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Adapting a definition from the Wisconsin Online Resource Center, Robert J. Beck suggests that learning objects have the following key characteristics:
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Adapting and from
Adapting the algorithm to use an additional array to store the shape of the region allows generalization to cover " fuzzy " flood filling, where an element can differ by up to a specified threshold from the source symbol.
Adapting the script to radio was not a great technical challenge for Hitchcock, and he cleverly decided to hold back the ending of the story from the listening audience in order to keep them in suspense themselves.
Adapting the crest from the Duke of Richmond ’ s coat-of-arms, it represented a brave and regal lion standing on a hat with ermine ( both symbols of high rank ) framed by Richmond Hill ’ s world-famous roses and the motto “ Like the rose I flourish .”
Adapting the constitution of the Unilateral Declaration of Independence ( UDI ), the Republic of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia was governed by a Prime Minister and Cabinet chosen from the majority party in a one-hundred member House of Assembly.
) Adapting the large body of existing software to change from TDB to TCB is a formidable task, and as of 2002 many calculations continue to use TDB in some form.
) Adapting the large body of existing software to change from TDB to TCG is a formidable task, and as of 2002 many calculations continue to use TDB in some form.
Adapting the advice of Italian salvage experts who had raised an upside down ship from the bottom of Taranto Harbour, Cox raised the ship inverted by filling it with air.
Adapting his stage name from his French grandmother's surname, Dougray, he enrolled in a foundation course in drama before going on to attend the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama in Cardiff from 1984 to 1987 ; here, he earned the college's Most Promising Drama Student award.
Adapting the characters and plot faithfully from the novel was tricky to retell for a modern audience, so there are some significant changes.
Adapting and Robert
Adapting and .
Adapting arguments earlier used for Rutland and Derby, Looney fitted events in the plays to episodes in Oxford's life, including his travels to France and Italy, the settings for many plays.
Adapting Tezuka's dynamic style to shōjo manga ( which had always been domestic in nature ) proved challenging.
Adapting the concept of the movie into a television series, Whedon decided to reinvent the character of Buffy slightly.
Adapting some of its boardgame titles to various platforms ( TRS-80, Vic-20, Commodore 64, Apple II, etc.
Adapting to the frustrations that he perceived in the executive offices was, however, a difficult transition for him.
* Winterton, G, " The President: Adapting to Popular Election " in M Coper & G Williams ( eds ), Power, Parliament and the People, Federation Press ( 1997 ), 23-41.
Adapting a more regional, seasonally based diet is more sustainable as it entails purchasing less energy and resource demanding produce that naturally grow within a local area and require no long-distance transport.
Adapting to their new environment, these " seaworms " quickly flourish, eventually producing a highly-concentrated form of spice, dubbed " ultraspice.
* Adapting to new business sectors: Since many business opportunities are developing in the realm of social entrepreneurialism, businesses hoping to reach this expanding market must design themselves to be financially profitable, socially beneficial and ecologically sustainable or fail to compete with those companies who do design themselves as such.
Adapting to their new environment, these seaworms quickly flourish, eventually producing a highly concentrated form of spice, dubbed " ultraspice.
Adapting and have
definition and from
Once the poetic arts are separated from the other forms, he lays down his famous definition of tragedy, which sets up standards and so lends direction to the remainder of the work.
but this grinning, broken head, not ten feet away from me, was the sharp definition of what my reality had become.
It is the one exercise that drastically influences the definition of the thighs at the hipline -- that mark of the champion that sets him apart from all other bodybuilders ; ;
Professor McNeill thinks that at Yalta, Stalin did not fully realize the dilemma which faced him, that he thought the exclusion of the anti-Soviet voters from East European elections would not be greatly resented by his allies, while neither Roosevelt nor Churchill frankly faced `` the fact that, in Poland at least, genuinely free democratic elections would return governments unfriendly to Russia '', by any definition of international friendliness.
This definition stems from the equilibrium dissociation of water into hydronium and hydroxide ( OH < sup >−</ sup >) ions:
The Brønsted-Lowry definition is the most widely used definition ; unless otherwise specified acid-base reactions are assumed to involve the transfer of a proton ( H < sup >+</ sup >) from an acid to a base.
As such, it has to be distinguished from agricultural land, which, according to Food and Agriculture Organization's ( FAO ) definition, additionally includes land under permanent crops as well as permanent pastures.
* Identity: the identity is the identity morphism from an object to itself which exists by definition.
A definition of Artist from Princeton. edu: creative person ( a person whose creative work shows sensitivity and imagination ).
The cubists, dadaists, Stravinsky, and many later art movements struggled against this conception that beauty was central to the definition of art, with such success that, according to Danto, " Beauty had disappeared not only from the advanced art of the 1960 ’ s but from the advanced philosophy of art of that decade as well.
Accordingly, these Protestants strip the notion of apostolic succession from the definition of " apostolic " or " apostolicity.
Also running on a JOHANNIAC, the Logic Theory Machine constructed proofs from a small set of propositional axioms and three deduction rules: modus ponens, ( propositional ) variable substitution, and the replacement of formulas by their definition.
The light beam from a distant object cannot itself have any transverse velocity component, or it could not ( by definition ) be seen by the observer, since it would miss the observer.
Aerodynamicists disagree over the precise definition of hypersonic flow ; minimum Mach numbers for hypersonic flow range from 3 to 12.
As seen from the definition, the derived SI units of angular momentum are newton meter seconds ( N · m · s or kg · m < sup > 2 </ sup > s < sup >− 1 </ sup >) or joule seconds ( J · s ).
The Arrhenius definition of acid – base reactions is a development of the hydrogen theory of acids, devised by Svante Arrhenius, which was used to provide a modern definition of acids and bases that followed from his work with Friedrich Wilhelm Ostwald in establishing the presence of ions in aqueous solution in 1884, and led to Arrhenius receiving the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1903 for " recognition of the extraordinary services ... rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation ".
The universal aqueous acid – base definition of the Arrhenius concept is described as the formation of water from a proton and hydroxide ions, or hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions from the dissociation of an acid and base in aqueous solution:
Meteorologists ( and most of the temperate countries in the southern hemisphere ) use a definition based on months, with autumn being September, October and November in the northern hemisphere, According to United States tradition, autumn runs from the day after Labor Day ( i. e. the Tuesday following the first Monday of September ) through Thanksgiving ( i. e. the fourth Thursday in November ), after which the holiday season that demarcates the unofficial beginning of winter begins.
In his earliest work, Against the Heathen-On the Incarnation, written before 319, he repeatedly quoted Plato and used a definition from the Organon of Aristotle.
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