Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Quadi" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

parenthetical and expression
Given any expression involving complex numbers, bras, kets, inner products, outer products, and / or linear operators ( but not addition ), written in bra-ket notation, the parenthetical groupings do not matter ( i. e., the associative property holds ).
Having calculated the parenthetical part of the expression, we start over again beginning with the left most value and move right.

parenthetical and often
However, it is now common for many retired judges to serve as arbitrators, and they will often write their names as if they were still judges, with the parenthetical "( Ret.
However, publishers often encourage note references in lieu of parenthetical references.
Sometimes formulas cannot be understood without a written or spoken explanation, but often they are sufficient by themselves, and sometimes they are difficult to read aloud or information is lost in the translation to words, as when several parenthetical factors are involved or when a complex structure like a matrix is manipulated.

parenthetical and from
Most denominations ( a notable exception being the Seventh Day Adventists ) would affirm the statement from the Catechism of the Catholic Church ( above ), with the exception of the parenthetical phrase, " through a purification or immediately.
However, the in-text referencing style in online publications may differ from the conventional parenthetical referencing.
* As an alternative to parenthetical references ; it is a simpler way to acknowledge information gained from another source.
The church's actual name is The Church of God ; however, the parenthetical phrase Charleston, Tennessee is added to distinguish it from similar sounding organizations.
With these came along a new method of fixing the lines of the recitative, better suited to the various situations that arose from the rich storyline and that was closer to speech, full of parenthetical at the expense of the paratactic style that had so characterized the first Florentine works.
At some point, the amuse-bouche transformed from an unexpected bonus to a de rigueur offering at Michelin Guide-starred restaurants and those aspiring to that category ( as recently as 1999, The New York Times provided a parenthetical explanation of the course ).
At the very moment in which, with his parenthetical admonition, the narrator archly and melodramatically dissociates himself from Archimago, he marks their similarity as wordsmiths.
The song's official title, when the CD was released, was " Untitled ", however, when it was released as a single, it was given the parenthetical, perhaps to distinguish it from other songs named " Untitled " or else for the convenience of DJs.

parenthetical and main
" Unite the World " ( its main title " Ungena Za Ulimwengu " is a Swahili translation of its parenthetical title ), the album's first single, was the first Temptations single since 1964's " I'll Be in Trouble " not to make the Billboard Pop Singles Top 30.

parenthetical and text
This style of citations and bibliographical format uses parenthetical referencing with author-page ( Smith 395 ) or author-title-page ( Smith, Contingencies 42 ) in the case of more than one work by the same author within parentheses in the text, keyed to an alphabetical list of sources on a " Works Cited " page at the end of the paper, as well as notes ( footnotes or endnotes ).
" ( NIV ) The parenthetical verses 9 – 10 of Ephesians are widely read as an exegetical gloss on the text.
They appear in the text in the following order ; the parenthetical date indicates the year they appeared separately in quarto form:

parenthetical and called
The United States Revenue Cutter Service, which merged with the United States Lifesaving Service in January 1915 to form the modern Coast Guard, began following the Navy's lead in the 1890s, with its cutters having parenthetical numbers called Naval Registry Identification Numbers following their names, such as ( Cutter No. 1 ), etc.

parenthetical and ).
* Poem: spaced slashes are normally used to indicate separate lines of a poem, and parenthetical citations usually include the line number ( s ).
On a Scottish map, for example, one finds " Glen Almont " followed by the parenthetical ( Glen Almond ).
An exception to this rule applies when only one end of the parenthetical is italicized ( in which case roman type is preferred, as on the right of this example ).
A parenthetical alternative is the analysis of Miller ( 2011 ).
The relative importance of the song to Buffett's career is referred to obliquely in a parenthetical plural in the title of a Buffett greatest hits compilation album, Songs You Know By Heart: Jimmy Buffett's Greatest Hit ( s ).

