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Some Related Sentences

Conversely and tabako
Conversely, in the word 煙草 ( tabako ) for " tobacco ", the individual kanji respectively mean " smoke " and " herb ", which corresponds to the meaning, but they have no phonetic relationship to the word tabako this is 熟字訓 ( jukujikun ).

Conversely and Japanese
Conversely, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean do not have single words for a thousand to the second, third, fifth power, etc., unlike English and many other European languages.
Conversely, in more common Japanese martial arts ( such as karate ), ranks are gained after passing a single test, and practitioners of karate are not normally demoted, even after repeated poor performances at tournaments.
Conversely, the Chinese logogram for water (" 水 ") may have a slightly different appearance in Japanese texts than it does in Chinese texts, and local typefaces may reflect this.
Conversely, the fourth game, The Return of Werdna, was poorly received, as, lacking the knowledge of subcultures necessary to solving the game, Japanese players had no chance of figuring out some puzzles.
Conversely, the Japanese term seiyū is commonly used among English-speaking anime and game fans for Japanese voice actors.
Conversely, because the Japanese American community was politicized by the internment and subsequent Redress and Reparations effort, and because of the global and local growth of overseas Japanese investment, Little Tokyo has resisted eradication and has continued to exist as a tourist attraction, community center, and home to Japanese American senior citizens and others.
Conversely, the basic structure of a transitive Japanese sentence is SOV, with the usual syntactic features associated with languages of this typology, including postpositions, that is, grammar particles that appear after the words and phrases to which they apply.
Conversely, her contributions to Japanese education were recognized by the following Imperial Awards:
Conversely, fewer than 5 % of Japanese public debt is held by foreign countries.
Conversely the Japanese investors in the college are impressed with the way Wilt has dealt with the adversity, and have him promoted.

Conversely and word
Conversely, words containing Lu, as in the word Lugh itself, or lo or le have appeared for millennia always meaning light or sun or sun god.
Conversely, some words appear to be a prefixed form of an opposite, but the opposite term does not exist, such as inept, which appears to be in-+ * ept ; such a word is known as an unpaired word.
Conversely, it being set apart implies the opposite-that someone took the clothes off in an ordinary manner ; furthermore, the Greek text uses the word, entetuligmenon, " having been folded up ", seeming to imply some intentional action had been taken on the soudarion.
Conversely, on the next line, the end of " I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him " has an extra syllable because omitting the word " him " would make the sentence unclear, but adding a syllable at the end would not disrupt the meter.
Conversely, the word also figures in idiomatic phrases such as " the dog's bollocks ", " top bollock ( s )", or more simply " the bollocks " ( as opposed to just " bollocks "), which will refer to something which is admired, approved of or well-respected.
Conversely, two unitary district councils added the word " county " to their titles to become " Rutland County Council District Council " and " County of Herefordshire District Council ".
Conversely, in the Hebrew language compound, the word ב ֵּ ית ס ֵ פ ֶ ר bet sefer ( school ), it is the head that is modified: the compound literally means " house-of book ", with ב ַּ י ִ ת bayit ( house ) having entered the construct state to become ב ֵּ ית bet ( house-of ).
Conversely, neutral quotes may indicate that the word or phrase in quotes has changed in meaning since its usage in the specific instance, especially if the word or phrase has gained a controversial or pejorative meaning.
Conversely, synthetic languages often combine many lexical morphemes into single words, making it difficult to boil them down to the traditional sense of words found more easily in analytic languages ; this is especially difficult for polysynthetic languages, such as Inuktitut and Ubykh, where entire sentences may consist of a single word.
Conversely, where the word " banci " seems innocuous enough in Malaysia (" census "), in Indonesia it is a derogatory term for " transvestite ".
* Conversely, the word knave originally meant " boy " and only gradually acquired its meaning of " person of low, despicable character ".
Conversely and to some surprisingly, the word may be used to mean " approve of ," especially in an official sense.

