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second and canonical
" More remarkable is the evidence that by the end of the second century Jude was widely accepted as canonical.
However, with the appropriate reduction formula, every elliptic integral can be brought into a form that involves integrals over rational functions and the three Legendre canonical forms ( i. e. the elliptic integrals of the first, second and third kind ).
Stated equivalently for matrices, the first part reduces a matrix to row echelon form using elementary row operations while the second reduces it to reduced row echelon form, or row canonical form.
( The canonical gospels are often dated from the second half of the 1st century.
If pedobaptists accept this text as canonical, they can still point out that the second clause mentions believing, but not baptism.
It is canonical to divide the artistic career of Velázquez by his two visits to Italy, with his second grouping of works following the first visit and his third grouping following the second visit.
Enriques surfaces give examples of complex manifolds that have Ricci-flat metrics, but their canonical bundles are not trivial so they are Calabi – Yau manifolds according to the second but not the first definition above.
In the first year ( called canonical ), they deepen their life of prayer and relationship with God along with their knowledge of life as a Missionary of Charity, the second year is more focused on the practical training for the mission life.
Then one seeks vectors maximizing the same correlation subject to the constraint that they are to be uncorrelated with the first pair of canonical variables ; this gives the second pair of canonical variables.
In the second half of 1920s, the canonical Russian Orthodox Church started making steps toward some form of rapprochement with the Soviet regime.
of the class of nonlinear second order ordinary differential equations with polynomial coefficients, those that possess a certain desirable technical property, shared by the linear equations ( nowadays commonly referred to as the ' Painlevé property ') can always be transformed into one of fifty canonical forms.
The second edition of Deadlands uses the updated backstory of 1877 as the canonical starting point.
Entering the second chapter of this section, " The Perverse Implantation ", Foucault argues that prior to the 18th century, discourse on sexuality focused on the productive role of the married couple, which was monitored by both canonical and civil law.
Thus, among her first works were a translation of the Dhamma Sangani, a text from the Theravāda Abhidhamma Piṭaka, which she published under the title A Buddhist manual of psychological ethics: Being a translation, now made for the first time, from the original Pali, of the first book in the Abhidhamma Piṭaka, entitled: Dhamma-sangaṇi ( Compendium of States or Phenomena ) ( 1900 ); a second early translation was that of the Therīgāthā, a canonical work of verses traditionally ascribed to early Buddhist nuns ( under the title Psalms of the Sisters ).
Bultmann held that the final form of the four canonical gospels was written toward the end of the second century.
In canonical comics, she first appears the second issue of Angel: After the Fall ( 2007 ), the official Angel continuation.
The second painter is Jean Colombe, who was paid 25 gold pieces by the Duke to complete certain canonical hours.
Robin appears in " No Future for You ", the second arc of the canonical comic book series Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight.
Annie Chapman, the second canonical victim of Jack the Ripper, was said to have made antimacassars for a living shortly before she was murdered.
English composer Geoffrey Burgon wrote a duet ( This Eane Night ) for two countertenors ( recorded by James Bowman and Charles Brett ) with words altered slightly to fit the canonical single melody, the second countertenor starting one bar behind the first.
( In the last step, we have expanded the canonical partition function, and is the Boltzmann constant, the second sum is performed over all microscopic states, denoted by with energy.
This story is Virginia DeMarce's second fictional foray in the series and like " Biting Time ", the tale establishes some important canonical underpinnings that draw references, or are extrapolated upon in the various novel sequels.

second and example
One growth center in a short bone -- distal phalanx of the second finger -- was chosen as an example for discussion here, primarily because epiphyseal-diaphyseal fusion, the maturity indicator for Completion in long and short bones, occurs in this center for girls near the menarche and for boys near their comparable pubescent stage.
An accompanying record of paralanguage factors for the second example might also note a throaty rasp.
There is a fine second act, as an example, one in which Samuel Groom, as Dillon, has an opportunity to blaze away in one impassioned passage after another.
In the second example CH < sub > 3 </ sub > COOH undergoes the same transformation, in this case donating a proton to ammonia ( NH < sub > 3 </ sub >), but cannot be described using the Arrhenius definition of an acid because the reaction does not produce hydronium.
The book presents the second series of novels not as additions to the series ' continuity but as an example of a roleplaying campaign with Merlin, Luke, Julia, Jurt and Coral as the PCs.
According to Ridenti, who cites the Fernando Henrique Cardoso administration as an example of the first group and the Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva administration as an example of the second, " we have it cyclically ".
For example, a runner on first base advances to second on a passed ball.
For example, a 500 gigabyte hard drive holds bytes, and a 100 megabit per second Ethernet connection transfers data at bit / s.
# The fade can be repeated several times, for example, from the first track, fade to the second track, then back to first, then to second again.
These included personal journeys, journeys related solely with his second job as a solicitor, and Conservative Party business, for example travel to Conservative conferences.
For example, the second edition of the popular introductory textbook, An Outline of Money, devoted the last three of its ten chapters to questions of foreign exchange management and in particular the ' problem of balance '.
For example the President for the second half of 2007, Portugal, was the second in a trio of states alongside Germany and Slovenia with whom Portugal had been co-operating.
Customers using the fastest connections of five megabits per second, for example, will have a monthly allotment of 60 GB, beyond which Bell will charge $ 1. 12 per GB to a maximum of $ 22. 50.
For example, in a copper wire of cross-section 0. 5 mm < sup > 2 </ sup >, carrying a current of 5 A, the drift velocity of the electrons is on the order of a millimetre per second.
The same phenomenon occurs in English, for example in the second syllable in the word ' bottle '.
Many Indo-European languages, for example, obey " Wackernagel's Law ", which requires clitics to appear in " second position ", after the first syntactic phrase or the first stressed word in a clause:
* Gothic: Sentence clitics appear in second position in accordance with Wackernagel's Law, including-u ( yes-no question ),-uh " and ", þan " then ", ƕa " anything ", for example ab-u þus silbin " of thyself ?".
Some of the higher raw moments do exist and have a value of infinity, for example the raw second moment:
For example, if the first approach is taken then " car park " will come after " carbon " and " carp " ( as it would if it were written " carpark "), whereas in the second approach " car park " will come before those two words.
This force has been measured, and is a striking example of an effect purely due to second quantization.
The dimension of a physical quantity is the combination of the basic physical dimensions ( usually mass, length, time, electric charge, and temperature ) which describe it ; for example, speed has the dimension length per time, and may be measured in meters per second, miles per hour, or other units.

1.594 seconds.