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wider and contexts
Politics in Saudi Arabia, outside of the royal family, can be examined in three contexts: the extent to which the royal family allows political participation by the wider Saudi society, opposition to the regime, and Islamist terrorism.
If not stated otherwise, this article considers symmetry groups in Euclidean geometry, but the concept may also be studied in wider contexts ; see below.
Among the different theological responses, and their wider contexts, Jews have had to the Holocaust are:
Like many other nineteenth-century medical terms that lost precise meaning as they gained wider currency, “ midget ,” as a term for someone with extreme proportional shortness, acquired pejorative connotations and is no longer used in medical contexts.
Community psychology studies the individuals ' contexts within communities and the wider society, and the relationships of the individual to communities and society.
Laurence Le Quesne argues that one of Jardine's greatest talents, and at the same time greatest weaknesses, was his ability to formulate a winning strategy without consideration of wider contexts such as the social aspect of the game.
Melton uses a group's religious texts as the essential mainstay for reporting about a group before then proceeding to scholarly questions and analysis about the wider social, religious and historical contexts.
It's here that DeRose takes the modal account of knowledge in a contextualist direction, for the range of " epistemically relevant worlds " is what varies with context: In high standards contexts one's belief must match the fact of the matter through a much wider range of worlds than is relevant to low standards contexts.
This comprehensive account of the regiment focuses extensively upon 1 DERR, describing all aspects of its life and times, and its numerous operational, peacetime and training activities and tours of duty about the world, as well as placing these subjects within wider military / political contexts of the period 1959-1994, especially those involved with aspects of the Cold War.
Also, similar to how bytes are used for small numbers in many programs, a shorter word ( 16 or 32 bits ) may be used in contexts where the range of a wider word is not needed ( especially where this can save considerable stack space or cache memory space ).
Chesworth's interest in exploring wider extra-musical contexts has led to his involvement with performance artworks and experimental opera.
In their wider contexts they read in English:
" This holographic idea led to the coining of the term " holonomic " to describe the idea in wider contexts than just holograms.
However its scope is wider than this and intended to encompass cybernetics which allows for the study of regulation in as many varied contexts as possible from the regulation of gene expression to the Press Complaints Commission for example.
* Homogeneity and heterogeneity describes uses of this terminology in wider contexts
It goes beyond the personal and emotional desires of a father seeking to meet his daughter, and explores the wider political and global contexts underlying the case of the Mahmoody family.
The word used in Thucydides writings History for money is chremata, translated in some contexts as " goods " or " property ", although with a wider ranging possible applicable usage, having a definite meaning " valuable things ".

wider and symmetry
A wider definition of geometric symmetry allows operations from a larger group than the Euclidean group of isometries.

wider and group
It also attracted a wider crowd of mostly younger fans, some of whom occasionally performed with the group, including Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones, Geoff Bradford, Rod Stewart, John Mayall and Jimmy Page.
* Progressive teachers use a wider variety of materials allowing for individual and group research.
Lately, a group of epilepsies termed Panayiotopoulos syndrome that share some clinical features of BOEC but have a wider variety of EEG findings are classified by some as BOEC.
In his earliest work, Neusner had argued that the most credible evidence showed that the Second Commonwealth Pharisees were a sectarian group centered on " table fellowship " and ritual food purity practices, and less interested in wider Jewish values or social issues.
A more loosely defined group has therefore been identified over a wider geographical area and longer time period, who attended meetings occasionally and who corresponded or co-operated regularly with multiple other members on group activities.
( The term " Luo " is also used for a wider group of languages which includes Dholuo.
Its main purpose was to offer a wider group of citizens an alternative way of opposition against the authoritarian communist regime by means of a peaceful protest that used absurd and nonsensical elements.
The usual translation into English is the Red Army Faction ; however, the founders wanted it to not reflect a splinter group but rather an embryonic militant unit that was embedded in or part of a wider communist workers ' movement.
St Helena has a land area of 122 square kilometres and is part of a wider territory called Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha which includes Ascension Island and the island group of Tristan da Cunha.
From the short-term perspective of the gene, more offspring will be gained by causing the cell in which it is contained to ignore any signals received from the colony, and to reproduce at the maximum rate, regardless of the implications for the wider group.
* 2 marking lights behind if wider than certain specifications ( red ; plus a group of 3 red lights in the middle in North America )
The group was receptive to the offer, knowing it could give them the wider exposure they craved, but they simultaneously feared that their music was too different from his.
Since the last reorganization in 1999 the university has a separate body called the academic senate, which is a wider, but mostly advisory group representing teaching staff / researchers and students.
Recordings made by this group in 1923 demonstrated the serious artistry of the New Orleans style of collective improvisation or Dixieland music to a wider audience.
Most Western accounts consider that the actual leadership of the Cultural Revolution consisted of a wider group, referring predominantly to the members of the Central Cultural Revolution Group.
For Durkheim, anomie arises more generally from a mismatch between personal or group standards and wider social standards, or from the lack of a social ethic, which produces moral deregulation and an absence of legitimate aspirations.
China does not recognise officially the ethnonym Hmong and instead, clusters that group with an official and wider group: the Miao ( 8, 940, 116 in 2000 ).
Although he preferred integration of a wider group of European states he accepted the group of Six of the EEC and defended the supranational structure it was based on.
The group worked with Ruby on their third album, Marcus Garvey ( 1976 ), which was immediately successful and led to a deal with Island Records to give the album a wider release.

