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For and purposes
For purposes of this explanation, this percentage is referred to as the State's `` unadjusted Federal share ''.
For purposes of sample selection only ( individual tests were given later ) we obtained group test scores of reading achievement and intelligence from school records of the entire third-grade population in each school system.
For expository purposes, this is best treated as a model which spells out the conditions under which an important industry affected with the public interest would find it profitable to raise wages even in the absence of union pressures for higher wages.
For the purposes of setting the product price, the industry behaves as a single entity.
For the purposes of this discussion, the problem of relative prices is encompassed in these two variables, since GNP includes other prices.
For our present purposes we assume that the sole subject of bargaining is the basic wage rate ( not including productivity improvement factors or cost-of-living adjustments ), and it is this basic wage rate which determines the level of costs.
'' For present purposes it may be assumed that this charge so narrowly limited speech as to violate the federal Constitution.
For all practical purposes, the West stands disunited, undedicated, and unprepared for the tasks of world leadership.
For their purposes, oxygen and other gases were not drawn from the surrounding atmosphere through the medium of lungs but sustained artificially by solution in their shells.
For the purposes of the treaty system, Antarctica is defined as all of the land and ice shelves south of 60 ° S latitude.
For geopolitical purposes, the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt – east of the Suez Canal – is often considered part of Africa.
For socket numbers, a few well-known numbers were reserved for special purposes specific to the AppleTalk protocol itself.
For example, letters 1, 5, and 8 contain a discussion on the question, whether the use of a piece of metal with the figure of a lion, as a talisman, is permitted by Jewish law for medicinal purposes, or is prohibited as idolatrous.
For administrative purposes the archipelago constitutes the comune of Favignana in the Province of Trapani.
For comparison purposes that is approximately the same size as Aylesbury, Carlisle, Guildford or Scunthorpe urban areas.
For commercial purposes, it is derived primarily from Gelidium amansii.
For statistical purposes, Baker is grouped with the United States Minor Outlying Islands.
For purposes of scoring and reference, each player is identified by one of the points of the compass and thus North and South play against East and West.
For calendric purposes, Bede made a new calculation of the age of the world since the creation, which he dated as 3952 BC.
For scoring purposes, a standing eight count is treated as a knockdown.
For all practical purposes that was the Baltic language until 1919.
For most purposes, most jurisdictions, including the U. S. federal system and most states, have merged the two courts.
For purposes of international communication and trade, the official names of the chemical elements both ancient and more recently recognized are decided by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry ( IUPAC ), which has decided on a sort of international English language, drawing on traditional English names even when an element's chemical symbol is based on a Latin or other traditional word, for example adopting " gold " rather than " aurum " as the name for the 79th element ( Au ).
For international banks, including the 55 member central banks of the Bank for International Settlements, the threshold is 8 % ( see the Basel Capital Accords ) of risk-adjusted assets, whereby certain assets ( such as government bonds ) are considered to have lower risk and are either partially or fully excluded from total assets for the purposes of calculating capital adequacy.
For enumeration purposes the country is demarcated into 4, 042 enumeration areas.

For and regulation
For example, money center banks, deposit-taking institutions, and other types of financial institutions may be subject to different ( and occasionally overlapping ) regulation.
For additional information see Histone modifications in chromatin regulation and RNA polymerase control by chromatin structure
For example, scientific uncertainty fuels the ongoing debate over greenhouse gas regulation and is a major factor in the debate over whether to ban pesticides.
For example, the law on primary education lists the subjects to the taught, and the regulation specifies the required number of teaching hours.
For example, there are usually no trade tariffs or import quotas ; there are usually no delays as goods pass from one part of the country to another ( other than those that distance imposes ); there are usually no differences of taxation and regulation.
For pharmaceutical grade gelatins strict regulations from the Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ), the European CPMP's regulation and European Pharmacopoeia must be met.
For example, the United States constitutes a mixed economy ( substantial market regulation, agricultural subsidies, extensive government-funded research and development, Medicare / Medicaid ), yet at the same time it is foundationally rooted in a market economy.
For example, mutations in the steroid binding domain have been known to affect androgen binding affinity or retention, mutations in the hinge region have been known to affect nuclear translocation, mutations in the DNA-binding domain have been known to affect dimerization and binding to target DNA, and mutations in the transactivation domain have been known to affect target gene transcription regulation.
For purposes of increasing safety, regulation changes related to weight, amount of available fuel and engine capacity were introduced.
For example, they want little regulation of the workforce and repeal of French laws setting a 35-hour work week rather than leaving this to contract negotiations.
For example, there is a growing conflict between the multijurisdictional practice of law in arbitration proceedings in the financial service industry and state regulation of lawyers.
For example, in the 19th century, Conservatives opposed classic Liberalism, favouring factory regulation, market intervention, and various controls to mitigate the effects of laissez faire capitalism, but in the 20th century, the role of Conservativism was to oppose a danger from the opposite direction, the excessive regulation, intervention, and controls favoured by Socialism.
For communities which looked at sexuality just as a source of pleasure and an element of social cohesion without attaching any taboo character to it, this discovery must have led to a sense of upset with consequences not only on the regulation of sexuality itself, but on the whole political, social, and economic system.
For instance, decisions regarding the regulation of land use, development and zoning in unincorporated areas of the county are the responsibility of the county government, whereas such decisions for areas within incorporated places are the jurisdiction of the incorporated city of which the property is a part.
For the regulation of computing resources, see throttling process ( computing ).
For example, predators eating herbivores indirectly influence the control and regulation of primary production in plants.
For about a decade, the use of regulation to channel private commerce to designated private disposal sites was greatly restricted as the result of the Carbone decision discussed below
For many hereditary diseases, the onset of symptoms is age related, and is affected by environmental codeterminants such as nutrition and smoking, as well as genetic cofactors and epigenetic regulation of expression:
For example, one maladaptive negative mood regulation is an overactive strategy in which individuals over dramatize their negative feelings in order to provoke support and feedback from others and to guarantee their availability.
For more on regulation see Commission for Communications Regulation and Broadcasting Authority of Ireland articles.
* For a theoretical analysis of the impact of regulation on rating agencies ' business model, see Rating Agencies in the Face of Regulation-Rating Inflation and Regulatory Arbitrage, by Opp, Christian C., Opp, Marcus M. and Harris, Milton ( 2010 ).
For the purpose of U. S. regulation and Global Technical Regulations and for clear communication in safety and seating design, dummies carry specifically designated reference points, such as the H-point ; these are also used, for example, in automotive design.
For example, in Leishmania, protein-coding genes are understood to be organized as large polycistronic units in a head-to-head or tail-to-tail manner ; RNA polymerase II transcribes long polycistronic messages in the absence of defined RNA pol II promoters, and Leishmania has unique features with respect to the regulation of gene expression in response to changes in the environment.

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