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concordance and with
A combination of bipolar I, II and cyclothymia produced concordance rates of 42 % vs 11 %, with a relatively lower ratio for bipolar II that likely reflects heterogeneity.
There is overlap with unipolar depression and if this is also counted in the co-twin the concordance with bipolar disorder rises to 67 % in monozigotic twins and 19 % in dizigotic.
* Cantigas de Santa Maria for Singers ( full text with syllable marks, pronunciation guide and concordance )
In 1795, following the Northwest Indian War, an area that was to be part of Chicago was turned over to the United States for a military post by native tribes in concordance with the Treaty of Greenville.
The use of the word ' psychotic ' is the reason why Anders Behring Breivik would automatically have been given a treatment order by the court, if the ( very unusual ) second psychiatric report had been in concordance with the first report.
The approximate dates presented by Josephus are in concordance with other historical records, and most scholars view the variation between the motive presented by Josephus and the New Testament accounts is seen as an indication that the Josephus passage is not a Christian interpolation.
* The quatrains of Rumi: Complete translation with Persian text, Islamic mystical commentary, manual of terms, and concordance, translated by Ibrahim W. Gamard and A. G. Rawan Farhadi, 2008.
Maximum Cards can be defined as a picture post card with postage stamp on the same theme and a cancellation, with a maximum concordance between all three.
Peirce defines truth as follows: " Truth is that concordance of an abstract statement with the ideal limit towards which endless investigation would tend to bring scientific belief, which concordance the abstract statement may possess by virtue of the confession of its inaccuracy and one-sidedness, and this confession is an essential ingredient of truth.
* Works by Cyprian at the IntraText Digital Library, with concordance and frequency lists
* Latin version with concordance from Intertext. com
However, others find them of value even for non-repetitive texts, because the database resources created have value for concordance searches to determine appropriate usage of terms, for quality assurance ( no empty segments ), and the simplification of the review process ( source and target segment are always displayed together while translators have to work with two documents in a traditional review environment ).
After the assassination in 1398 of Biordo Michelotti, who had made himself lord of Perugia, the city became a pawn in the Italian Wars, passing to Gian Galeazzo Visconti ( 1400 ), to Pope Boniface IX ( 1403 ), and to Ladislaus of Naples ( 1408 – 14 ) before it settled into a period of sound governance under the Signoria of the condottiero Braccio da Montone ( 1416 – 24 ), who reached a concordance with the Papacy.
The tables conclude with term statistics and concordance data.
Calvinists contend that God extends mercy and grace to whom He will according to His plan ( Romans 8 ), and administers justice ( which, by its very nature is the punishment for sin, and thus in every way good and holy in concordance with the character of God ) to all others.
He largely agreed with them and perceived the ideas of Luther and Erasmus to be in concordance.
For a group of twins in which at least one member of each pair is affected, probandwise concordance is a measure of the proportion of twins who have the illness who have an affected twin and can be calculated with the formula of 2C /( 2C + D ), in which C is the number of concordant pairs and D is the number of discordant pairs.
Mérillon proceeded to publish an entirely different schedule of events, with the result that many of those that had made plans to compete in concordance with the original program withdrew, and refused to deal with the new committee.
Linguistic and cultural classification are in general concordance with the genetic classification, although it may be transgressed due to the apparent gene flow between the major branches of Tai – Kadai.
This has led to the development of a so-called concordance ΛCDM model which combines detailed data obtained with new telescopes and techniques in observational astrophysics with an expanding, density-changing universe.

concordance and process
The only real method was Alan Templeton's Nested Clade Analysis, which made use of an inference key to determine the validity of a given process in explaining the concordance between geographic distance and genetic relatedness.

concordance and who
These hypotheses would explain the result of adoption and twin studies that have been carried out, indicating that twins separated at birth have a higher likelihood of concordance for addictive disease than would be expected were there not a genetic component, and indicating that these twins have a lower likelihood of concordance for addictive disease than do twins who remain together in identical environments.
This is in concordance with Eckart Altenmuller ’ s study where it was observed that students who received musical instruction had greater cortical activation than those who did not.
After tapping the invisible college of scholars who knew of Rees, she convened a summer 1986 meeting in London, following which she wrote a proposal to the American Foundation for the Humanities for funding to the project, setting out the object of producing a printed concordance to the contents of the Cyclopædia.
Neil Risch ( 2005 ), who was involved in the research published in the article Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race / Ethnicity, and Confounding in Case-Control Association Studies, noted: " In a recent study, when we looked at the correlation between genetic structure on microsatellite markers versus self-description, we found 99. 9 % concordance between the two.

concordance and first
Besides introducing the Masorah into the margin, he compiled at the close of his Bible a concordance of the Masoretic glosses for which he could not find room in a marginal form, and added an elaborate introduction – the first treatise on the Masorah ever produced.
* Samuel Ayscough-An Index to the Remarkable Passages and Words Made Use of by Shakespeare, the first Shakespeare concordance ever published
Ironically, despite open domestic opposition to his views in education, in 1868, he was instrumental in the reformation of Galatasaray High School in strict concordance with his secular views, as the first Western-style state higher education institution in Ottoman Empire.
Today, a 21-gun salute is rendered on the arrival and departure of the President of the United States ; it is fired in concordance with four ruffles and flourishes, which are immediately followed by " Hail to the Chief " -- the actual gun salute begins with the first ruffle and flourish, and ' run long ' ( i. e. the salute concludes after " Hail to the Chief " has ended ).
Most attribute these to Rabbi Isaac Nathan ben Kalonymus's work for the first Hebrew Bible concordance around 1440.
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, generally known as Strong's Concordance, is a concordance of the King James Bible ( KJV ) that was constructed under the direction of Dr. James Strong ( 1822 – 1894 ) and first published in 1890.
The first album draws from the Old Testament and New Testament, except the Book of Revelation, and include biblical references and a concordance.
Other observational and theoretical inconsistencies were resolved by inflationary cosmology first described by Alan Guth in 1980 and this ad hoc model is now incorporated in the best-supported concordance model of cosmology.
With the aid of many of his Order, he edited the first concordance of the Bible ( Concordantiae Sacrorum Bibliorum or Concordantiae S. Jacobi ), but the assertion that we owe the present division of the chapters of the Vulgate to him is false.
Another less common view, in concordance with a story of the Westcar Papyrus, is that the first three rulers of the fifth dynasty were brothers — the sons of woman named Raddjedet.
The second book of this work consisted of a set of concordance tables ( Chronici canones ) that for the first time synchronized the several concurrent chronologies in use with different peoples.
Cruden's concordance was first published in 1737, one of the first copies being personally presented to Queen Caroline on November 3, 1737.
Samuel Newman ( May 10, 1602 – July 5, 1663 ) was a clergyman in colonial Massachusetts whose concordance of the Bible, published first in London in 1643, far surpassed any previous work of its kind.
The concordance was reprinted at least as late as 1889, almost 250 years after it was first published.
* A large and compleat concordance to the Bible in English according to the last translation: first collected by Clement Cotton and now much enlarged and amended for the good both of schollars and others, far exceeding the most perfect that ever was extant in our language, both in ground-work and building.
A New Concordance of the Bible ( full title A New Concordance of the Bible: Thesaurus of the Language of the Bible, Hebrew and Aramaic, Roots, Words, Proper Names Phrases and Synonyms ) by Avraham Even-Shoshan is a concordance of the Hebrew text of the Hebrew Bible, first published in 1977.
Ayscough is also remembered as the writer of the first concordance to Shakespeare.

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