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Inefficiency and from
Inefficiency was also removed from the production process.
# Inefficiency — Some idling power is wasted as the power supply is left running when the equipment power switch is off or the equipment is disconnected from the power supply.

Inefficiency and is
Inefficiency in the public sector has been rising however at a gradual pace ; external resistance to developing the country's richest natural resources is mounting ; and power sectors including infrastructure have all contributed to slowing economic growth.
Inefficiency therefore does not result in superior performance for a firm, but the passage of time that is necessary for all production processes to occur nevertheless is that feature of the process that explains value-added, not exploitation of labor.

Inefficiency and with
Inefficiency only arises when means are chosen by individuals that are inconsistent with their desired goals.
* Inefficiency, a term with a number of meanings in economics

Inefficiency and its
According to Palm Info Center on June 22, 2005, the palmOne Tungsten T5 Version 1. 1 Update fixes the NVFS File System Inefficiency Problem since its release on November 2004.

Inefficiency and efficiency
Inefficiency requires weighing the cost of the required power supply ) against the cost of attaining greater efficiency ( through choosing different components or redesigning the system ).

Inefficiency and at
The Republicans ran a newspaper advertisement prior to the 1930 general election in which it claimed the Democrats had given Arkansas " Inefficiency, wanton waste, coercive machine rule, and government for private gain at public expense.

Inefficiency and ).
* Inefficiency: in the latter situation people who may not need milk cannot get something of equivalent value ( without subsequently trading or selling the milk ).

comes and just
With six in the group, the cost comes to just a nickel a day per person on the daily fee.
Christianity's idea of " eternal life " comes from the word for life, zoe, and a form of aeon, which could mean life in the next aeon, the Kingdom of God, or Heaven, just as much as immortality, as in.
The club's current position comes within 15 years of their being one of the top sides in Welsh football, winning the old format Welsh Football League in 1991 and 1992, but being relegated in 1993 after just one season in the newly formed League of Wales.
When it comes to the world's largest door, there is not just one, in fact there are four and they all belong to NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center.
I just say that if a man dances effeminately he dances badly — just as if a woman comes out on stage and starts to sing bass.
Therefore, just as Bayes ' theorem shows, the result of each trial comes down to the base probability of the fair coin:.
In other words, the modern definition may be thought of as, " that pride that comes just before the fall ".
The FRAG 6 kit, designed to do just that, is still in development, however its increased protection comes at a hefty price.
The modern English name comes from an 18th century misreading of yet another variant, Ioua, which was either just Adomnán's attempt to make the Gaelic name fit Latin grammar or else a genuine derivative from Ivova (" yew place ").
He said that a " peasant who is in possession of just the amount of land he can cultivate ," and " a family inhabiting a house which affords them just enough space ... considered necessary for that number of people " and the artisan " working with their own tools or handloom " would not be interfered with, arguing that " he landlord owes his riches to the poverty of the peasants, and the wealth of the capitalist comes from the same source.
This story is an allegory ; the android was primitive scholasticism, which was broken by the Summa of St Thomas, the daring innovator who first substituted the absolute law of reason for arbitrary divinity, by formulating that axiom which we cannot repeat too often, since it comes from such a master: " A thing is not just because God wills it, but God wills it because it is just.
The energy probably comes from a dynamo process, meaning that part of the circuit threads a plasma moving relative to Earth, either in the solar wind and in " boundary layer " flows which it drives just inside the magnetopause, or by plasma moving earthward in the magnetotail, as observed during substorms ( below ).
It runs just like a motorcycle but comes with three wheels instead of two and carries a much heavier load on its back.
A strand called a princess length, measuring 17 to 19 inches or 43 to 48 cm in length, comes down to or just below the collarbone.
There can be many different answers to prayer, just as there are many ways to interpret an answer to a question, if there in fact comes an answer.
With a revolver, this is not necessary as none of the energy for cycling the revolver comes from the firing of the cartridge, but is supplied by the user either through cocking the hammer or, in a double action design, by just squeezing the trigger.
Sondheim told biographer Meryle Secrest, " I just wanted to study composition, theory, and harmony without the attendant musicology that comes in graduate school.
The structure of states of affairs comes from the arrangement of their constituent objects ( TLP 2. 032 ), and such arrangement is essential to their intelligibility, just as the toy cars must be arranged in a certain way in order to picture the automobile accident.
As of 2005 VB also comes in 500 ml tinnies (" Lunch Greens "), which are commonly drunk by trade workers on lunch, being just enough to quench their thirst and maintain maximum retention of their precious bodily fluids ..
Another ad exhorted male readers to join the British Army, because " all the birds are gagging for squaddies " ( with the fine print on the reply coupon having a tick box where the interested recruit indicates that spending years ducking for cover in Belfast " should just about see right " when it comes to the ladies ).
The principle support for such a relationship comes from special cell / cell junctions, the belt desmosomes, that occur not just in the Placozoa but in all animals except the sponges ; they enable the cells to join together in an unbroken layer like the epitheloid of the Placozoa.

