Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School for Boys" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

number and pupils
Pupil reaction to light is important because it shows an intact retina, and cranial nerve number 2 ( CN II ); if pupils are reactive to light, then that also indicates that the cranial nerve number 3 ( CN III ) ( or at least its parasympathetic fibers ) are intact.
David had a huge number of pupils, making him the strongest influence in French art of the early 19th century, especially academic Salon painting.
Over 10 % of Swedish pupils were enrolled in charter schools in 2008 and the number is growing fast, leading the country to be viewed as a pioneer of the model.
His fame as a theorist attracted to him in the Austrian capital a large number of pupils, some of whom afterwards became eminent musicians.
Sekien is known to have had a number of other pupils, who failed to achieve distinction.
Salai executed a number of paintings under the name of Andrea Salai, but although Vasari claims that Leonardo " taught him a great deal about painting ", his work is generally considered to be of less artistic merit than others among Leonardo's pupils, such as Marco d ' Oggione and Boltraffio.
There are a number of exam boards which offer the chance for pupils to be assessed on either music theory or practice.
He had a large workshop and in addition to his own works there are a number by pupils.
The académie de Versailles, the largest of France's thirty académies by its number of pupils and students, is in charge of supervising all the elementary schools and high schools of the western suburbs of Paris.
Although his pupils included Peter Philips and Thomas Tomkins, both of whom were active as keyboard composers, the native virginal school to which he had contributed so much went into sharp decline with a number of deaths in the 1620s and never recovered.
The number of pupils in each house varies and the numbers given below are from the 2005 – 2006 academic year.
In the late 1850s four boarding houses were planned ( but only three built, namely A, B and C ), to be headed by housemasters: the plan, since dropped, was to increase the number of scholars to 100 so that there would be " College ", " Commoners " and " Houses " consisting of 100 pupils each.
) There are therefore now ten houses in addition to College, which continues to occupy the original 14th century buildings, and the total number of pupils is almost 700.
This number was thought to be the most likely to foster a local feeling of identification: for merchants to get to know their customers, ministers their memberships, and teachers their pupils and parents.
Eton runs a number of courses for pupils from the maintained sector ( state schools ), most of them in the summer holidays ( July and August ).
Before leaving, he found a number of pupils for Jules ; the modest earnings from those lessons, supplemented by fees earned by both brothers as members of synagogue choirs, supported them during their studies.
Though, since 2006, a limited number of GCSEs have been offered to pupils at Sark School.
Indeed, Harrow suffers a significant number of pupils leaving the Borough for their tertiary education.
After WWII Plon was chosen as the site for King Alfred School, a remarkable secondary school for British Forces children under the inspired, maverick headmastership of Freddie Spencer Chapman with his hand-picked staff and on the site of what is now the little-changed non-commissioned officer school, and as such the town holds a place of affection with many former pupils across the world and the declining number of surviving teachers and their families.
Scott's success attracted a large number of pupils, many would go on to have successful careers of their own, not always as architects.
This greatly enhanced his reputation and brought him a large number of pupils.
Likewise, every beth din (" rabbinical court ") was attended by a number of pupils up to three times the size of the court ( Mishnah, tractate Sanhedrin ).
Traditionally, every town rabbi had the right to maintain a number of full-time or part-time pupils in the town's beth midrash ( study hall, usually adjacent to the synagogue ).

number and outgrew
When the number of users outgrew the capacity of the original computer, additional ' compute ' resource computers could be attached via ARCNET, running the same applications and accessing the same data.
The Anzac Day dawn service was held at Ari Burnu Cemetery within the cove until 1999 when the number of people attending outgrew the site.
Soon the increasing number of seminarians outgrew the Watertown facility.
The number of parishioners outgrew the capacity of the church in the 19th century.
In Britain, demand eventually outgrew the number that could be supplied by hand-making, and they began to be imported from France.

number and capacity
There is little doubt that the number of those who wish to serve will be far greater than our capacity to absorb them.
However, whether you arrange to have a European or American model, if you rent a car with the proper seating capacity in relation to the number of people in your party, your transportation expense will average very close to $10.00 per day per passenger.
Nevertheless, he admits, humans and animals differ in mental faculties in a number of ways, including: differences in memory and attention, inferential abilities, ability to make deductions in a long chain, ability to grasp ideas more or less clearly, the human capacity to worry about conflating unrelated circumstances, a sagely prudence which arrests generalizations, a capacity for a greater inner library of analogies to reason with, an ability to detach oneself and scrap one's own biases, and an ability to converse through language ( and thus gain from the experience of others ' testimonies ).
Games played ( most often abbreviated as G or GP ) is a statistic used in team sports to indicate the total number of games in which a player has participated ( in any capacity ); the statistic is generally applied irrespective of whatever portion of the game is contested.
So by reducing the number of tracks used and thus capacity, it was possible to further reduce cost-in contrast to Double Density drives used e. g. in IBM PC computers of the day which saved 180 kB on one side ( by using a 40 tracks format ).
Although the college game has a much larger margin for talent than its pro counterpart, the sheer number of fans following major colleges provides a financial equalizer for the game, with Division I programs – the highest level – playing in huge stadiums, six of which have seating capacity exceeding 100, 000.
By reducing the number of tracks used ( and thus the capacity ), Commodore could further reduce cost-in contrast to the double-density drives used e. g. in IBM PCs of the day which saved 180 KB on one side ( by using a 40-track format ).
Though the combination of both companies ' PC manufacturing capacity initially made it the number one, it soon lost the lead and further market share to Dell which squeezed HP on low end PCs.
where N is the number of individuals measured as biomass density, a is the maximum per-capita rate of change, and K is the carrying capacity of the population.
* Open enrollment is the process of allowing parents to choose which public school their child attends instead of being assigned one ( provided the school has not reached its maximum capacity number for students ).
The exact capacity of a given drive is usually some number above or below the class designation.
He creates an image of disparate individuals, with factions broken up by the guiding hand of the law, working to ensure those in positions of importance are fairly chosen from their number and without the capacity to serve the interests of a smaller group.
Chadwick edited The Beadle Baseball Player, the first baseball guide on public sale, as well as the Spalding and Reach annual guides for a number of years and in this capacity promoted the game and influenced the then-infant discipline of sports journalism.
The most fundamental results of this theory are Shannon's source coding theorem, which establishes that, on average, the number of bits needed to represent the result of an uncertain event is given by its entropy ; and Shannon's noisy-channel coding theorem, which states that reliable communication is possible over noisy channels provided that the rate of communication is below a certain threshold, called the channel capacity.
Even though the human language capacity is finite, one can say and understand an infinite number of sentences, which is based on a syntactic principle called Recursion.
The song's lyrics make a series of scurrilous allegations against a number of highly respected philosophers, usually with regard to their capacity or incapacity for imbibing intoxicating liquors.
The capacity of a disk drive is the product of the sector size, number of sectors per track, number of tracks per side, and the number of disk platters in the drive.
After improvements in 2006, the stadium is currently configured to seat 47, 000 for football but can readily be reconfigured to its original capacity of 70, 000, more than the total number of Rice alumni, living and deceased.
Open enrollment also refers to educational policies which allow residents of a state to enroll their children in any public school, provided the school has not reached its maximum capacity number for students, regardless of the school district in which a family resides.
A large number of subsystems — ranging from main engines to radar equipment — were not installed on this vehicle, but the capacity to add them in the future was retained.
The term " ton " is also used to refer to a number of units of volume, ranging from in capacity.
A number of modern historians and writers, such as Richard Marius, have evaluated More in his political capacity and have criticised him for Anti-Protestantism and, " intolerance.

0.511 seconds.