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example and resulting
Common side-effects include diarrhea, resulting from disruption of the species composition in the intestinal flora, resulting, for example, in overgrowth of pathogenic bacteria, such as Clostridium difficile.
In the Major Leagues, the most recent example of a swing at an intentional ball resulting in a hit occurred during a June 22, 2006 game between the Florida Marlins and the Baltimore Orioles.
For example, on Saint Lucia, harvesting mangrove for timber and clearing for fishing reduced the mangrove forests, resulting in a loss of habitat and spawning grounds for marine life that was unique to the area.
For example, structural unemployment is a form of unemployment resulting from a mismatch between demand in the labour market and the skills and locations of the workers seeking employment.
This is especially true if the data is to undergo further processing ( for example editing ) in which case the repeated application of processing ( encoding and decoding ) on lossy codecs will degrade the quality of the resulting data such that it is no longer identifiable ( visually, audibly or both ).
The Zoological Gardens of London for example once successfully managed to mate a male European wolf to an Indian female, resulting in a pup bearing an almost exact likeness to its sire.
A classic example is an earthquake that causes a tsunami, resulting in coastal flooding.
For these disciplines, the original master degree abbreviation is combined with the dr. abbreviation thus resulting in for example " dr. ir.
An example that combines features above is a country that specializes in the production of high-tech knowledge products, as developed countries do, and trades with developing nations for goods produced in factories where labor is relatively cheap and plentiful, resulting in different in opportunity costs of production.
On the right Nicomachus ' example with numbers 49 and 21 resulting in their GCD of 7 ( derived from Heath 1908: 300 ).
Teasdale and Owen ( 1989 ), for example, found the effect primarily reduced the number of low-end scores, resulting in an increased number of moderately high scores, with no increase in very high scores.
Spanish and Ancient Greek, for example, have a perfect ( not the same as the perfective ), which refers to a state resulting from a previous action ( also described as a previous action with relevance to a particular time, or a previous action viewed from the perspective of a later time ).
A good example of where this is useful is for shooters of older military surplus firearms, which often exhibit widely varying bore and groove diameters ; by making bullets specifically intended for the firearm in question, accuracy of the resulting cartridges can be significantly increased.
Note: if the product resulting from the labor process is homogeneous ( all similar in quality and traits, for example, all cups of coffee ) then the value of the period ’ s product can be divided by the total number of items ( use-values ) produced to derive the unit value of each item.
For example, injection of a flux of a liquid crystal between two close parallel plates ( viscous fingering ), causes orientation of the molecules to couple with the flow, with the resulting emergence of dendritic patterns.
This reduces the power of the parser because, as the following example depicts, dropping the lookahead info can confuse the parser as to which grammar rule to pick next, resulting in a reduce / reduce conflict.
The impact of inventions and technology on society is a recurring, if not central theme in Niven's work: for example, addiction to electric brain stimulation resulting in " wireheads ", or the secondary and tertiary effects of an invention such as teleportation on social behavior, problems, and mores.
They may be a mix of different orogenic expressions and terranes, for example thrust sheets, uplifted blocks, fold mountains, and volcanic landforms resulting in a variety of rock types.
For example, an alchemical paradigm might describe the act of wood burning as the wood " releasing its essence of elemental Fire ," while modern science would describe fire as " combustion resulting from a complex chemical reaction.
The Organum, for example, expanded upon plainchant melody using an accompanying line, sung at a fixed interval, with a resulting alternation between polyphony and monophony.
The resulting space is often seen in old city centers of Europe even to this day, as broader streets often outline where the old wall once stood ( evident for example in Prague and Florence, Italy ).
Carry out the modulation, for example by multiplying the sine and cosine waveform with the I and Q signals, resulting in the equivalent low pass signal being frequency shifted to the modulated passband signal or RF signal.
