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partial and protection
This was originally a cloth worn over the back of the helmet as partial protection against heating by sunlight.
Its steeply-sloped front armour offered full protection against NATO's standard. 50 calibre machine gun and partial protection against 20 millimetre Oerlikon cannon both in a 60 degree frontal arc, while its 73 mm gun and ATGM were a threat to NATO APCs and even MBTs.
The leading theory is that skin colour adapts to intense sunlight irradiation to provide partial protection against the ultraviolet fraction which produces damage and thus mutations in the DNA of the skin cells.
These principles of partial sovereignty were exercised in the Swedish-Icelandic Declaration regarding mutual protection of trade marks in Sweden and Iceland, exchanged at Copenhagen on March 23, 1921.
The evergreen oak grows wild on the rocks around the alpine lake, Lake Garda, and even lemons are cultivated on a large scale, with partial protection in winter.
In 1918, older adults may have had partial protection caused by exposure to the previous Russian flu pandemic of 1889.
It has been suggested that the similarity in plumage between juvenile European Honey Buzzard and Common Buzzard has arisen as a partial protection against predation by Northern Goshawks.
* Circumcision-Some studies show that circumcision during infancy or in childhood may provide partial protection against penile cancer, but this is not the case when performed in adulthood.
For reasons of cost, the first phase hard fortifications were of unreinforced concrete, which provided only partial protection.
Within Jaworzno's boundaries there are 41 plant species under strict protection and 11 under partial protection.
Past infection results in partial protection against ill effects if reinfected.
It has been suggested that the similarity in plumage between juvenile Crested Honey Buzzard and the Spizaetus hawk-eagles has arisen as a partial protection against predation by larger raptors.
Nest location can provide partial protection from most mammalian nest predators, especially if placed on islands or floating vegetation in deep waters.
They are popular in the biker subculture, providing protection from the wind and cold as well as partial protection from cuts and scrapes in the event of a fall to the roadway.
Tuberculosis was responsible for 20 % of all European deaths between 1600 and 1900, so even partial protection against the disease could account for the current gene frequency.
Seleucid Companions were noted to have worn lighter, but not otherwise dissimilar, equipment to the cataphracts at the Battle of Magnesia in 190 BC, which may have included partial horse armour and leg and arm protection.
Europe offers some partial protection from this practice by prohibiting European intermediate banks from taking a fee out of the amount being transferred, even for transatlantic transfers.
While homozygotes will have either no protection from malaria or a dramatic propensity to sickle cell anemia, heterozygotes enjoy a partial resistance to both.
Poor financial results followed by a spell under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection necessitated a partial reversal of this strategy and resulted in the resumption of limited charter services from bases in the US the following year.
Some countries have cut back significantly in the use of indexation and cost-of-living escalation clauses, first by applying only partial protection for price increases and eventually eliminating such protection altogether when inflation is brought down to single digits.

partial and against
To guard against the tyranny of a numerical majority, Calhoun developed his theory of `` concurrent majority '', which, he said, `` by giving to each portion of the community which may be unequally affected by the action of government, a negative on the others, prevents all partial or local legislation ''.
A different set of external arguments against the authenticity of the Testimonium ( either partial or total ) are " arguments from silence ", e. g. that although twelve Christian authors refer to Josephus before Eusebius in 324 AD, none mentions the Testimonium.
A separate argument from silence against the total or partial authenticity of the Testimonium is that a 5th or 6th century table of contents of Josephus ( although selective ) makes no mention of it.
The Italian Constitutional Court has declared the partial incompatibility with the Italian Constitution of a law that forced courts to delay all trials against the Italian Prime Minister while he is in office.
* June 19 – The fast food chain McDonald's wins a partial victory in its libel trial, known as the McLibel case, against two environmental campaigners.
Robert Bussard proposed the Single-Stage-To-Orbit " Aspen " vehicle using a nuclear thermal rocket for propulsion and liquid hydrogen propellant for partial shielding against neutron back scattering in the lower atmosphere.
* The rebel slaves of the Third Servile War: Between 73 BC and 71 BC a band of slaves, eventually numbering about 120, 000, under the ( at least partial ) leadership of Spartacus were in open revolt against the Roman republic.
* Hospitals and related services cannot receive a judgment against the patient in court filings made more than 36 months after the date the patient was discharged, or the last partial payment the patient made to the hospital, contractor, or agent.
The United States has a partial, qualified no-first-use policy, stating that they will not use nuclear weapons against states that do not possess nuclear weapons or other weapons of mass destruction.
During the Russo-Turkish War, Alexandra was clearly partial against Turkey and towards Russia, where her sister was married to the Tsarevitch, and she lobbied for a revision of the border between Greece and Turkey in favour of the Greeks.
A topological soliton, also called a topological defect, is any solution of a set of partial differential equations that is stable against decay to the " trivial solution.
Parfit contends that to be indirectly individually self-defeating and directly collectively self-defeating is not fatally damaging for S. To further bury S, Parfit exploits its partial relativity, juxtaposing temporally neutral demands against agent-centered demands.
In 1993, a commemorative French two franc coin was issued showing a partial image of Moulin against the Croix de Lorraine.
By the late 9th century, Danish invasions prompted at least a partial reoccupation of London by the Saxons ; the bridge may have been rebuilt around 990 under the Saxon king Æthelred the Unready, to hasten Saxon troop movements against Sweyn Forkbeard, father of Cnut.
Despite living a Bohemian lifestyle in partial rebellion against his upbringing, Bergman often signed his scripts with the initials " S. D. G " ( Soli Deo Gloria ) – " To God Alone The Glory " – just as JS Bach did at the end of every musical composition.
" The book, which Byrne describes in the preface as a " partial life ," identifies other real-life bases for events and characters in Waugh's novel, though Byrne argues carefully against simple one-to-one correspondences, suggesting instead that Waugh combined people, places and events into composite inventions, subtle transmutations of life into fiction.
The elections held on the demise of the Crown resulted in a Gustav's partial victory for the Caps, especially among the lower orders ; but in the estate of the peasantry their majority was merely nominal, while the mass of the nobility was dead against them.
Similar to other aminoglycosides, neomycin has excellent activity against Gram-negative bacteria, and has partial activity against Gram-positive bacteria.