wider and may
This phenomenon raises the question whether the guidance of the emotions for therapeutic ends may not have an even wider application in the area of the neuroses.
In a wider sense, most companies in the UK are created under statute since the Companies Act 1985 specifies how a company may be created by a member of the public, but these companies are not called ' statutory corporations '.
Modern electronic commerce typically uses the World Wide Web at least at one point in the transaction's life-cycle, although it may encompass a wider range of technologies such as e-mail, mobile devices and telephones as well.
Also many on the left such as Tony Benn tend not to use the phrase to refer to themselves even though they share many of their criticisms of the European Union and they may use phrases such as euro-critical or just call themselves democrats or socialists and their scepticism as part of their wider belief in democracy or socialism.
In the Information Technology Infrastructure Library, within companies adhering to ISO / IEC 20000 or seeking to implement IT Service Management best practice, a help desk may offer a wider range of user centric services.
The term is derived from the wider senses of the word historia in Latin and Italian, and essentially means " story painting ", rather than the painting of scenes from history in its narrower sense in modern English, for which the term historical painting may be used, especially for 19th century art.
While it may well be the case that the people of the western stream spoke a language belonging to a wider Eastern Bantu division, it is a puzzle which remains to be resolved that they spoke a language most closely related to the languages just mentioned, all of which are today spoken in southeastern Africa.
For instance, attempts to sabotage a corporation may be considered industrial espionage ; in this sense, the term takes on the wider connotations of its parent word.
Such needles are usually long but, due to the compressibility of knitted fabrics, may be used to knit pieces significantly wider.
Potentially this may be part of a wider power struggle between the East and West in Africa.
A monohull may be stabilized by making it substantially wider than it is tall.
Recessions have also provided opportunities for anti-competitive mergers, with a negative impact on the wider economy: the suspension of competition policy in the United States in the 1930s may have extended the Great Depression.
The characteristics of a roof are dependent upon the purpose of the building that it covers, the available roofing materials and the local traditions of construction and wider concepts of architectural design and practice and may also be governed by local or national legislation.
In some areas, braces much wider than that may identify a skinhead as either unfashionable or as a white power skinhead.
This is in contrast to other goods, which may be considered " good " in a wider variety of situations.
On the other hand, irregular curves represented by simple geometric shapes may be made proportionally wider when zooming in, to keep them looking smooth and not like these geometric shapes.
Jumpers, while caring for their horses and grooming them well, are not scored on turnout, are allowed a wider range of equipment, and riders may wear less conservative attire, so long as it stays within the rules.
The necessity of laying out all of the leads in a basically radial pattern in a single plane from the die perimeter to two rows on the periphery of the package is the main reason that DIP packages with higher lead counts must have wider spacing between the lead rows, and it effectively limits the number of leads which a practical DIP package may have.
The amplification bandwidth of Raman amplifiers is defined by the pump wavelengths utilised and so amplification can be provided over wider, and different, regions than may be possible with other amplifier types which rely on dopants and device design to define the amplification ' window '.
That community may be the family unit, but it can also be understood in a far wider sense of personal interaction, of geographical location, or of shared history.
Genre painting may also be used as a wider term covering genre painting proper, and other specialized types of paintings such as still-life, landscapes, marine paintings and animal paintings.
They may be purposefully imposed, or arise as unintended consequence of trans-cultural interaction ; and have a measurable effect even where countered by other external influences and actions deemed to be beneficial or which serve to promote indigenous rights and interests within the wider community.
" The notion of a confined grid may also be known as an intra-nodes cooperation whilst the notion of a larger, wider grid may thus refer to an inter-nodes cooperation ".

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