Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "International relations" ¶ 30
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

By and means
By the same means he perceives this fact as having communicated itself to the audience ; ;
By no means would we discourage the production of ideas: they provide raw materials with which to work ; ;
By 1937 he had clarified his intentions to serve his people: `` I have striven for clarity and melodious idiom, but at the same time I have by no means attempted to restrict myself to the accepted methods of harmony and melody.
By means of geographical isolation and high fertility rates, inbreeding can be fostered and the pattern of isolation from the greater society maintained.
By means of this social control, deviance is either eliminated or somehow made compatible with the function of the social group.
By all means the most important distinction is that between those total-cost apportionments which superimpose a distribution of admittedly unallocable cost residues on estimates of incremental or marginal costs, and those other apportionments which recognize no difference between true cost allocation and mere total-cost distribution.
By no means.
By no means are these isolated cases.
By means of charts showing wave-travel times and depths in the ocean at various locations, it is possible to estimate the rate of approach and probable time of arrival at Hawaii of a tsunami getting under way at any spot in the Pacific.
By no means do all Jews today believe in reincarnation, but belief in reincarnation is not uncommon among many Jews, including Orthodox.
By " impressions ", he means sensations, while by " ideas ", he means memories and imaginings.
By " chance ", he means all those particular comprehensible events which the viewer considers possible in accord with their experience.
By " necessary connection ", Hume means the power or force which necessarily ties one idea to another.
By allowing a new kind of equality among citizens this opened the way to democracy, which in turn called for a new means, chattel slavery, to at least partially equalise the availability of leisure between rich and poor.
By extension, the term " embark " literally means to board the kind of boat called a " barque ".
By such subtle means were Cranmer's purposes further confused, leaving it for generations to argue over the precise theology of the rite.
By contrast, in civil law jurisdictions ( the legal tradition that prevails in, or is combined with common law in, Europe and most non-Islamic, non-common law countries ), courts lack authority to act where there is no statute, and judicial precedent is given less interpretive weight ( which means that a judge deciding a given case has more freedom to interpret the text of a statute independently, and less predictably ), and scholarly literature is given more.
By means of her mother, Catherine had a stronger legitimate claim to the English throne than King Henry VII himself through the first two wives of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster: Blanche of Lancaster and the Spanish Infanta Constance of Castile.
By no means ... there is a necessary connexion to be taken into consideration.
By means of the atonement and his offering of divine grace to humankind, Christ provided access to divinity for humankind.
By the time DDT was introduced in the U. S., the disease had already been brought under control by a variety of other means.
" By this Derrida means that all claims to know something necessarily involve an assertion of the metaphysical type that something is the case somewhere.
By many, education is understood to be a means of overcoming handicaps, achieving greater equality and acquiring wealth and status for all ( Sargent 1994 ).
By this means, power dissipation in the active device is minimised, and efficiency increased.

By and structure
By personal factors I mean those rooted in personality structure.
By 1946, as the growing fellowship quarreled over structure, purpose, and authority, as well as finances and publicity, Wilson began to form and promote what became known as AA's Twelve Traditions, guidelines for an altruistic, unaffiliated, non-coercive, and non-hierarchical structure that limited AA's purpose to only helping alcoholics on a non-professional level while shunning publicity.
By finding how similar two protein sequences are, we acquire knowledge about their structure and therefore their function.
For example, periodic acid according to Kekuléan structure theory could be represented by the chain structure I-O-O-O-O-H. By contrast, the modern structure of ( meta ) periodic acid has all four oxygen atoms surrounding the iodine in a tetrahedral geometry.
By this point, the Franciscan Order had grown to such an extent that its primitive organizational structure was no longer sufficient.
By 1913, the yellow brick factory had been demolished and on the site a new 5-story structure of reinforced concrete and red brick had been built.
By 2000 the social structure included a politically active working class, a primarily clerical middle class, and an upper bracket consisting of managers, entrepreneurs, and professionals.
By turning his entire body to ice, instead of just wearing an icy exterior, Bobby now was capable of using his power in new, aggressive ways, adding spikes and padding to his ice structure.
By the early 15th century, the ruling structure had split into several large groups known as khanates, including the Nogai Horde and the Uzbek Khanate.
By 1874, the Louvre Palace had achieved its present form of an almost rectangular structure with the Sully Wing to the east containing the square Cour Carrée and the oldest parts of the Louvre ; and two wings which wrap the Cour Napoléon, the Richelieu Wing to the north and the Denon Wing, which borders the Seine to the south.
By supplying the parallel structure, the original conclusion becomes logical.
By then, Chinese-made high-performance computers will be expected to achieve two major breakthroughs: first, the adoption of domestic-made central processing units ( CPUs ); second, the existing cluster-based system structure of high-performance computers will be changed once the computing speed reaches one quadrillion operations per second.
By the late 1930s, some musicals began to be written with a more operatic structure.
By studying the limit of the manifold for large time, Perelman proved Thurston's geometrization conjecture for any fundamental group: at large times the manifold has a thick-thin decomposition, whose thick piece has a hyperbolic structure, and whose thin piece is a graph manifold, but this extra complication is not necessary for proving just the Poincaré conjecture.
By convention, the primary structure of a protein is reported starting from the amino-terminal ( N ) end to the carboxyl-terminal ( C ) end.
By changes in structure, specific proteins acquire the capability to enter the nucleus of the cell and bind to promoter DNA, or to other proteins that themselves are already bound to a given promoter.
By the thirteenth century, it signified a poem of fourteen lines that follows a strict rhyme scheme and specific structure.
By December 1838, he had noted a similarity between the act of breeders selecting traits and a Malthusian Nature selecting among variants thrown up by " chance " so that " every part of newly acquired structure is fully practical and perfected ".
By this Resolution, the UN General Assembly established an international commission which, in collaboration with the Government of Costa Rica, was requested to prepare the organization, structure and setting in motion of the University for Peace.
By comparison, in a general topological space, given sets A, B it is meaningful to say that a point x is arbitrarily close to A ( i. e., in the closure of A ), or perhaps that A is a smaller neighborhood of x than B, but notions of closeness of points and relative closeness are not described well by topological structure alone.
By 2 months of age, the vocal fold started differentiating into a bilaminar structure of distinct cellular concentration, with the superficial layer being less densely populated than the deeper layer.
By 11 months, a three-layered structure starts to be noted in some specimens, again with different cellular population densities.

0.212 seconds.