partial and double
The lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen is delocalized into the carbonyl, thus forming a partial double bond between N and the carbonyl carbon.
One partial solution to this problem has been to double pump the bus.
Not all double dapples have problems with their eyes and / or ears, which may include degrees of hearing loss, full deafness, malformed ears, congenital eye defects, reduced or absent eyes, partial or full blindness, or varying degrees of both vision and hearing problems ; but heightened problems can occur due to the genetic process in which two dapple genes cross, particularly in certain breeding lines.
The resonance suggests that the amide group has a partial double bond character, estimated at 40 % under typical conditions.
The partial double bond character can be strengthened or weakened by modifications that favor one resonance form over another.
The partial double bond renders the amide group planar, occurring in either the cis or trans isomers.
The transition states requires that the partial double bond be broken, so that the activation energy is roughly 80 kilojoule / mol ( 20 kcal / mol ) ( See Figure below ).
This definition of the surface area is based on methods of infinitesimal calculus and involves partial derivatives and double integration.
* A G-kitchen has cabinets along three walls, like the U-kitchen, and also a partial fourth wall, often with a double basin sink at the corner of the G shape.
If hydrogenation is incomplete ( partial hardening ), the relatively high temperatures used in the hydrogenation process tend to flip some of the carbon-carbon double bonds into the " trans " form.
The bromine atom closer to the bond takes on a partial positive charge as its electrons are repelled by the electrons of the double bond.
Moreover, compounds like ' 1-chloro 1-ethene ' too do not undergo nucleophillic substitution easily because the carbon to chlorine bond is said to be of partial double bond character, thus is harder to break.
In reality the two terminal oxygen atoms are equivalent and the hybrid structure is drawn on the right with a charge of-1 / 2 on both oxygen atoms and partial double bonds with a full and dashed line and bond order 1. 5.
A partial list of these symptoms could include headache, double vision, loss of vision, fatigue, chest pain, shortness of breath, frequent urination and extreme thirst, severe snoring, muscle weakness and impotence.
It is easy to see that over the real field we can obtain L in terms of the first partial derivatives of F. When those both are 0 at P, we have a singular point ( double point, cusp or something more complicated ).
These can be ( in the adult ) complete bands ( Ringed, Semipalmated, Little Ringed, Long-billed ), double or triple bands ( Killdeer, Three-banded, Forbes ', Two-banded, Double-banded ) or partial collars ( Kentish, Piping, Malaysian, Javan, Red-capped, Puna ).
Reunited with the cast in Theresienstadt, Krása reconstructed the full score of the opera, based on memory and the partial piano score that remained in his hands, adapting it to suit the musical instruments available in the camp: flute, clarinet, guitar, accordion, piano, percussion, four violins, a cello and a double bass.
The interchange-a double trumpet-connected to I-4 south of Gore Street, and resulted in the closure of four of the six ramps at Gore Street, which had intersected I-4 with a six-ramp partial cloverleaf.
The simplest example of a multiple exposure is a double exposure without flash, i. e. two partial exposures are made and then combined into one complete exposure.
Several methods can be used to create the double eyelid — including the full-incisional, partial incision and no incision methods ( e. g. the DST method ).
One study done by a German researcher showed that out of 38 dachshunds, they found partial hearing loss in 54. 6 % of double merles, and 36. 8 % of single merles.
In all these cases, increases in traffic from the late 1990s have led to the partial reinstatement of double track.
The transition state TS # is depicted as a 5-membered ring with partial covalent or double bonding.
The transition state for the addition is a nine-membered ring with chair conformation with partial single bonds and double bonds.

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