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Some Related Sentences

strictly and technical
Westinghouse has a similar system, with two classifications representing various levels of competence on the strictly technical side: consulting engineer or scientist, as the case may be, and advisory engineer or scientist.
and an administrative organization to take the routine load away from department managers and project engineers as much as possible, thus allowing them more time for strictly technical work.
The neighborhood high schools are not, strictly speaking, comprehensive schools, because some of the boys and girls may be attending a vocational or technical high school instead of the local school.
Open standards are less strictly defined, but by some definitions the term describes technical standards without legal restrictions.
A memory leak has symptoms similar to a number of other problems ( see below ) and generally can only be diagnosed by a programmer with access to the program source code ; however, many people refer to any unwanted increase in memory usage as a memory leak, though this is not strictly accurate from a technical perspective.
This is because fiscal instruments are easier to measure while regulatory and financial instruments are extremely complex and difficult to measure statistically because nowhere transfers remain strictly confined to the technical objectives.
In technical terms, newer assays of this type are not strictly ELISAs, as they are not " enzyme-linked ", but are instead linked to some nonenzymatic reporter.
In some fields and regions, the SI symbols for units are used quite strictly, in particular in technical and scientific publications and in legally regulated product labels.
Legal technical terms, often called ( legal ) terms of art or ( legal ) words of art, have meanings that are strictly defined by law.
Systers membership was limited to women with highly technical training and discussions were strictly confined to technical issues.
Billing itself as " The Premier International Fraternity of Engineers ", the organization is the only fraternity of its kind that draws its membership exclusively from male engineering students at ABET-accredited colleges and universities, as other similar organizations are co-ed or admit students not strictly in traditional engineering programs ( such as architecture or technical sciences ).
Implicature is a technical term in the pragmatics subfield of linguistics, coined by H. P. Grice, which refers to what is suggested in an utterance, even though neither expressed nor strictly implied ( that is, entailed ) by the utterance.
In a strictly technical sense, a Unix-like system process is a daemon when its parent process terminates and the daemon is assigned the init process ( process number 1 ) as its parent process and has no controlling terminal.
In her view, the announcement of a technical adjustment of Schengen Agreement proposed by Nicolas Sarkozy and Silvio Berlusconi during the 26 April 2011 French-Italian summit " will not settle strictly anything ".
From a strictly technical musical level, Goehr's endeavour has long been that of unifying the contrapuntal rigor and motivic workings of the First Viennese School and Second Viennese School with a strong sense of harmonic pacing and sonority.
Popper called his ' principle of rationality ' nearly empty ( a technical term meaning without empirical content ) and strictly speaking false, but nonetheless tremendously useful.
AT & T strictly enforced policies against buying and using phones by other manufacturers, purportedly to ensure the technical integrity of their network.
Although strictly biological techniques have been developed to achieve these ends, the chemical synthesis of peptides often has a lower technical and practical barrier to obtaining small amounts of the desired protein.
This task required great engineering, organizational and political skills, as the many strictly technical challenges were complicated by the significant resources devoted to the project, from which various parties evidenced a desire for advantage.

strictly and terms
Whilst the terms are often used interchangeably, branding is more strictly related to the identifying mark or trade name for a product or service, whereas corporate identity can have a broader meaning relating to the structure and ethos of a company, as well as to the company's external image.
Even in the height of the depression, he continued to make regular payments on the Honduran debt, adhering strictly to the terms of the arrangement with the British bondholders and also satisfying other creditors.
In terms of catering at the customers ’ sites, foodservice establishments of this category often only provided dishes strictly according to their menu, and would not provide any dishes that were not on the menu, because they were generally incapable of providing dishes outside their menu according to the specific occasion.
Nowadays, linguists use the terms Provençal and Limousin strictly to refer to specific varieties within Occitania, keeping the name Occitan for the language as a whole.
Between these poles, there is a complex variety of systematic differences, particularly difficult to describe because the foundational terms are not strictly equivalent between systems.
They are not strictly speaking pronouns because they do not substitute for a noun or noun phrase, and as such, some grammarians classify these terms in a separate lexical category called determiners ( they have a syntactic role close to that of adjectives, always qualifying a noun ).
In the classical account strictly and purely in terms of cyclic processes, the spatial interior of the ' working body ' of a cyclic process is not considered ; the ' working body ' thus does not have a defined internal thermodynamic state of its own because no assumption is made that it should be in thermodynamic equilibrium ; only its inputs and outputs of energy as heat and work are considered.
The terms is strictly used to refer to gridded ion thrusters, but may often more loosely be applied to all electric propulsion systems that accelerate plasma, since plasma consists of ions.
Various terms related to the resonation process include amplification, enrichment, enlargement, improvement, intensification, and prolongation ; although in strictly scientific usage acoustic authorities would question most of them.
Caution is required when discussing increasing or decreasing return loss since these terms strictly have the opposite meaning when return loss is defined as a negative quantity.
By most definitions, characters do not strictly require actual superhuman powers to be deemed superheroes, although terms such as costumed crime fighters are sometimes used to refer to those such as Batman and Green Arrow without such powers who share other common superhero traits.
It is clear that the CNML predictive distribution is strictly superior to the maximum likelihood plug-in distribution in terms of average Kullback – Leibler divergence for all sample sizes.
In terms of adaptation, orchestration applies, strictly speaking, only to writing for orchestra, whereas the term instrumentation applies to instruments used in the texture of the piece.
In terms of domestic policy, Katsura was a strictly conservative politician who attempted to distance himself from the Diet of Japan and party politics.
As the living embodiment of the Crown, the sovereign is regarded as the personification of the Canadian state and, as such, must, along with his or her viceregal representatives, " remain strictly neutral in political terms.
Therefore, in strictly legal terms, the Self Defense Forces are not land, sea or air forces, but are extensions of the national police force.
In common usage, alto is used to describe the voice type that typically sings this part, though this is not strictly correct: alto, like the other three standard modern choral voice classifications ( soprano, tenor and bass ) was originally intended to describe a part within a homophonic or polyphonic texture, rather than an individual voice type ; neither are the terms alto and contralto interchangeable or synonymous, though they are often treated as such.
the extracellular concentration of that ion ( in moles per cubic meter, to match the other SI units, though the units strictly don't matter, as the ion concentration terms become a dimensionless ratio )
Taking the opposing view, it is argued by many U. S. Senators and legal scholars that, since for any treaty to be enforceable in the United States, it must strictly conform to the terms of ratification issued by the Senate ; and, that no term of any treaty which is subject to the Senate's reservation ( s ) can be interpreted to have been confirmed, lawful or enforceable in the United States, according to the sovereign operation of the Constitution.
* The value, or, strictly speaking, the price, of a particular site of land is what a fair exchange brings in terms of money during an agreed trade or transaction between two parties, one of whom is the landowner.
But Hitler saw the war more in geopolitical than strictly strategic terms.
In strictly military terms, Rundstedt's reputation remains high.
Various terms related to the resonation process include amplification, enrichment, enlargement, improvement, intensification, and prolongation, although in strictly scientific usage acoustic authorities would question most of them.
This earlier work cast the Mau Mau war in strictly bipolar terms, " as conflicts between anti-colonial nationalists and colonial collaborators ".

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