast majority of issues of the Fall 2005 semester were six pages, with eight-page issues being the exception rather than the norm ( compared to the fall 2004 semester, when most issues were eight to 10 pages, and sometimes even 12 ).
As a consequence of the quantitative magnitude of microbial life ( Whitman and coworkers calculated 5 × 10 < small >< sup > 30 </ sup ></ small > cells, eight orders of magnitude greater than the number of stars in the observable universe
The apparent mismatch between aircraft numbers and nuclear bombs was a consequence of RAF staff planners concluding that with some aircraft held back from the conventional phase as a reserve, there would be one-third attrition of aircraft, leaving the remaining survivors numerically strong enough to deliver the squadron's entire stockpile of eight nuclear bombs.
As a direct consequence, the band spent eight months off-and-on in the studio not only recording the album but getting used to — and experimenting with — the new technology.

consequence and second
The fact that a catalyst does not change the equilibrium is a consequence of the second law of thermodynamics.
One of these, Itō's lemma, expresses the composite of an Itō process ( or more generally a semimartingale ) dX < sub > t </ sub > with a twice-differentiable function f. In Itō's lemma, the derivative of the composite function depends not only on dX < sub > t </ sub > and the derivative of f but also on the second derivative of f. The dependence on the second derivative is a consequence of the non-zero quadratic variation of the stochastic process, which broadly speaking means that the process can move up and down in a very rough way.
* The second stratum would be called by Husserl " logic of consequence " or the " logic of non-contradiction " which explores all possible forms of true judgments.
His grandfather, Thomas Francis, founder of the Carignano line of the House of Savoy, was the son of Catherine Michelle – a daughter of Philip II of Spain – and the great-grandson of the Emperor Charles V. But of more immediate consequence to Leopold I was the fact that Eugene was the second cousin of Victor Amadeus, the Duke of Savoy, a connection that the Emperor hoped might prove useful in any future confrontation with France.
The second law is then a consequence of this definition and the fundamental postulate of statistical mechanics.
In the second view expertise is a characteristic of individuals and is a consequence of the human capacity for extensive adaptation to physical and social environments.
) Later writers describe his lameness as the consequence of his second fall, while Homer makes him lame and weak from his birth.
The second most important area of immigration to Italy has always been the neighbouring North Africa ( in particular, Morocco, Egypt and Tunisia ), with soaring arrivals as a consequence of the Arab Spring.
This statement is an obvious consequence of the deduction that for ƒ to be invertible it must be injective ( first definition of the inverse ) or bijective ( second definition ).
* Conservation of Momentum, which is a direct consequence of Newton's laws of motion, especially Newton's second law which relates the net force on an element of air to its rate of momentum change,
A second consequence of the presence of the 2 '- hydroxyl group is that in conformationally flexible regions of an RNA molecule ( that is, not involved in formation of a double helix ), it can chemically attack the adjacent phosphodiester bond to cleave the backbone.
A second, potential negative consequence of group cohesion is group think.
In classical thermodynamics, the second law is a basic postulate applicable to any system involving heat energy transfer ; in statistical thermodynamics, the second law is a consequence of the assumed randomness of molecular chaos.
As a consequence of this asymmetric behaviour, the error of the second kind ( acquitting a person who committed the crime ),, is often rather large.
Causality ( also referred to as causation ) is the relationship between an event ( the cause ) and a second event ( the effect ), where the second event is understood as a consequence of the first.
A consequence was that in the three European Championship Grands Prix, he took two wins and a second place-winning the championship by four points from Borzacchini.
The story's second half examines the arbitrariness of justice: the public official compiling the details of the murder case tells him repentance and turning to Christianity will save him, but Meursault refuses to pretend he has found religion ; emotional honesty overrides self-preservation, and he accepts the idea of punishment as a consequence of his actions as part of the status quo.
Fish and chips became a stock meal among the working classes in Great Britain as a consequence of the rapid development of trawl fishing in the North Sea, and the development of railways which connected the ports to major industrial cities during the second half of the 19th century, which meant that fresh fish could be rapidly transported to the heavily populated areas.
However, it is claimed that it passes the second test of being part of " the whole counsel of God " because it is " deduced from scripture " " by good and necessary consequence ", citing passages such as Isaiah 8: 20: " To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them .".
As a consequence, for convergence of a sequence of elements of it then suffices that the coefficient of each power of Y converges to a formal power series in X, a weaker condition that stabilizing entirely ; for instance in the second example given here the coefficient of Y converges to, so the whole summation converges to.
The second was the eldest son of Hiel the Bethelite, who perished prematurely in consequence of his father's undertaking to rebuild Jericho ( 1 Kings 16: 34 ), according to Joshua ( 6: 26 ).

