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Comparable and other
* Comparable performance — average-case performance is as efficient as other trees.
" Comparable words from other regions would include " mate " or " pet '".
Comparable figures were found in other parts of Western Europe: in France, such terms as devins-guérisseurs and leveurs de sorts were used for them, whilst in the Netherlands they were known as toverdokters or duivelbanners, in Germany as Hexenmeisters and in Denmark as kloge folk.
Comparable data is used to estimate the site value, and may also be useful in estimating construction costs and other factors.
Comparable ATM units marketed by other companies at the time were the Diebold TABS 9000 and NCR 50xx series.

Comparable and state
Comparable to Lear, it shows the fight of the decayed Trojan queen, Hecuba, against the Athenian empire, succeeding only when she abandons the aristocracy and the interests of the state to physically meet the proletariat and join the people's cause.

Comparable and systems
Comparable pluralistic ( or ' mixed ') legal systems operate in Quebec, Louisiana and South Africa.
Comparable systems
Comparable debit card systems are Maestro and Visa Electron.
Comparable to CHKDSK / ScanDisk tools of Microsoft operating systems .</ td >
Comparable systems:
Comparable scales for indicating sucrose content are the degree Plato (° P ), which is widely used by the brewing industry, and the degree Balling, which is the oldest of the three systems and therefore mostly found in older textbooks, but also still in use in some parts of the world.

Comparable and at
Comparable visions of life are at work in Antigone and Romeo And Juliet.
Comparable gas turbine would be the Kawasaki GBP70 at 6639 kW and a fuel consumption of 284 gm / kWhr or about 36 % higher.
Comparable material has been found at Göbekli Tepe.
Comparable statements are: " Look at the flower and the flower also looks "; " Guest and host interchange ".
Comparable only with Hadrian's Wall in England in its complexity and preservation, the fortification stretches some 56 km from Black Sea coast across the Thracian peninsula to the Sea of Marmara at west of Silivri.
Comparable objects found in a Phoenician tomb at Achziv suggest that they may have decorated a sword handle.

Comparable and Eastern
Comparable Far Eastern works are always described as painted, as are Mesoamerican works.

Comparable and .
Comparable trends can be noted elsewhere.
Comparable to wolves, and similar to domestic dogs, coyotes have a higher density of sweat glands on their paw pads.
Comparable images from Western Christianity are generally not described as " icons ", although " iconic " may be used to describe a static style of devotional image.
Comparable to the size of viruses or bacteria, their compact parts would allow them to be more complex.
Comparable organizations in the English-speaking world are the Boys ' Brigade and the non-militaristic Woodcraft Folk ; however, they never matched the development and growth of Scouting.
Comparable formats include Sony's Digital Betacam, launched in 1993, and MPEG IMX, launched in 2001.
Comparable devices were not developed in Europe until the 18th century.
Comparable to most people with the disorder, she was arm deficient and developed shortened bones and legs.
Comparable accounts survive, including those by the Church Father, Gregory of Nazianzus and by Jerome in his commentary to Zephaniah written in 392 CE.
Reece led the House Special Committee to Investigate Tax-Exempt Foundations and Comparable Organizations which investigated the use of funds by tax-exempt organizations ( non-profit organizations ) to see if they were being used to support communism.
Comparable discontent manifested itself in the seventeenth century when a number of Wymondham citizens, including Thomas Lincoln, John Beal and others emigrated to Hingham, Norfolk in the wave of religious dissent that swept England in the years preceding Cromwell's Commonwealth.
Comparable to the Roman tradition, the views of Confucianism on " right living " relate very much to the ideal of the ( male ) scholar-leader and his benevolent rule, buttressed by a tradition of filial piety.
For example, in Java ( where protocols are termed interfaces ), the < tt > Comparable </ tt > interface specifies a method < tt > compareTo ()</ tt > which implementing classes should implement.
Comparable community groups based in Ontario, Canada, are called conservation authorities.
Comparable to the views of the nineteenth century moral philosopher Henry Sidgwick, Nagel believes that one needs to conceive of one's good as an impersonal good and one's reasons as objective reasons.
Comparable only to Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, a whole new quarter of the city was constructed in recent years.
Comparable is also Numbers 5: 11ff, where a confirmed adulteress is punished with swelling of the abdomen.
Comparable fluid bearings have stiffness of ~ 10 ^ 6 MN / m.
Comparable failures in Australia ( HIH, One. Tel ) are associated with the eventual passage of the CLERP 9 reforms.

