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momentary and exception
Gold has historically been positive with exception for momentary backwardations ( hours ) since gold futures started trading on the Winnipeg Commodity Exchange in 1972.
Many important events occur off-camera and there is no artificial exposition in the form of voice-over or flashbacks, with the sole exception of one flashback at the end of the pilot episode, and even this brief use of the flashback technique is actually replaying a momentary footage clip from earlier in the same episode.

momentary and rule
However, the reprieve for English rule in Calais was momentary.
Arguing in favor of rule by commoners rather than elistists he wrote: " The people can never mean to do anything that will not advance the public good, and it is only under momentary delusion that they can act wrong.
" will rule out " momentary rabbit stage ," and so forth.

momentary and occurs
If a momentary loss of supply voltage occurs, the contactor will open and not close again until a new start command is given.
If G-LOC occurs at low altitude, this momentary lapse can prove fatal and even highly experienced pilots can pull straight to a G-LOC condition without first perceiving the visual onset warnings that would normally be used as the sign to back off from pulling any more g's.

momentary and during
In some cultures it is often a sexual interest, or flirtatious manner, during momentary eye contact.
When Sisko, Bashir, and Odo interrupt the interrogation, there is a momentary standoff, during which Dukat grows impatient.
The tremendous g-forces to which pilots were subjected during this maneuver could lead to momentary blackouts, necessitating the inclusion of mechanisms to automate pullout from the dive while the pilot was unconscious.
A momentary flare-up of anti-German feeling occurred during the 1991 Gulf War, when Israel was the subject of missile attack by Saddam Hussein's Iraq.
In the most extreme cases of " reformism ", a party may actively work to curb more " revolutionary " activity, whether out of momentary caution or genuine commitment to other methods — during the 1968 General Strike of France, Marxist and Communist Parties urged workers to return to their jobs, and express their dissatisfaction with the power of voting.
This is commonly accomplished by connecting localized capacitors close to the power leads of integrated circuits to act as a small localized energy reservoir ; these supply the circuit with current during transient, high current demand periods, preventing the voltage on the power supply rail from being pulled down by the momentary current load.
The inhibitor protein ( IP ) is situated in the mitochondrial matrix and protects the cell against rapid ATP hydrolysis during momentary ischaemia.
One branch in user experience research focuses on emotions, that is, momentary experiences during interaction: designing affective interaction and evaluating emotions.
The mismatched pair finds momentary happiness during a trip to the countryside, however social conventions and the lovers ' inability to defy them force Pawel and Lidka to part.

momentary and initial
Despite initial praise as providing " CD sound quality ", both Beta Hi-Fi and VHS HiFi suffered from " carrier buzz ", where high frequency information bled into the audio carriers, creating momentary " buzzing " and other audio flaws.
Ideally, devices will have the trust center address and initial master key preloaded ; if a momentary vulnerability is allowed, it will be sent as described above.
The bombardment from these two vessels caused momentary confusion in the breastworks, but once the Confederates had recovered from the initial shock, immediate preparations were made to return the fire from their two 32-pounders and the two rifled guns already in position.

momentary and phase
So we may conceive the coexistence of the infinite number of universal, apparently momentary states of matter, successive one after another in consciousness, but permanent each on its own basic phase of the progressive frequencies.

momentary and addition
Saussure argues that we should be concerned with the AB axis ( in addition to the CD axis, which was the focus of attention in Saussure's time ), because, he says, language is " a system of pure values which are determined by nothing except the momentary arrangements of its terms ".
In addition to all the magic Shazzan can drum up, Chuck and Nancy have magical items which include " Illusion Dust " ( which naturally causes a momentary illusion ), a magic rope ( which will obey the command of the owner ), and a cloak of invisibility ( which turns the wearer invisible ).

momentary and network
Typically, each client is able to act according to the momentary need of the network and can become part of the respective overlay network used to coordinate the P2P structure.

momentary and device
The ASTM defines a membrane switch as " a momentary switch device in which at least one contact is on, or made of, a flexible substrate.

momentary and .
This man's isolation is not merely momentary, it is permanent.
He felt it rip at the side of his jacket and a momentary sting under his left ribs.
Her hesitation was only momentary and she hoped he didn't notice it, as she settled herself, asked quickly how Miss Jenny and the babies were getting on.
The sudden solitude had lost its momentary charm and become oppressive.
It may be that the something that thinks is purely momentary, and not the same as the something which has a different thought the next moment.
This was not, as may be thought, a momentary transient phenomenon: for it continued several hours together visible to our eyes, and brighter than the sun ;; the light of which would have eclipsed it, had not this been stronger.
The missions of Cardinal Peter of St. Chrysogonus to Toulouse and the Toulousain in 1178, and of Henry of Marcy, cardinal-bishop of Albano, in 1180 – 81, obtained merely momentary successes.
Like so many Buddhists from 600-1000 CE, Dharmakirti ’ s philosophy involved mereological nihilism, meaning that other than states of consciousness, the only things that exist are momentary quantum particles, much like the particles of quantum physics ( quarks, electrons, etc.
This notion is of particular importance for the analysis of human experience: Rather than assuming that mental states inhere in a cognizing subject, or a soul-substance, Buddhist philosophers largely propose that mental states alone exist as " momentary elements of consciousness " and that a subjective perceiver is assumed.
Later, Buddhist philosophers like Nāgārjuna would question whether the dharmas ( momentary elements of consciousness ) truly have a separate existence of their own.
There are several schools of Hedonist thought ranging from those advocating the indulgence of even momentary desires to those teaching a pursuit of spiritual bliss.
In many respects, the novel ’ s “ current reader ” of the time was the woman who “ lay down her book with affected indifference, or momentary shame ,” according to Jane Austen, author of Northanger Abbey.
* Although the perfective is often thought of as representing a " momentary action ", this is not strictly correct.
Of these, momentary pleasures, especially physical ones, are stronger than those of anticipation or memory.
The Impressionists found that they could capture the momentary and transient effects of sunlight by painting en plein air.
Photography inspired Impressionists to represent momentary action, not only in the fleeting lights of a landscape, but in the day-to-day lives of people.
Message-signalled interrupts behave very much like edge-triggered interrupts, in that the interrupt is a momentary signal rather than a continuous condition.
But we come together spontaneously, and not with permanent criteria, according to momentary affinities for a specific purpose, and we constantly change these groups as soon as the purpose for which we had associated ceases to be, and other aims and needs arise and develop in us and push us to seek new collaborators, people who think as we do in the specific circumstance.
In 1648 the sovereign courts of Paris procured their momentary suppression in a kind of charter of liberties which they imposed upon the crown, but which was ephemeral.
In B. F. Skinner's Verbal Behaviour ( 1957 ), he suggested that the successful use of a sign, such as a word or lexical unit, given a certain stimulus, reinforces its " momentary " or contextual probability.
* Flap, often called a tap, is a momentary closure of the oral cavity.

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