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consequence and due
The consequence of this early date is that due to the precession of the equinoxes, the borders on a modern star map, such as epoch J2000, are already somewhat skewed and no longer perfectly vertical or horizontal.
The resistance is a consequence of the motion of charge through a conductor: in metals, for example, resistance is primarily due to collisions between electrons and ions.
The population of Italy almost doubled during the twentieth century, but the pattern of growth was extremely uneven due to large-scale internal migration from the rural South to the industrial cities of the North, a phenomenon which happened as a consequence of the Italian economic miracle of the 1950-60s.
In consequence, many working conditions are not negotiable due to a strong legal protection of individuals.
Galileo showed that the path of a projectile follows a parabola, a consequence of uniform acceleration due to gravity.
As a consequence, an accurate measurement of the earth ’ s axial reorientation relative to objects outside the frame of the moving galaxy ( such as distant quasars commonly used as precession measurement reference points ) must account for a minor amount of non-local torque-free precession, due to the solar system ’ s motion.
God is said ( as in Isaiah 45 ) to be the author of evil in the sense that the corruption of material objects in nature is ordained by Him, as a means for carrying out the design of the universe ; and on the other hand, the evil which exists as a consequence of the breach of Divine laws is in the same sense due to Divine appointment ; the universe would be less perfect if its laws could be broken with impunity.
Some titanite has been found to be metamict, in consequence of structural damage due to radioactive decomposition of the often significant thorium content.
" as a consequence of the fact that a hypothesis with fewer adjustable parameters will automatically have an enhanced posterior probability, due to the fact that the predictions it makes are sharp ..."
Most syntacticians generally concede that there are parametric points of variation between languages, although heated debate occurs over whether UG constraints are essentially universal due to being " hard-wired " ( Chomsky's Principles and Parameters approach ), a logical consequence of a specific syntactic architecture ( the Generalized Phrase Structure approach ) or the result of functional constraints on communication ( the functionalist approach ).
As a consequence, this environment is completely anoxic and, due to the activity of sulphate reducers, contains sulphide at a concentration of 2. 9 mM.
Her death certificate lists the cause as " acute asthma attack due to or as a consequence of smoke inhalation.
" By accounts from Lisbon we are assured, that in consequence of the experiments made there with the Montgolfier balloon, the literati of Portugal had been incited to make numerous researches on the subject ; in consequence of which they pretend that the honour of the invention is due to Portugal.
One consequence of these " scorched-earth " strategy operations was that many citizens were hindered in their efforts to flee the city due to the destruction of the transportation infrastructure.
Forest fires are more common close to edges as a consequence of increased desiccation at edges and increased understory growth present due to increased light availability.
BS12 included a number of interesting features that still have yet to appear on most SQL-based systems, some a consequence of following the ISBL precedent, others due to deliberate design.
Another consequence of this name is that she was seen as a herald of imminent birth, as when the amniotic sac breaks and floods its waters, it is a medical indicator that the child is due to be born extremely soon.
As a consequence, many of the city's street-and traffic-signs are written in both Hungarian and German making it an officially bilingual city due to its proximity to the Austrian frontier.
The Sylviornis, a huge prehistorically extinct mound-builder relative of New Caledonia, was flightless, but as opposed to most other flightless birds like ratites or island rails which become flightless due to arrested development of their flight apparatus and subsequently evolve to larger size, the Sylviornis seems to have become flightless simply due to its bulk, with the wing reduction following a consequence, not the reason for its flightlessness.
He also noted from the Constitution, " No person held to service or labor in one State under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due.
This was due not merely to the natural consequence of the hegemony of Moscow over the other Russian lands, but to new imperial pretensions.
Formal recognition and commemoration of the Roma persecution by the Nazis is practically difficult due to the lack of significant collective memory and documentation of the Porajmos among the Roma, a consequence both of their oral traditions and their illiteracy, heightened by widespread poverty and discrimination that forces some Roma out of state schools.
The airline suffered a setback due to the United Nations Security Council Resolution 748, which was adopted on 31 March 1992 as a consequence of the Libyan government allegedly having supported the terrorists responsible for the bombings of Pan Am Flight 103 ( on 21 December 1988 ) and UTA Flight 772 ( on 19 September 1989 ).