chancellor and position
One of Otto III's first actions as an independent ruler was to appointed Heribert of Cologne as his chancellor over Italy, a position he would hold until Otto III's death in 1002.
Although Schmidt did not feel that he was in a position to substantially extend the social reforms of the Brandt Administration, due to the economic problems he encountered during his time as chancellor, a wide range of reforms were nevertheless carried out under his administration.
After Clay was employed as Wythe's amanuensis for four years, the chancellor took an active interest in Clay's future ; he arranged a position for him with the Virginia attorney general, Robert Brooke.
In his position, Salutati was responsible for the widely circulated official correspondences with other states, drafting confidential instructions to ambassadors, conducting diplomacy and negotiating treaties: " in its chancellor Florence had someone truly exceptional, endowed not only with legal knowledge, political cunning and diplomatic skill, but also with psychological penetration, a gift for public relations, and unusual literary skill.
This was certainly the position adopted by the two chief architects ( and enforcers ) of the Congress system, British foreign secretary Viscount Castlereagh and Austrian chancellor Prince von Metternich.
Bourchier's short term of office as chancellor coincided with the start of the Wars of the Roses, and at first he was not a strong partisan, although he lost his position as chancellor when Richard, Duke of York, was deprived of power in October 1456.
During the minority of Henry VI Kemp had a prominent position in the English council as a supporter of Henry Beaufort, whom he succeeded as chancellor in March 1426.
From 1859 to 1860, he was chancellor of the University of Wisconsin – Madison and agent of the board of regents of the normal school fund ; in 1866 he was president of St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland ; and from 1867 to 1870 he was the first United States Commissioner of Education, and in this position he laid the foundation for the subsequent work of the Bureau of Education.
L ' Hôpital then held the position of chancellor to the king's sister, Margaret of France, Duchess of Berry.
Early in 1643 he was chosen chancellor of Salisbury Cathedral, but he was soon deprived of this position as a " malignant.
Following the end of the Second World War, the first and only foreigner was elected to hold the office of chancellor was the Czech professor Alois Král, who had lectured at Faculty of Technical Sciences since 1920 and also held the position of dean thereof four times.
The position of chancellor is a four year, non-renewable term.
The current chancellor of the university is John Thompson, who held the position since 2008.
Prior to the formation of the system, the position of president was more akin to what is now chancellor of the Columbia campus.
Former Boston University School of Oratory professor and telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell became the school's first chancellor in 1907, a position he held until his death in 1922.
Although the chancellor only has a technocratic role, the position is a political appointment made by a vote of both houses of the Federal Assembly, sitting together as the United Federal Assembly, for a term of four years.
One or two Vice-Chancellors ( before 1852 this position was called the State Secretary of the Confederation ) are also appointed ; in contrast to the chancellor, their appointment is made directly by the Federal Council.
Hopkins also became one of the school's most generous supporters, and became the school's first chancellor, which position he held until his death in 1785.
In the spring of 2006, Austin announced that he would retire from his position as university president in June 2007 and assume the newly created role of university chancellor.
His father, Nicholas Perrenot de Granvelle ( 1484 – 1550 ), afterwards became chancellor of the empire under Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, held an influential position in the Netherlands, and from 1530 until his death he was one of the emperor's most trusted advisers in Germany.
Zhang Liang was still the chancellor of Hán under the new arrangement but he was aware of his precarious position, and cognizant of how Xiang Yu had destroyed his hope of restoring the Hán state.
In 1860 he was appointed chancellor in Pulaski County, a position he held until Union forces captured the state capital.
Nevertheless, chancellor Leopold Figl offered the party a ministerial position in the government and Karl Altmann was made Minister for Energy.
Kerr gained respect from his stance and was named UC Berkeley's first chancellor when that position was created in 1952.

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