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survey and approaching
With the approaching opening of the Grand Canal, the Grand Canal Company obtained permission from the Directors General and asked John Brownrigg to do a survey which found that much of Omer's work had deteriorated badly, so they started repairs.

survey and scope
The vast scope of the text, itself almost an anthropological survey taking in creation myths, world religions and man's impact on the planet, impressed critics and listeners alike, as did the similarly eclectic score.
In March 1985, the railways decided to extend the scope of their survey to include the omitted length of the west coast line extending from Madgaon to Roha.
It is a compilation by Pierre Deligne of some survey articles, new results within the scope of SGA4, and finally material from SGA5.
The mapping project was originally a general survey of newly acquired lands, but the job soon gained a wider scope under Warren Hastings, who was appointed as Governor-General in 1773.
After extensive survey research, Inglehart postulated that the Western societies under the scope of his survey were undergoing transformation of individual values, switching from materialist values, emphasizing economic and physical security, to a new set of post-materialist values, which instead emphasized autonomy and self-expression.
The legislature grew impatient with the scope and pace of the survey work and slowly cut the budget.
Nevertheless, in 1989, the leading German gun magazine, VISIER, discovered from a survey that a large number of German airgun shooters would be willing to pay more than 500 DM ( about 300 U. S. dollars ) for an air rifle which was equipped with a sporting-style stock and designed for scope use.
The scope of its activities expanded in the early 1970s when a survey was conducted to probe complaints by women tailors of exploitation by contractors.
Each book begins with an introduction to the techniques used to survey the particular vegetations within its scope, discussing sampling, the type of data collected, organization of the data, and analyzing the data.
# The use case survey is not the scope of the project per se.

survey and extent
Their accuracy has been called into question, however ( e. g., by Chauncey Brewster Tinker in The Translations of Beowulf, a comprehensive survey of 19th-century translations and editions of Beowulf ), and the extent to which the manuscript was actually more readable in Thorkelin's time is unclear.
A survey was carried out in October 2010, using three dimensional scans to build up a detailed view of each elevation, thus helping to identify the extent of the conservation required.
However, much of the expedition's survey equipment had been lost at this point and thus vital questions about the height and extent of the lake could not be answered.
Estimates of deaths due to starvation ranged into the millions, although the government did not allow outside observers to survey the extent of the famine.
In fact, it is among the unpublished records of the boundary survey, that he indulged in the flowing bowl to such an extent as not only to hinder the work, but also to cause him at times to be the reverse of amiable in his manners.
A number of recent survey studies have demonstrated the consistency of these rankings between people in a given culture and indeed to a considerable extent across cultures.
Telescope operation was automated to the extent that the survey could be run all night without observer intervention.
The WHO has conducted a survey of available data and studies globally to assess the extent of this issue and issued a chapter-length report, called “ Sexual Violence ," as part of the WHO ’ s larger 2002 “ World Report on Violence and Health .” The report states that, globally, one in four women will likely experience sexual violence by an intimate partner and one in three girls report their first sexual experience being forced.
The frequent breakdowns and service outages frustrated riders to such an extent that 91 % of users preferred replacing the people mover with a walkway, according to a 2004 survey of 240 Wellington commuters conducted by National Development, owners of the Station Landing property.
" The paper concludes that the Lancet survey, " cannot be considered a reliable or valid contribution towards knowledge about the extent of mortality in Iraq since 2003.
The resulting maps ( primarily at 6 ″ scale, with greater detail for urban areas, to an extreme extent in Dublin ) portrayed the country in a degree of detail never attempted before, and when the survey of the whole country was completed in 1846, it was a world first.
Over the years many sociologists have contributed theories and research which has enlightened psychiatry in this area ( e. g. Avison and Robins ); The relationship between social factors and mental illness was demonstrated by the early work of Hollingshead and Readlich in Chicago in the 1930s, who found a high concentration of individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia in deprived areas of the city has been replicated numerous times throughout the world, although controversy still exists as to the extent of drift of vulnerable individuals to these areas or of a higher incidence of the disorder in the socially disadvantaged ; the Midtown Manhattan Study conducted in the 1950s by Cornell University hinted at widespread psychopathology among the general population of New York City ( Srole, Sanger, Michael, Opler, and Rennie, 1962 ); the Three Hospitals Study ( Wing JK and Brown GW, Social Treatments of Chronic Schizophrenia: a comparative survey of three mental hospitals, 1961, Journal of Mental Science, 107, 847-861 ) was a very influential work that has been replicated, that demonstrated forcefully that the poverty of the environment in poor mental hospitals lead to greater handicaps in the patients.
Often, an area under contract was surveyed only to the extent that was necessary to create plausible, but fabricated, survey plats and field notes for the remainder of the area.
In a recent survey of the evidence, Malcolm Schofield, however, has argued that it is difficult to know to what extent the Academy was interested in practical ( i. e., non-theoretical ) politics since much of our evidence " reflects ancient polemic for or against Plato.