comes and from
As a Humanist, Dr. Huxley interests himself in the possibilities of human development, and one thing we can say about this suggestion, which comes from a leading zoologist, is that, so far as he is concerned, the scientific outlook places no rigid limitation upon the idea of future human evolution.
While my memory holds with relentless tenacity, as I cannot too often stress, to my wrongs, when it comes to my shames, it gestures and jokes and toys with chronology like a prestidigitator in the hope of distracting me from them.
Aubrey's mention of it ( 2:67, and Bodleian MS Aubr. 8, F. 63 ) comes from this prolusion, through Christopher Milton or Edward Phillips.
A call for action `` before it is too late '' has alarming implications when it comes from a man who, in his previous reports on the schools, cautioned so strongly against extreme measures.
Many home-bound subway riders utilizing the Flushing-Main Street express are daily confronted with the sight of the local departing from the Woodside station as their express comes to a stop, leaving them stranded and strained.
There was an air of blindness in her gray eyes, the startled-horse look that ultimately comes to some women who are born at the end of an ancestral line long since divorced from money-making and which, besides, has kept its estate intact.
-- The deterrent power of our Armed Forces comes from both their nuclear retaliatory capability and their capability to conduct other essential operations in any form of war.
This comes not alone from high-set, high-rep training, but from certain definition-specialization exercises which the champion selects for himself with the knowledge of exactly what works best for him.
During a round of target practice the sun comes from behind a cloud and dazzles the marksman, lowering his chance of a bull's-eye.
Much of the available information comes not from the Federal government but from an exchange of experiences among states.
that on the immediate horizon, if further large-scale ( relatively speaking ) desegregation comes, it will result from court orders on suits filed in several Middle-South states.
The final example of the failure to use available evidence, though evidence of a different kind from that which has so far been considered, comes from Fromm's treatment of some other writers who have dealt with the same themes.
This theme comes to represent the outer world, the realm of battles and banquets -- seen from a distance, quite distinct from the quieter spiritual life in the monastery.
Much of the material comes directly from secondary sources such as Strukturbericht.
Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, former President of the Ford Motor Company, comes from a generation different from that of Eisenhower's own first Secretary of Defense, Charles Wilson, who had been head of General Motors.
Udall, who comes from one of the Mormon first-families of Arizona, is a bluff, plain-spoken man with a lust for politics and a habit of landing right in the middle of the fight.
A picture of her in high school comes from a younger schoolmate, Albert S. Flint, friend of her brother Winslow, and later, like Winslow, a noted astronomer.
One of the finest of artists' oils comes from poppy seeds.
Sesame seed, which comes from the tall pods of a plant grown in Egypt, Brazil, and Central America, has a toasted-nut flavor and can be used in almost any dish calling for almonds.
We had tea at Mr. Washizu's home where I learned that he, too, comes from a very wealthy family.

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