consequence and availability
These facts might be a consequence of the increased availability of e-resources.
Still, the basic design was never updated and, as interest in motorcycles declined in the late 1950s as a consequence of the availability of cheap cars such as the Volkswagen Beetle, production ceased in 1960, when the last contract from the army was delivered.
Some animals and even insects were shown to get survival advantages ( avoidance of dangers ) and even, as a consequence, reproductive advantages ( availability for " exuberant " courtship behaviours ) from being " shy ".
The Osborne effect is a term referring to the unintended consequence of the announcement of a future product ahead of its availability and its impact upon the sales of the current product.

consequence and on
He tramped out of the Miners Rest with his hopes plummeting, and headed doggedly for the Palace Saloon, the last place of any consequence on this side of the street.
As a consequence of the tensions thus produced in his thoughts and feelings, he wrote on the one hand sketches of idealized hunting trips and on the other an anecdote of the village of Hardscrabble, Arkansas, where no one had ever seen a piano ; ;
One consequence is the occurrence of occasional conflicts because private owners of some inholdings object to public programs of use on neighboring National Forest or other Federal land, or because such ownerships are developed for uses that are not compatible with use for the public of neighboring National Forest land.
As a consequence there are four chimney-pieces by Algardi in the Royal Palace of Aranjuez, and in the gardens, the figures on the fountain of Neptune are also by him.
In consequence of this clause Abergavenny on various occasions shared in the election, the last instance being in 1685.
Another likely explanation for the loss of its eyes is that of selective neutrality and genetic drift: in the dark environment of the cave, the eyes are neither advantageous nor disadvantageous and thus any genetic factors that might impair the eyes ( or their development ) can take hold with no consequence on the individual or species.
As another consequence of the disturbances, a new constitution was accepted in 1831 which came into effect on 4 September of that year.
Ptosis is a normal consequence of aging where the breast tissue sags lower on the chest and the nipple points downward.
As a consequence on April 13, 1975, several units of N ' Djamena's gendarmerie killed Tombalbaye during a coup.
For example, the effects on the character of the agent or any other people involved in an action may be regarded as a relevant consequence.
One of these, Itō's lemma, expresses the composite of an Itō process ( or more generally a semimartingale ) dX < sub > t </ sub > with a twice-differentiable function f. In Itō's lemma, the derivative of the composite function depends not only on dX < sub > t </ sub > and the derivative of f but also on the second derivative of f. The dependence on the second derivative is a consequence of the non-zero quadratic variation of the stochastic process, which broadly speaking means that the process can move up and down in a very rough way.
where is a metalogical symbol meaning that is a syntactic consequence if and are each on lines of a proof in some logical system ;
One consequence of this is that its users face difficult choices in targeting, to avoid expending the missiles on targets of low value.
When an infected host cell is starved for various nutrients such as amino acids ( for example, tryptophan ), iron, or vitamins, this has a negative consequence for Chlamydiae since the organism is dependent on the host cell for these nutrients.
As a consequence of this demonstration, Descartes considers science and mathematics to be justified to the extent that their proposals are established on a similarly immediate clarity, distinctiveness, and self-evidence that presents itself to the mind.
Together, they create a forum to speak on issues of consequence to all women.
As a consequence of his heart attack, Eisenhower developed a left ventricular aneurysm, which was in turn the cause of a mild stroke on November 25, 1957.
That a rational number must have a finite or recurring decimal expansion can be seen to be a consequence of the long division algorithm, in that there are only q-1 possible nonzero remainders on division by q, so that the recurring pattern will have a period less than q.
In consequence the Bible came to be seen as authoritative on matters of faith and morals but no longer authoritative ( or meant to be ) on science.
Often, the criteria had moral bases, such as in the case of Pierre de La Primaudaye's L ' Académie française and Guillaume Telin's Bref sommaire des sept vertus & c .. Encyclopaedists encountered several problems with this approach, including how to decide what to omit as unnecessary, how to structure knowledge that resisted structure ( often simply as a consequence of the sheer amount of material that deserved inclusion ), and how to cope with the influx of newly discovered knowledge and the effects that it had on prior structures.

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