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non-naval and for
The scale was made a standard for ship's log entries on Royal Navy vessels in the late 1830s and was adapted to non-naval use from the 1850s, with scale numbers corresponding to cup anemometer rotations.

non-naval and such
In contrast, maritime aviation is the operation of aircraft in a maritime role under the command of non-naval forces such as the former RAF Coastal Command or a nation's coast guard.

non-naval and .
In the case of non-naval Enigma, deciphering was performed in Hut 6, and translation indexing and cross-referencing with existing information, in Hut 3.
The rectangular state flag is used by bodies of the Finnish national and provincial governments ( except the police and the district courts ), by the Cathedral Chapters of the two national churches ( Evangelical Lutheran and Orthodox ), and non-naval vessels of the state.
Countries that were strategically dependent on surface fleet, most notably US and UK, maintained also fleet defense fighters that acted very similarly to their non-naval counterparts.
They also asserted that the extension of authority of the admiralty courts to non-naval matters represented an abuse of power.
There are several hundred museum ships around the world, with around 175 of them organised in the Historic Naval Ships Association though there are also many non-naval museum ships as well, from general merchant ships to tugs and lightships.
In 1931, the award was made available to members of the Merchant Navy and in 1940 eligibility was further extended to non-naval personnel ( British Army and Royal Air Force ) serving aboard a British vessel.
A merchantman is any non-naval vessel, including Tankers, freighters, or cargo ships, but not troopships ; East Indiaman was a merchantman licensed to or by an East India joint-stock company.
* Merchantman: Any non-naval passenger-or cargo-carrying vessel, including cargo ships, tankers, and passenger ships but excluding troopships.
Indeed, the early Union successes in the war's western theater ( their only non-naval successes until 1863 ) are directly related to Polk's blunder.
The term became more common in non-naval usage ca.

context and skull
In his book he explained the various skull angles of Peruvians in the context of the Angle of Camper.
Old English adopted a small number of Greco-Roman loan words from an early period, especially in the context of the Christianisation of the Anglo-Saxons ( church, bishop, priest ), and from the 9th century ( Danelaw ) many Old Norse loans for every-day terms ( skull, egg, skirt ).
In the context of an execution, it means shooting the heart or head ( typically the back of the skull ) of an already wounded, but not yet dead, person during a military or civilian execution.

context and motif
The popular motif of Isis suckling her son Horus, however, lived on in a Christianized context as the popular image of Mary suckling the infant son Jesus from the fifth century onward.
The significance of this motif in the context of a painting of domestic happiness is unclear, but it may involve a transfer of functions in that that the child appears to be blowing on the conch shell ( referred to above ) in order to frighten away those forces that threaten family peace ..
The Rape of the Sabine Women (" rape " in this context meaning " kidnapping " rather than sexual violation, see raptio ) became a common motif in art ; the women ending the war forms a less frequent but still reappearing motif.
Architects and designers use it alone and as a repeated motif in a wide range of contexts, from ironwork to bookbinding, especially where a French context is implied.
; motif ( sequence context ): refers to a conserved pattern of amino acids that is found in two or more proteins.
; motif ( structural context ): refers to a combination of several secondary structural elements produced by the folding of adjacent sections of the polypeptide chain into a specific three-dimensional configuration.
A cell can be developed, independent of its context, as a melodic fragment, it can be used as a developmental motif.
The motif of the changeability of identity may have ramifications in the context of Zionism and the Jewish diaspora, as " A Report to an Academy " first appeared in a Zionist magazine.
SH2 domains typically bind a phosphorylated tyrosine residue in the context of a longer peptide motif within a target protein, and SH2 domains represent the largest class of known pTyr-recognition domains.

context and has
Today the Negro must discover his role in an industrialized South, which indicates that the racial aspect of the Southern dilemma hasn't changed radically, but rather has gradually come to be reflected in this new context, this new coat of paint.
Equivalents could be assigned to the paradigm either at the time it is added to the dictionary or after the word has been studied in context.
Thus in a context in which there has been discussion of snow but mention of local conditions is new, dominant stress will probably be on here in it rarely snows here, but in a context in which there has been discussion of local weather but no mention of snow, dominant stress will probably be on snows.
But one does not have to affirm the existence of an evil order irredeemable in that sense, or a static order in which no changes will take place in time, to be able truthfully to affirm the following fact: there has never been justitia imprinted in social institutions and social relationships except in the context of some pax-ordo preserved by clothed or naked force.
The axiom of choice has also been thoroughly studied in the context of constructive mathematics, where non-classical logic is employed.
Note that " completeness " has a different meaning here than it does in the context of Gödel's first incompleteness theorem, which states that no recursive, consistent set of non-logical axioms of the Theory of Arithmetic is complete, in the sense that there will always exist an arithmetic statement such that neither nor can be proved from the given set of axioms.
The 1982 science fiction film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan used " Amazing Grace " amid a context of Christian symbolism, to memorialize the death of Mr. Spock but more practically, because the song has become " instantly recognizable to many in the audience as music that sounds appropriate for a funeral " according to a Star Trek scholar.
Loyn has observed in this context that " a sea voyage is perilous to tribal institutions ," and the apparently tribally-based kingdoms were produced in England.
The phrase " all quiet on the Western Front " has become a colloquial expression meaning stagnation, or lack of visible change, in any context.
According to him, while the first two visions ( the alter-globalism and the anti-globalism ) represent the reconstructed forms of old and new left ideologies, respectively, in the context of current globalization, only the third one has shown the capacity to respond more effectively to the intellectual requirements of today ’ s global complexities.
Heschel's daughter, Susannah, has objected to the adoption of her father's name in this context.
Euan MacKie has supported Thom's analysis, to which he added an archaeological context by comparing Neolithic Britain to the Mayan civilization to argue for a stratified society in this period.
The Latin word has never been recorded in a surgical context, being reserved to indicate punishment for criminals.
John C. Cavadini has challenged this notion by attempting to take the Spanish Christology in its own Spanish / North African context in his important study, The Last Christology of the West: Adoptionism in Spain and Gaul, 785 – 820.
* Bar ( law ), in a legal context has three possible meanings: the division of a courtroom between its working and public areas ; the process of qualifying to practice law ; and the legal profession
Kiernan's reasoning has in part to do with the much-discussed political context of the poem: it has been held by most scholars, until recently, that the poem was composed in the 8th century on the assumption that a poem eliciting sympathy for the Danes could not have been composed by Anglo-Saxons during the Viking Ages of the 9th and 10th centuries, and that the poem celebrates the namesakes of 8th Century Mercian Kings.
By contrast, evidence based on the textual differences between the Septuagint and the Masoretic Text has been used to argue that the context of the MT truly does depict a historical Jeremiah.
Computing also has other meanings that are more specific, based on the context in which the term is used.
In a context where a conspiracy theory has become popular within a social group, communal reinforcement may equally play a part.
Gad Barzilai has accordingly offered how to protect human rights, individual rights, and multiculturalism in inter-communal context that allows the generating of cultural relativism.
Others such as Michael Johnston and Noam Chomsky assert that classical liberalism as such can no longer exist in a modern day context as its principles were only relevant at the time its founding thinkers conceptualised them ; and that classical liberalism has grown into two divergent philosophies since the beginning of the twentieth century: social liberalism and market liberalism.

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