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cross-reference and apparatus
This version of the Holy Bible is significant because, for the very first time, a mechanically printed, mass-produced Bible was made available directly to the general public which came with a variety of scriptural study guides and aids ( collectively called an apparatus ), which included verse citations which allow the reader to cross-reference one verse with numerous relevant verses in the rest of the Bible, introductions to each book of the Bible which acted to summarize all of the material that each book would cover, maps, tables, woodcut illustrations, indexes, as well as other included features — all of which would eventually lead to the reputation of the Geneva Bible as history's very first study bible.

cross-reference and for
) The ACT requires the referee to cross-reference the difficulty of a character action with the ability score used to complete that action, determining which column of the ACT is used for that action.
* choosing the appropriate structures for presenting the data in the dictionary ( i. e. frame structure, distribution structure, macro-structure, micro-structure and cross-reference structure )
A possible source for Borges might have been the Jewish Encyclopedia of 1901 – 1906, whose entry for the town is simply a cross-reference to an article on one of its " heresiarchs ", Meshwi al-Ukbari.
The adult trade division includes a substantial list authors ( see below for cross-reference to literary awards ) including Khaled Hosseini, William Boyd, Donna Tartt, Elizabeth Gilbert, David Guterson, Will Self, Anthony Bourdain, William Dalrymple, Ben Macintyre, Kate Summerscale, Richard Ford, Ann Patchett, Madeline Miller, Susanna Clarke, Dava Sobel, Mark Kurlansky, Chelsea Handler, Jesmyn Ward, Heston Blumenthal, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and 2010 Man Booker Prize winner Howard Jacobson.
While one usage of the word pin is to refer to electrical contacts of, specifically, the male gender, its usage in pinout does not imply gender: the contact-to-function cross-reference for a connector that has only female socket contacts is still called a pinout.
A fifth volume containing an index, thesaurus and cross-reference was added to the basic encyclopedia, not least because this increased the total " number of entries " from 40, 000 ( in the main volumes ) to 100, 000 ( in the index ), one of the strongest sales arguments for encyclopedias.
See, for example, the Linux cross-reference tool, LXR for init / main. c.
Ironically, hypertext was coined by Ted Nelson who used to object to the wide spectrum of text retrieval or cross-reference and subject it mainly to the narrow idea of transclusion, or simply quotation, aiming for text patchwork rather than retrieval.
These issue writeups, while not themselves part of the standard, were deemed sufficiently useful for the Common Lisp HyperSpec to include and cross-reference them for the benefit of readers, providing information about the original intent of the committee in its decisions.
For ease of cross-reference to the contents of De Motu that appeared again in the Principia, there are online sources for the ' Principia ' in English translation, as well as in Latin.
In contemporary " value-based management " by corporations, we can witness a continual cross-reference between past prices, current prices and future prices occurring, because there is practically no other way to do it for business purposes.

cross-reference and also
The term CASE was originally coined by software company Nastec Corporation of Southfield, Michigan in 1982 with their original integrated graphics and text editor GraphiText, which also was the first microcomputer-based system to use hyperlinks to cross-reference text strings in documents — an early forerunner of today's web page link.
A cross-reference to the 1960 song " Shop Around " by The Miracles is also present.

cross-reference and .
Information can be found in the Britannica by following the cross-references in the Micropædia and Macropædia ; however, these are sparse, averaging one cross-reference per page.
Static hypertext can be used to cross-reference collections of data in documents, software applications, or books on CDs.
Unfortunately, a lot of catalogues cross-reference the Durchmusterungs without specifying which one is used in the zones of overlap, so some confusion often remains.
Traces of this process are generally found in the Notes accompanying the " lead section " associated with the popular name, and in cross-reference tables that identify Code sections corresponding to particular Acts of Congress.
On a day-to-day basis, very few lawyers cross-reference the Code to the Statutes at Large.
The first edition of the United States Code ( published as Statutes at Large Volume 44, Part 1 ) includes cross-reference tables between the U. S. C.
To avoid having to set the same text twice, Byrd often resorted to a cross-reference or ‘ transfer ’ system which allowed a single setting to be slotted into a different place in the liturgy.
Generally, these abbreviations should be used sparingly and only ( 1 ) to avoid repeating a lengthy footnote and / or, ( 2 ) to cross-reference a nearby footnote.
A list of internal cross-reference forms.
* Supra is used as an internal cross-reference to guide the reader between parts of a document, whether text or footnotes.
* Agreement ( linguistics ), a form of cross-reference between different parts of a sentence or phrase.
The foreign key can be used to cross-reference tables.
This exciting cross-reference method of Bible study ties the magnificent truths of Scripture together.
Hass noted that she had brought forward sourced information from the Palestinian community, and said that it was the responsibility of newspaper editors to cross-reference it with other information from the IDF and the settler community.
Due to the varying levels of detection capabilities between detector types, manufacturers have designed multi-criteria devices which cross-reference the separate signals to both rule out false alarms and improve response times to real fires.
Ussher had to cross-reference the Biblical records with known dates of other people and rulers to create an overall timeline.
Biological databases cross-reference other databases with accession numbers as one way of linking their related knowledge together.