consequence and limit
This has an interesting consequence because treaties that limit or extend the powers of the Dutch government are automatically considered a part of their constitutional law, for example, the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
This uniquely human ability for one generation to start where a previous generation left off, is a consequence of the uniquely human ability to move to higher and higher levels of abstraction without limit.
The purpose of legal causation is to limit the scope of factual causation, if the consequence of the action is too remote to have been foreseen by an objective, reasonable person the defendant will escape liability.
As a consequence, one could say that the limit as Q approaches P of the secant's slope, or direction, is that of the tangent.
One consequence of Babinet's principle is a paradox that in the diffraction limit, the radiation removed from the beam due to a particle is equal to twice the particle's cross section times the flux.
Civil Rights advocates see the 2007 ruling as the inevitable consequence of gradual Court decisions dating back to the early 1970s to ease judicial supervision and limit important tools to achieve integrated schools.
In consequence, so far as the monitor is concerned, there is no theoretical limit to the number of different colours that can be displayed.
Continuous compounding in pricing these instruments is a natural consequence of Itō calculus, where derivatives are valued at ever increasing frequency, until the limit is approached and the derivative is valued in continuous time.
The fact that there are two logarithms ( log of a log ) in the limit for the Meissel – Mertens constant may be thought of as a consequence of the combination of the prime number theorem and the limit of the Euler – Mascheroni constant.
Another consequence of their new status was that from now on could they not only reject passenger and goods consignments and limit the exposure of their liability, but also were free to " demand, take and recover such charges for their services and facilities, and to make the use of those services and facilities subject to such terms and conditions as they think fit " ( Section 43 ), i. e. benefit from total freedom of contract to sell their services, rather than operate via the medium of a statutory process.
This is a consequence of the time limit data controllers must meet in making their response.
As of 2010, there are " no widely accepted diagnostic or classification criteria for the diagnosis of LSS and, as a consequence, studies use widely differing eligibility criteria that limit the generalisability of reported findings " and " few studies have examined how its prevalence or incidence is changing ".
Here the fact that in the limit a faithful representation of G is found is another consequence of the Peter – Weyl theorem,
This result is a consequence of the central limit theorem, as reported in and proved by Henry Wallman in.
This concept of foreseeability in tort law tends to limit liability to the consequences of an act that could reasonably be foreseen rather than every single consequence that follows.
The consequence was that Eisenhower was obliged to limit his army group commanders to one major advance at a time.
Such low irradiation times limit the amount of additional neutron capture and therefore buildup of alternate isotope products such as Pu-240 in the rod, and also by consequence is considerably more expensive to produce, needing far more rods irradiated and processed for a given amount of plutonium.
However, as a consequence of the above properties, a Banach limit also satisfies:
The limit here is meant in the usual sense of a limit of a function defined on a metric space ( see Functions on metric spaces ), using V and W as the two metric spaces, and the above expression as the function of argument h in V. As a consequence, it must exist for all sequences of non-zero elements of V which converge to the zero vector If the limit exists, we write and call it the ( Fréchet ) derivative of f at x.
Just seconds after the call to Tocumen air traffic control and passing the thunderstorms that were falling in the original route, flight 201 entered into a steep dive of an angle of 100 degrees to the right side and rolled uncontrolable to the ground, until it passed the speed of sound and as a consequence, the plane passed the speed limit to hold itself.

0.984 seconds.