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consequence and slow
The consequence of slow but nonstop travel in a dry climate is that horse's feet are naturally worn to a small, smooth, even and hard state.
This is a consequence of Snell's law and the very slow speed of light inside a conductor.
A supposedly unintended consequence of the code, however, caused it to be more damaging: a computer could be infected multiple times and each additional process would slow the machine down, eventually to the point of being unusable.
As a consequence of relativity, the extreme gravitational field and orbital velocity experienced by infalling matter around a black hole would " slow " time for that matter relative to a distant observer.
As a consequence, slow CMEs are accelerated toward the speed of the solar wind and fast CMEs are decelerated toward the speed of the solar wind.
The slow convergence here can be seen as a consequence of the curse of dimensionality.
As such, the UK and French infantry tanks were heavily armoured, and as a consequence slow, whereas British cavalry (" cruiser ") tanks were swift, and as a result poorly armoured.
This was an era when air travel was still in its infancy and journeys by road uncomfortable and slow, and in consequence Devon and Cornwall were fashionable destinations for London ’ s wealthy and cultured society and the railways their preferred mode of transport.
The demise of the Ottoman Caliphate took place in part because of a slow erosion of power in relation to Europe and end of the state in consequence of partitioning of the Ottoman Empire.
As a consequence of this slow progress the Lunacy Act 1845 created the Lunacy Commission to focus on lunacy legislation.

consequence and growth
The most accepted theory of how these structures came to be is that all the large-scale structure of the cosmos we observe today was formed as a consequence of the growth of the primordial fluctuations, which are small changes in the density of the universe in a confined region.
The population of Italy almost doubled during the twentieth century, but the pattern of growth was extremely uneven due to large-scale internal migration from the rural South to the industrial cities of the North, a phenomenon which happened as a consequence of the Italian economic miracle of the 1950-60s.
As a consequence, most of the wood today is derived from thinning and improvement cuts, forming 50 % of the annual total growth increment of 8 million cubic meters of wood.
As a consequence, the sequence that replicates fastest may even disappear completely in selection-mutation equilibrium, in favor of more slowly replicating sequences that are part of a quasispecies with a higher average growth rate.
: The secretary bird is characterised in flight, the natural consequence of growth and speed.
:( 2 ) the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident.
As a consequence, it was not able to explain the qualitatively different empirical regularities that characterized the growth process over longer time horizons in both developed and less developed economies.
Forest fires are more common close to edges as a consequence of increased desiccation at edges and increased understory growth present due to increased light availability.
* Energy: Willow is grown for biomass or biofuel, in energy forestry systems, as a consequence of its high energy in-energy out ratio, large carbon mitigation potential and fast growth.
During the 19th century, many intellectuals and politicians were preoccupied with the growth of the urban proletariat as a consequence of the Industrial Revolution.
As a consequence, the hair ’ s growth phase ( anagen ) is shortened, and young, unpigmented vellus hair is prevented from growing and maturing into the deeply-rooted and pigmented terminal hair that makes up 90 percent of the hair on our heads.
* Declining capacity to regulate the private sector, as a consequence of the post-Reagan shift to neoliberal policies, economic globalization, and the growth of corporate lobbies
A consequence of the decline in mortality in Stage Two is an increasingly rapid rise in population growth ( a " population explosion ") as the gap between deaths and births grows wider.
At the Paris Exhibition of 1878, Pétrus won a gold medal, at a time when such an event had great consequence, establishing a selling price at the level of a Médoc second growth, the first wine of Pomerol to do so.
Between the reign of Afonso IV and the 20th century there were numerous alterations to the limits of the nation, a consequence of development and population growth.
A social consequence of this industrial growth was a densely populated metropolitan landscape, home to an extensive and enlarged working class community living in an urban sprawl of low quality terraced houses.
Marx followed Smith by claiming that the most important beneficial economic consequence of capitalism was a rapid growth in productivity abilities.
Another consequence of the mixing of nationalities and the spread of bilingualism and linguistic Russification was the growth of ethnic intermarriage and a process of ethnic Russification — coming to call oneself Russian by nationality or ethnicity, not just speaking Russian as a second language or using it as a primary language.
Signed into law by President Richard Nixon on December 28, 1973, it was designed to protect critically imperiled species from extinction as a " consequence of economic growth and development untempered by adequate concern and conservation.
As a consequence economic growth slowed down.
In consequence of the growth of Macedonian power, and under pressure from their Thracian neighbors, their territory was considerably diminished, and in historical times was limited to the north of Macedonia from Illyria to the Strymon.
Note that as an immediate consequence, any uniformly continuous function on a convex subset of a normed space has a sublinear growth: there are constants and such that for all.
There are two main thesis, it has been either considered a consequence of the economic and demographic growth of the 17th – 18th century or the main cause for the growth of the administration and centralization of the Modern State in the same period.