survey and Domesday
William ordered the compilation of the Domesday Book, a survey of the entire population and their lands and property for tax purposes, which reveals that within twenty years of the conquest the English ruling class had been almost entirely dispossessed and replaced by Norman landholders, who also monopolised all senior positions in the government and the Church.
In 1086 William ordered the compilation of the Domesday Book, a survey listing all the landholders in England along with their holdings.
At Christmas 1085, William ordered the compilation of a survey of the landholdings of him and his vassals throughout the kingdom, organised by counties, a work now known as the Domesday Book.
William Rufus inherited the Anglo-Norman settlement detailed in the Domesday Book, a survey undertaken at his father's command, essentially for the purposes of taxation, which could not have been undertaken anywhere else in Europe at that time, and is a sign of the control of the English monarchy.
* 1274 – The first main survey of the Hundred Rolls, an English census seen as a follow up to the Domesday Book completed in 1086, is begun ; it lasts until 1275.
* The first main survey of the Hundred Rolls, an English census seen as a follow up to the Domesday Book completed in 1086, is finished ; it began in 1274.
* The first main survey of the Hundred Rolls, an English census seen as a follow up to the Domesday Book completed in 1086, is begun ; it lasts until 1275.
* The Domesday survey is commissioned by William I of England, apparently prompted by the abortive invasion of Canute IV of Denmark, to ensure proper taxation and levies.
* A survey of royal privileges is conducted, which is included in the Hundred Rolls, an English census seen as a follow up to the Domesday Book completed in 1086 ; the Hundred Rolls is later completed with two larger surveys in 1274 / 1275 and 1279 / 1280.
Domesday Book ( or ), now held at The National Archives, Kew, in South West London, is the record of the great survey of much of England and parts of Wales completed in 1086.
One of the main purposes of the survey was to determine who held what and what taxes had been liable under Edward the Confessor ; the judgment of the Domesday assessors was final — whatever the book said about who held the material wealth or what it was worth, was the law, and there was no appeal.
The Domesday survey therefore recorded the names of the new holders of lands and the assessments on which their tax was to be paid.
# The Boldon Buke — a survey of the bishopric of Durham a century later than Domesday.
In 1986, the BBC released the BBC Domesday Project, the results of a project to create a survey to mark the 900th anniversary of the original Domesday Book.
Darby first cites F. W. Maitland's comment following his compilation of a table of statistics from material taken from the Domesday Book survey, " it will be remembered that, as matters now stand, two men not unskilled in Domesday might add up the number of hides in a county and arrive at very different results because they would hold different opinions as to the meanings of certain formulas which are not uncommon ", then after adding that " each county presents its own problems " Darby concedes that " it would be more correct to speak not of ' the Domesday geography of England ', but of ' the geography of Domesday Book '.
At the time of the Domesday Book survey Ludlow was the location of the unoccupied large Stanton Manor, a possession of Walter de Lacy.
The Exeter Domesday Book records that, at the death of Edward the Confessor in 1066, the site was held ( probably by lease from the Abbey ) by one Uluert, and by Roger de Corcella at the time of the survey in 1086.
The Domesday survey was an administrative survey of the landholdings of the kingdom, and was unique to medieval Europe.

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