For example, in a 10 card deck, if a 7 card cut and a 4 card cut are made, that is, 7 cards are moved from the top of the deck to the bottom and then the resulting top 4 cards are also moved to the bottom, then those two consecutive cuts are equivalent to a cut the size of ( 7 + 4
For example, proverbs have been used for teaching foreign languages at various levels., In addition, proverbs have been used for public health promotion, such as promoting breast feeding with a shawl bearing a Swahili proverb “ Mother ’ s milk is sweet ”, also for helping people manage diabetes, for to combat prostitution, and for community development The most active field deliberately using proverbs is Christian ministry, where Joseph G. Healey and others have deliberately worked to catalyze the collection of proverbs from smaller languages and the application of them in a wide variety of church-related ministries, resulting in publications of collections and applications ,.

example and vowel
for example, duration sometimes figures in both the vowel system and the intonation.
For example, while most of today's Altaic languages have vowel harmony, Proto-Altaic as reconstructed by Starostin et al.
For example, some words, such as " Kor " ( meaning " to hold "), are now pronounced with a terminal vowel sound, as in " Koro ".
For example, some people pronounce ( meaning " fish ") as, the " r " is dropped and the vowel begins by dipping much lower in tone than standard speech and then rises, effectively doubling its length.
In the Wali language of Ghana, for example, an apostrophe indicates a change of vowel quality, but occurs at the beginning of the word, as in the dialects ’ Bulengee and ’ Dolimi.
For example, while the vowel ū is written with the diacritic in क ू kū, it has its own letter ऊ in ऊक ūka and ( in Hindi but not Sanskrit ) कऊ kaū.
For example, when representing a vowel, the letter ⟨ y ⟩ in non-word-final positions, represents the sound in some words borrowed from Greek ( reflecting an original upsilon ), whereas the letter usually representing this sound in non-Greek words is the letter ⟨ i ⟩.
Another example is the pair of homophones plain and plane, where both are pronounced but are have two different spellings of the vowel.
Another example involves the vowel differences ( with accompanying stress pattern changes ) in several related words.
The same claim is sometimes made for Yemenite Hebrew or Temanit, which differs from other Mizrahi dialects by having a radically different vowel system, and distinguishing between different diacritically marked consonants that are pronounced identically in other dialects ( for example gimel and " ghimel ".
* perfect has the suffix – ī and vowel lengthening in the stem, for example:
For example, in the Hebrew construct-state form bēt, meaning " the house of ", the middle letter " י " in the spelling בית acts as a vowel, whereas in the corresponding absolute-state form bayit (" house "), which is spelled the same, the same letter represents a genuine consonant.
Some, notably Professor Bruce Biggs, have advocated that double vowels be written to mark long vowel sounds ( for example, Maaori ), but he was more concerned with their being marked be marked at all than with the method that was chosen.
In dactylic hexameter of Classical Latin and Classical Greek, for example, each of the six feet making up the line was either a dactyl ( long-short-short ) or spondee ( long-long ), where a long syllable was literally one that took longer to pronounce than a short syllable: specifically, a syllable consisting of a long vowel or diphthong or followed by two consonants.
One example is English " bleat " for the sheep noise: in medieval times it was pronounced approximately as " blairt " ( but without an R-component ), or " blet " with the vowel drawled, which is much more accurate as onomatopoeia than the modern pronunciation.
In some languages, assonance, the repetition of a vowel, is also exploited in forming artistic proverbs, such as the following extreme example from Oromo, of Ethiopia.
For example, the Vai syllabary originally had separate glyphs for syllables ending in a coda ( doŋ ), a long vowel ( soo ), or a diphthong ( bai ), though not enough glyphs to distinguish all CV combinations ( some distinctions were ignored ).
For example, is ṉa ( with the inherent a ) and is ṉ ( without a vowel ).
* The diphthongs and are raised to approximately and before voiceless consonants ; thus, for example, the vowel sound of out is different from that of loud.
For example, a word like car should have the pattern of a " closed syllable " because it has one vowel and ends in a consonant.
For example, in non-rhotic dialects of English the " r " in words like " clear " is usually only pronounced when the following word has a vowel as its first letter ( e. g. " clear out " is realized as ).
In some dialects of Spoken Finnish it is common to drop the last vowel and thus the usage of elative resembles that of Estonian, for example " talost ' ".
Where two adjacent vowel sounds occur in different syllables — for example, in the English word re-elect — the result is described as hiatus, not as a diphthong.
For example, a vowel at the beginning of a word can trigger assimilation in a vowel at the end of a word.

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