consequence and employment
" The superiority of reward is not here the consequence of competition, but of its absence: not a compensation for disadvantages inherent in the employment, but an extra advantage ; a kind of monopoly price, the effect not of a legal, but of what has been termed a natural monopoly ... independently of ... artificial monopolies grants by government, there is a natural monopoly in favour of skilled labourers against the unskilled, which makes the difference of reward exceed, sometimes in a manifold proportion, what is sufficient merely to equalize their advantages.
In consequence, people could be thrown out of work involuntarily and not be able to find acceptable new employment.
For Crosland, the relevance of nationalization ( or public ownership ) for socialists was much reduced as a consequence of contemporary full employment, Keynesian management of the economy and reduced capitalist exploitation.
Since many former monks had found employment as chantry priests, the consequence for these clerics was a double experience of dissolution, perhaps mitigated by being in receipt thereafter of a double pension.
As a consequence, he left Dresden to seek employment in St Petersburg at the court of Catherine II of Russia.
As stated by Offe, the new middle class in association with the old one is evolved in the new social movements because of their high levels of education and their access to information and resources that lead to the questions of the way society is valued ; the group of people that are marginal in terms of labour market such as students, housewives and the unemployed participate in the collective actions as a consequence of their disposable resource of time, their position in the receiving end of bureaucratic control and disability to be fully engaged in the society based on employment and consumption.
The substitution effect considers the consequences on employment given the output level, the scale effect considers the consequence on employment of the change in the costs of production by way of the effect of the latter on the production level.
As a direct consequence of the return from war of injured servicemen, the Disabled Persons ( Employment ) Act of 1944 was brought into force to enable these to secure employment.
At this time Ter Borch was invited to visit Madrid, where he received employment and the honour of knighthood from Philip IV, but, in consequence of an intrigue, it is said, he was obliged to return to the Netherlands.
Dr. Hatfill, who claims he has lost his professional reputation and employment prospects as a consequence of being publicly identified, alleges that the Justice Department and the FBI used the phrase as an excuse to implicate him personally, without commencing legal proceedings, to divert media attention from their own failure to charge a suspect for the attacks.
The consequence of the decision for employment, the social and economic structure and cultural and social developments in South Limburg were enormous, as all the Dutch mines were located in this area.
After the opening of the Stockton and Darlington railway in 1825, the search for coal escalated dramatically in the West Auckland area and the population increased as a consequence with the promise of employment.
Low income is a consequence of the social bias women face in trying to obtain formal employment, which in turn deepens the cycle of poverty.
The loss of support resulting from these scandals was outweighed by the president's popularity among the voters of the lower classes, whose income per capita was raised as a consequence of both higher employment, expansion of domestic credit to consumers and government social welfare programs.
In order for such a duty to exist, the injury to the claimant must be " reasonably foreseeable ", meaning, for example, that the type of employment must be one in which an unfit employee could cause harm of the type which occurred, and the claimant is the type of person to whom such harm would be a " reasonably foreseeable consequence ".

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