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Admittance and is
; Laplacian matrix or " Kirchhoff matrix " or " Admittance matrix ": This is defined as D − A, where D is the diagonal degree matrix.
Admittance is free but registration recommended ( write to mars.
Admittance, just like impedance, is a complex number, made up of a real part ( the conductance, G ), and an imaginary part ( the susceptance, B ), thus:
Admittance is 310 yen for adults, as of 2009.
Admittance for performers to the festival is determined by application to a lottery held each November.
Admittance is selective.
* Adult ( A ): Admittance to films classified as Adult is restricted to people 18 years and older.
Admittance is open to all students who show talent and potential in their chosen field of design irrespective of previous education.
Admittance is by guided tour which are in Thai or English.

Admittance and by
Sarah notices a door marked " No Admittance " and pushes her way through into the former robotics section run by Professor J. P. Kettlewell.

Admittance and .
Admittance to each degree of O. T. O.
Admittance of the new members was approved on November 8, 1911.
Admittance to an LL. B.
Admittance in geophysics takes atmospheric pressure as the input and measures small changes in the gravitational field as the output.
Air Admittance Valves have been effectively used in Europe for more than two decades.
Admittance requires adhering to stringent documentation requirements, with questionable proof resulting in application rejection.
Admittance to the state apartment was a privilege, and the further one penetrated ( there were many variations, but an apartment might include for example an anteroom ; withdrawing room ; bedroom ; dressing room ; and closet ) the greater the honour.
Admittance fees are charged at the main gate, and are as follows: adults $ 18, seniors $ 15, children 4 – 12 $ 8, and children under 4 are free.
Admittance specials take place several times yearly.
* Admittance Restricted to persons 18 years of age or over.
Six Organs of Admittance and many other artists.

religious and institute
In the Roman Catholic Church according to the norms of the Code of Canon Law 1983 a Benedictine abbey is a " religious institute ", and its professed members are therefore members of the " Consecrated Life ", commonly referred to as " Religious ".
Prior to this time, Judah had been a vassal of the Assyrian empire, but the rapid decline of Assyria after c. 630 led Josiah to assert his independence and institute a religious reform stressing loyalty to Yahweh, the national God.
Claudius, as the author of a treatise on Augustus ' religious reforms, felt himself in a good position to institute some of his own.
* The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a nonprofit, nonpartisan, interfaith, legal and educational institute dedicated to protecting the free expression of all religious traditions, took its inspiration and namesake from Thomas Becket.
) or in a religious institute, society of apostolic life or secular institute.
* Teresian Daughters of Mary, a diocesan religious institute of women in Davao City under the protection of the archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Davao.
The customary practice whereby persons entering a religious institute take on a name in religion is still observed by Eastern Orthodox and some traditional Roman Catholics.
Originally, the vows taken by profession in any religious institute approved by the Holy See were classified as solemn.
In 1996, the Smithsonian Institute issued a statement addressing claims made in the Book of Mormon, stating that the text is primarily a religious text and that archeologists affiliated with the institute found " no direct connection between the archeology of the New World and the subject matter of the book ".
In the late 1960s, Manning joined the Little Brothers of Jesus of Charles de Foucauld, a religious institute committed to an uncloistered, contemplative life among the poor.
) are members of a religious institute of Catholic women founded by Catherine McAuley in Dublin, Ireland, in 1831.
The religious institute began when McAuley used an inherited fortune to build a " House of Mercy " in Dublin that provided educational, religious, and social services for poor women and children.
The Legion of Christ, a Roman Catholic religious institute, operates the Our Lady of Thornwood Conference, Education and Training Center on the site of a former IBM facility on Columbus Avenue.
* 1732-Alphonsus Liguori founds the Roman Catholic religious institute known as the Redemptorist Fathers with the purpose of doing missionary work among rural people
A Catholic religious institute is an organization, recognised by the Church, whose members ( commonly referred to as " religious ") strive to achieve a common purpose through formally dedicating their life to God.
It applies to all such institutes the single name " religious institute " and the same rules of canon law.
" " Religious order " and " religious institute " tend indeed to be used now as synonyms, and canon lawyer Nicholas Cafardi, commenting on the fact that the canonical term is " religious institute ", can write that " religious order " is a colloquialism.

religious and is
Hemingway's fiction is supported by a `` moral '' backbone and in its search for ultimate meaning hints at a religious dimension.
This is the rhetoric of righteousness the beatniks use in defending their way of life, their search for wholeness, though their actual existence fails to reach these `` religious '' heights.
Piepsam is not, certainly, religious in any conventional sense.
If Jews are identified as a religious body in a controversy that comes before a national or international tribunal, it is obviously compatible with the goal of human dignity to protect freedom of worship.
From that time to this my religious concern is that I might give effective help to the bringing in of God's kingdom on earth.
The religious quest is often intense and deep, and there are students on every campus who are seriously wrestling with the most profound questions of meaning and value.
He is a Buddhist, which means that to him peace and the sanctity of human life are not only religious dogma, but a profound and unshakable Weltanschauung.
It is like medical schools in India where, in that fairy-land of religious inhibition, the dissection of dead bodies is frowned upon.
In the last analysis, religion is the means of inducing, formulating, expressing, enhancing, implementing, and perpetuating man's deepest experience -- the religious.
Man is first religious ; ;
The feeling of individual inferiority, defeat, or humilation growing out of various social situations or individual deficiencies or failures is compensated for by communion in worship or prayer with a friendly, but all-victorious Father-God, as well as by sympathetic fellowship with others who share this faith, and by opportunities in religious acts for giving vent to emotions and energies.
The value-system of a community or society is always correlated with, and to a degree dependent upon, a more or less shared system of religious beliefs and convictions.
Even in the United States, with its freedom of religious belief and worship and its vast denominational differentiation, there is a general consensus regarding the basic Christian values.
In America also all of our major religious bodies officially sanction a universalistic ethic which is reflective of our common religion.
Closely related to this function is the fact that the religious system provides a body of ultimate ends for the society, which are compatible with the supreme eternal ends.
As he points out, a religious group cannot exist without a collective credo, and the more extensive the credo, the more unified and strong is the group.
His view is that every religion pertains to a community, and, conversely, every community is in one aspect a religious unit.
This is brought out in the common religious ethos that prevails even in the denominationally diverse audiences at many secular semi-public and public occasions in the United States ; ;
and it is evidenced in the prayers offered, in the frequent religious allusions, and in the confirmation of points on religious grounds.
There is a marked tendency for religions, once firmly established, to resist change, not only in their own doctrines and policies and practices, but also in secular affairs having religious relevance.
To derive Utopian communism from the Jerusalem Christian community of the apostolic age or from its medieval successors-in-spirit, the monastic communities, is with an appropriate shift of adjectives, misleading in the same way as to derive it from Plato's Republic: in the Republic we have to do with an elite of physical and intellectual athletes, in the apostolic and monastic communities with an elite of spiritual and religious athletes.
It omits, for example, practically the whole line of great nineteenth century English social critics, nearly all the great writers whose basic position is religious, and all those who are with more or less accuracy called Existentialists.

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