expression and often
His neighbors celebrated his return, even if it was only temporary, and Morgan was especially gratified by the quaint expression of an elderly friend, Isaac Lane, who told him, `` A man that has so often left all that is dear to him, as thou hast, to serve thy country, must create a sympathetic feeling in every patriotic heart ''.
The set of all binomial distributions is called the family of binomial distributions, but in general discussions this expression is often shortened to `` the binomial distribution '', or even `` the binomial '' when the context is clear.
Or, equally often, a concretistic-seeming, particularistic-seeming statement may consist, with its mundane exterior, in a form of poetry -- may be full of meaning and emotion when interpreted as a figurative expression: a metaphor, a smile, an allegory, or some other symbolic mode of speaking.
In sign languages, however, several channels operate simultaneously — hand shape, often with the two hands operating independently, hand location, hand motion, facial expression, mouthing — making an alphabetic script more complicated than just stringing letters together in the order sounds are produced.
For example, his engraving of The Last Supper of 1523 has often been understood to have an evangelical theme, focussing as it does on Christ espousing the Gospel, as well the inclusion of the Eucharistic cup, an expression of Protestant utraquism, although this interpretation has been questioned.
Anything that partakes in being is also called a " being ", though often this use is limited to entities that have subjectivity ( as in the expression " human being ").
* François Rabelais, in his classic Gargantua and Pantagruel, often employs the expression mâche-merde or mâchemerde, meaning shit-chewer.
To be " caught in the crossfire " is an expression that often refers to unintended casualties ( bystanders, etc.
A popular expression claims that " all words ever spoken by human beings " could be stored in approximately 5 exabytes of data, ( although this project is now outdated and therefore not entirely accurate ) often citing a project at the UC Berkeley School of Information in support.
Most epitaphs are brief records of the family, and perhaps the career, of the deceased, often with an expression of love or respect-" beloved father of ..."-but others are more ambitious.
Though the EPR paper has often been taken as an exact expression of Einstein's views, it was primarily authored by Podolsky, based on discussions at the Institute for Advanced Study with Einstein and Rosen.
While old-fashioned, this expression is still used in French, often mockingly, but the English gallicism to flirt has made its way and has now become an anglicism.
In 1793, William Godwin, who has often been cited as the first anarchist, wrote Political Justice, which some consider to be the first expression of anarchism.
" British Imperialist strategy often but not always used the concept of terra nullius ( Latin expression which stems from Roman law meaning ‘ empty land ’).
As a general expression of positive sentiment ( a stronger form of like ), love is commonly contrasted with hate ( or neutral apathy ); as a less sexual and more emotionally intimate form of romantic attachment, love is commonly contrasted with lust ; and as an interpersonal relationship with romantic overtones, love is sometimes contrasted with friendship, although the word love is often applied to close friendships.
Symptoms, which vary in type and severity, may include asymmetrical ptosis ( a drooping of one or both eyelids ), diplopia ( double vision ) due to weakness of the muscles that control eye movements, an unstable or waddling gait, weakness in arms, hands, fingers, legs, and neck, a change in facial expression, dysphagia ( difficulty in swallowing ), shortness of breath and dysarthria ( impaired speech, often nasal due to weakness of the velar muscles ).
A sub-genre of the action film, martial arts films contain numerous martial arts fights between characters, usually as the films ' primary appeal and entertainment value, and often as a method of storytelling and character expression and development.
It is exceptional for its logical construction, concise and clear expression and extraordinary learning, so that it became a standard against which other later codifications were often measured.
A pun differs from a malapropism in that a malapropism uses an incorrect expression that alludes to another ( usually correct ) expression, but a pun uses a correct expression that alludes to another ( sometimes correct but more often absurdly humorous ) expression.
Genotypes often have much flexibility in the modification and expression of phenotypes ; in many organisms these phenotypes are very different under varying environmental conditions ( see ecophenotypic variation ).
Inheriting the folk tradition of the protest song, rock music has been associated with political activism as well as changes in social attitudes to race, sex and drug use, and is often seen as an expression of youth revolt against adult consumerism and conformity.
A regular expression, often called a pattern, is an expression that specifies a set of strings.

0.190 seconds.