Conversely and for
Conversely, if he gives a heavy rating to his own reading, and finds more accurate facts in it than in the others, a point is chalked up for the intrinsic, objective meaningfulness of this type of mediumistic material.
Conversely, the Radical Republicans criticized him for moving too slowly in abolishing slavery.
Conversely, some elements do not maintain distinct allotropes in different phases for example phosphorus has numerous solid allotropes, which all revert to the same P < sub > 4 </ sub > form when melted to the liquid state.
Conversely, British English favours fitted as the past tense of fit generally, whereas the preference of American English is more complex: AmEng prefers fitted for the metaphorical sense of having made an object " fit " ( i. e., suited ) for a purpose ; in spatial transitive contexts, AmEng uses fitted for the sense of having made an object conform to an unchanged object that it surrounds ( e. g., " fitted X around Y ") but fit for the sense of having made an object conform to an unchanged object that surrounds it ( e. g., " fit X into Y "); and for the spatial senses ( both intransitive and transitive ) of having been matching with respect to contour, with no alteration of either object implied, AmEng prefers fit (" The clothes fit.
Conversely, the withdrawal syndrome may also be a trigger for relapse.
Conversely, any algebra for which this is true is clearly alternative.
Conversely the use of true brass seems to have declined in Western Europe during this period in favour of gunmetals and other mixed alloys but by the end of the first Millennium AD brass artefacts are found in Scandinavian graves in Scotland, brass was being used in the manufacture of coins in Northumbria and there is archaeological and historical evidence for the production of brass in Germany and The Low Countries areas rich in calamine ore which would remain important centres of brass making throughout the medieval period, especially Dinant brass objects are still collectively known as dinanterie in French.
Conversely, many fighter aircraft, such as the F-16, are often used as ' bomb trucks ,' despite being designed for aerial combat.
Conversely, a subset R defines a binary function if and only if, for any x in X and y in Y, there exists a unique z in Z such that ( x, y, z ) belongs to R.
Conversely, certain general principles ( for example, neighbourliness, or charity ) are seen to be universal and consistent.
Conversely, in more recent times, Russian existentialist philosopher Lev Shestov viewed Job as the embodiment of the battle between reason ( which offers general and seemingly comforting explanations for complex events ) and faith in a personal god, and one man's desperate cry for him.
Conversely, the vast majority of early attempts at proper excavation techniques failed to accurately measure or record stratigraphy, thereby failing to provide a secure context for artefact finds making interpretations extremely limited in scope.
Conversely, in the English language as a whole, singular verb forms can often be used with nouns ending in "- s " that were once considered plural ( for example: " Physics is my favorite academic subject ").
Conversely, Derek Bickerton and others argue that the advent of abstract words provided a mental basis for analyzing higher-order relations, and that any communication system that remotely resembles human language utterly relies on cognitive architecture that co-evolved alongside language.
Conversely, the tiny meson mass mass differences responsible for meson oscillations are often expressed in the more convenient inverse picoseconds.
Conversely, in functional code, the output value of a function depends only on the arguments that are input to the function, so calling a function f twice with the same value for an argument x will produce the same result f ( x ) both times.
Conversely, the bodies of people who had certain medical conditions are useful for research into those conditions.
Conversely, if the data are sparse — that is, if only K out of N Fourier coefficients are nonzero — then the complexity can be reduced to O ( K log N log ( N / K )), and this has been demonstrated to lead to practical speedups compared to an ordinary FFT for N / K > 32 in a large-N example ( N = 2 < sup > 22 </ sup >) using a probabilistic approximate algorithm ( which estimates the largest K coefficients to several decimal places ).
Conversely, one might expect that inertial motions, once identified by observing the actual motions of bodies and making allowances for the external forces ( such as electromagnetism or friction ), can be used to define the geometry of space, as well as a time coordinate.
Conversely, for many deductive systems, it is possible to prove the completeness theorem as an effective consequence of the compactness theorem.

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