apparatus and for
During Oersted's attendance at the university, it was poorly equipped with physical apparatus for experimenting in the sciences.
Corrections were applied for modulation broadening, apparatus background, and field shift.
A special template is furnished with the apparatus to enable marking a specimen for a central measuring area and the fabric extensions to the clamps ( see Fig. 2 ).
One mechanism for maintaining the blood pressure is the release of a protein called renin from cells in the kidney ( to be specific, the juxtaglomerular apparatus ).
As a metal, beryllium is transparent to most wavelengths of X-rays and gamma rays, making it useful for the output windows of X-ray tubes and other such apparatus.
He experimented with designing a new apparatus for human propulsion of small boats.
An apparatus ( 4-5 cm length, with 9 short needles ) used for BCG vaccination in Japan, shown with ampules of BCG and saline
The world's first computer printer was a 19th century mechanically driven apparatus invented by Charles Babbage for his difference engine.
A burette, an apparatus for carrying out e. g. acid-base titration, is an important part of equilibrium chemistry.
Capitalism entails the private ownership of the latter two — natural resources and capital goods — by a class of owners called capitalists, either individually, collectively or through a state apparatus that operates for a profit or serves the interests of capital owners.
# Make sure patient is in an actual comatose state and is not mistaken for locked-in state ( patient will either be able to voluntarily move his eyes or blink ) or psychogenic unresponsiveness ( caloric stimulation of the vestibular apparatus will result in slow deviation of eyes towards the stimulation followed by rapid correction to mid-line ; this response can't be voluntarily suppressed: therefore, if the patient doesn't have this response, then psychogenic coma can be ruled out as a differential )
Also, while elementary particles showed predictable properties in many experiments, they became highly unpredictable in certain contexts, for example, if one attempted to measure their individual trajectories through a simple physical apparatus.
So if an electron passes through a double slit apparatus there are various probabilities for where on the detection screen that individual electron will hit.
( radio apparatus " means a device or combination of devices intended for, or capable of being used for, radiocommunication ).
The Golgi apparatus is a large organelle that processes proteins and prepares them for use both inside and outside the cell.
As UCLA law professor Stephen Yeazell has pointed out, the most likely reason is that the abysmally poor transportation, communications, and administrative apparatus of medieval times made it impossible for the English sovereign to directly manage the entire country in terms of individuals ; it was easier to structure society by imposing obligations upon groups which were enforced by the sporadic use of force.
To do this a " cow " or " pig " adaptor can be added to the end of the condenser, or for better results or for very air sensitive compounds a Perkin triangle apparatus can be used.
With the key activists of the Nationalist Clubs largely absorbed into the apparatus of the People's Party, Bellamy abandoned politics for a return to literature.
Arne Tiselius developed the first sophisticated electrophoretic apparatus in 1937 and some years later he was awarded the 1948 Nobel Prize for his work in protein electrophoresis.
The Golgi apparatus is a series of multiple compartments where molecules are packaged for delivery to other cell components or for secretion from the cell.
He argues in favor of a society organized around a market order, in which the apparatus of state is employed almost ( though not entirely ) exclusively to enforce the legal order ( consisting of abstract rules, and not particular commands ) necessary for a market of free individuals to function.
The turmoil caused a severe food shortage, destroyed the Finnish economy, demolished the political apparatus and divided the Finnish nation for many years.

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