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For and convenience
For convenience we chose a stronger pigment, unknown to the early Italians or to Brumidi, titanium oxide, reserving the active lime white for highest lights, put on at the end of the day's stint.
For the convenience of guests bundle centers have been established throughout the city and suburbs where the donations may be deposited between now and the date of the big event.
For convenience, such lists usually include infractions although, in the U. S., they may come into the sphere not of the criminal law, but rather of the civil law.
For convenience, ceramic products are usually divided into four sectors ; these are shown below with some examples:
For convenience, hyperbolas are usually analyzed in terms of their centered East-West opening form.
For typographical convenience, the Legendre symbol is sometimes written as ( a | p ) or ( a / p ).
For the convenience of the reader, the formula given above is based on Chapront's latest parameters and expressed with a single integer variable, and the following additional terms have been added:
For the sake of convenience, these failure statistics often are translated into MTBF ( in this case, installed life before failure ).
For convenience, pixels are normally arranged in a regular two-dimensional grid.
For convenience some geologists prefer to annotate them with a subscript S, for example L < sub > s </ sub >< sub > 1 </ sub > to differentiate them from intersection lineations, though this is generally redundant.
For long periods of the last millennium Britain had the largest merchant fleet in the world, but it has slipped down the rankings as Flag of convenience has grown.
For convenience, Egyptologists arbitrarily choose to pronounce her name as " ee-set ".
For convenience of use, the vibrating reed assembly is often attached by a cable to the rest of the electrometer.
For the convenience of users configuring a system, the four bit house code is selected as a letter from A through P while the four bit unit code is a number 1 through 16.
For example Rembrandt's prints are usually referred to as " etchings " for convenience, but very often include work in engraving and drypoint as well, and sometimes have no etching at all.
For convenience, the primary sources that these texts rely upon are not cited.
For those who want the convenience of DocBook without a large learning curve, Simplified DocBook was designed.
For example, while convenience stores in Alaska, Pennsylvania and New Jersey cannot sell any kind of alcohol at all, stores in Nevada, New Mexico, and California may sell alcoholic beverages of any sort, while stores in Virginia, Idaho, or Oregon can sell beer and wine, but not liquor.
For example, in Los Angeles, CA, a local chain operates neighborhood grocery stores that fill a niche between a traditional supermarket and convenience store.
For navigational convenience, Great Circle routes are often broken into a series of shorter rhumb lines which allow the use of constant headings between waypoints along the Great Circle.
For reasons of convenience, historically the value of the reciprocal of the fine-structure constant is often specified.
It had been bought by Wren many years before as part of a legacy for his son Christopher Wren, Jr. For convenience Wren also leased a house on St James's Street in London.
For this reason, enterprising maritime raiders commonly took advantage of " flag of convenience " Letters of Marque, shopping for cooperative governments to license and legitimize their depredations.
For convenience, two different views of the data are available here: “ Segmented tables ,” and a single “ Unitized table ( all elements ).” Choose whichever one you need from the table of contents, below.
For convenience and due to the range of magnitudes involved, these quantities are almost always reported in kJ · mol < sup >− 1 </ sup > rather than in J · mol < sup >− 1 </ sup >.

For and consistency
For, in accordance with Mr. Lowell's concept of an advisory board, our selections are made by experienced selectors who give both constancy and consistency to our processes and our choices.
For objectivists, probability objectively measures the plausibility of propositions, i. e. the probability of a proposition corresponds to a reasonable belief everyone ( even a " robot ") sharing the same knowledge should share in accordance with the rules of Bayesian statistics, which can be justified by requirements of rationality and consistency.
For that reason many NoSQL databases are using what is called eventual consistency to provide both availability and partition tolerance guarantees with a maximum level of data consistency.
For consistency, this usage is also permitted in non-public settings such as local variables, parameter names, and private members.
For instance, all characters age in step and the family and feudal relationships maintain general consistency.
For similar reasons and for the sake of consistency, in the later book, Little House on the Prairie, Laura portrayed herself as 6 – 7 years old.
For each value, the consistency of the partial assignment with the constraints is checked ; in case of consistency, a recursive call is performed.
For the purposes of consistency, the game accepts The Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit and The Silmarillion and to a lesser extent the other works of Tolkien as canonical materials.
For example, the DSM-IV stopped using two criteria present in the DSM-III-R, constrained expression of affection and indecisiveness, mainly based on reviews of the empirical literature's that found these traits did not contain internal consistency.
For problems like the Neyman-Scott ( 1948 ) problem or factor analysis where the amount of data per parameter is bounded above, MML can estimate all parameters with statistical consistency.
For example, Call of Cthulhu's foremost concern is recreating the mood of brooding horror and cosmic insignificance of the Cthulhu Mythos, and makes heavy use of illusionism to craft grisly fates for the players ' characters, thereby maintaining consistency with the source material.
For example, consistency theories, which imply that we must be consistent in our beliefs and values.
For example, isolation relies on atomicity to roll back changes in the event of isolation failures such as deadlock ; consistency also relies on rollback in the event of a consistency-violation by an illegal transaction.
For example, the existence of a huge cardinal is much stronger, in terms of consistency strength, than the existence of a supercompact cardinal, but assuming both exist, the first huge is smaller than the first supercompact.
For the above reasons and for the sake of continuity and consistency, these services were referred to by the old route names until the time of the opening of the Chrystie Street Connection.
For consistency, all dates prior to the first sunrise have been given in Valian years.
For example: In a survey that asks respondents to rate attitudes toward technology, consistency would be expected in responses to the following questions:
For the sake of consistency, as there were or had been regional separatist movements in Papua and East New Britain, provincial status was offered to the other 18 Districts as well.
For example, if a respondent expressed agreement with the statements " I like to ride bicycles " and " I've enjoyed riding bicycles in the past ", and disagreement with the statement " I hate bicycles ", this would be indicative of good internal consistency of the test.
For statistical consistency and for convenience, each country or area is shown in one region only: e. g., Russia ( Eastern Europe ), which is in Europe and Asia.
For example, treatment with probiotic formulations including Lactobacillus rhamnosus may reduce the risk of antibiotic-associated diarrhea, improve stool consistency during antibiotic therapy, and enhance the immune response after vaccination.
For example, it may help ensure consistency in presentation of content.

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