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Mortality and is
Mortality is the pacing of a brief and dangerous watch, and to all sentinels, whether at Elsinore or on the battlements at Mycenae, the coming of dawn has its breath of miracle.
Mortality is extremely high during the first six to seven months of life, when 37 – 50 % of all calves die.
A recent critic, who is a legal as well as a literary scholar, argues that Old Mortality not only reflects the evolution of Scottish nationalism but also invokes a foundational moment in British sovereignty, namely, the Act of Habeas corpus ( also known as the Great Writ ), passed by the English Parliament in 1679.
# Reduce Child Mortality: There is some what improvement in survival rates globally ; accelerated improvements are needed most urgently in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.
Mortality is the study of the causes, consequences, and measurement of processes affecting death to members of the population.
Mortality is concentrated among children and the elderly.
Mortality of a tubal pregnancy at the isthmus or within the uterus ( interstitial pregnancy ) is higher as there is increased vascularity that may result more likely in sudden major internal hemorrhage.
Its libretto is by Count Carlo Pepoli, based on Têtes rondes et Cavaliers by Jacques-François Ancelot and Joseph Xavier Saintine, which is in turn based on Walter Scott's novel Old Mortality.
Mortality in the first year is 59 – 70 %, declining to 25 – 32 % annually
More importantly, the Research Center for Ruminant Abortion and Neonatal Mortality Studies is currently considered to be a Center of Excellence of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine.
Mortality rate is a measure of the number of deaths ( in general, or due to a specific cause ) in a population, scaled to the size of that population, per unit of time.
Mortality rate is typically expressed in units of deaths per 1000 individuals per year ; thus, a mortality rate of 9. 5 ( out of 1000 ) in a population of 100, 000 would mean 950 deaths per year in that entire population, or 0. 95 % out of the total.
Mortality is the condition of being mortal, or susceptible to death ; the opposite of immortality.
* Mortality drag, a term to describe a negative impact that is experienced when an annuity purchase is delayed
Mortality in the early stages of life is often related to predation.
Mortality from untreated PE is said to be 26 %.
Denying the belief that sensory experience is primary, Radischev, in On Man, His Mortality, His Immortality, speaks in favor of man's higher virtues as the main elements in complex human thought.
Mortality in the field ( where most horse castrations are performed ) is probably higher, due to poorer facilities.
: MMDS is also an acronym for Mortality Medical Data System.
Mortality is indirect and caused by complications.
Mortality in young males is greater than that of young females and the typical lifespan is four years.

Mortality and rare
* 1981 – The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that five people in Los Angeles, California have a rare form of pneumonia seen only in patients with weakened immune systems, in what turns out to be the first recognized cases of AIDS.
Mortality is extremely rare and usually due to hepatic, respiratory, or cardiac failure.

Mortality and reports
Such a standing report section is the " Notifiable Diseases and Mortality Tables ", which reports deaths by disease and state, and city for city, for 122 large cities.

Mortality and do
Mortality resulting from trawling bycatch seems to be less of an issue, probably because porpoises are not inclined to feed inside trawls, as dolphins are known to do.
The long-term study of 25, 000 women, Mortality among Canadian Women with Cosmetic Breast Implants ( 2006 ), reported that the “ findings suggest that breast implants do not directly increase mortality in women .”

Mortality and .
Mortality rates in that area never declined to the same dramatic extent, and now constitute the bulk of malarial deaths worldwide, especially following the disease's resurgence as a result of resistance to drug treatments and the spread of the deadly malarial variant caused by Plasmodium falciparum.
Some scholars pinpoint the origin of statistics to 1663, with the publication of Natural and Political Observations upon the Bills of Mortality by John Graunt.
Mortality tops the list.
In writing Old Mortality Scott drew upon the knowledge he had acquired from his researches into ballads on the subject for The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border.
At that time, the chief source of information on the demography was provided by parish registration of baptisms, marriages, and burials that had occurred in the parish churches, supplemented by information on mortality in the Bills of Mortality that were published for certain large towns and by inferences drawn from various counts of taxpayers.
The CDC's fact sheet on the Relationship of Walking to Mortality Among U. S. Adults with Diabetes states that those with diabetes who walked for 2 or more hours a week lowered their mortality rate from all causes by 39 %.
Mortality also peaked during this period due to other air -, food -, and waterborne diseases, but these declined as well during the early 19th century.
* Murray, John E. “ A Demographic Analysis of Shaker Mortality Trends .” Communal Societies.
The Natural and Political Observations ... upon the Bills of Mortality ( 1662 ) of John Graunt contains a primitive form of life table.
Ageing and Longevity: Mortality Laws and Mortality Forecasts for Ageing Populations Czech: Stárnutí a dlouhověkost: Zákony a prognózy úmrtnosti pro stárnoucí populace.
Mortality often occurs when the narwhals suffocate after they fail to leave before the surface of the Arctic waters freezes over in the late fall.
This term was used extensively in the English Bills of Mortality as a cause of death from 1842, and ceased to be used in the early 1900s.
* Thomas Pynchon's early short-story, " Mortality and Mercy in Vienna ", take its title from a verse in this play, and has also been inspired by it.

is and rare
The woman eyed the youth with the avidity a coin collector might display toward a rare doubloon which is not yet in his collection.
and the success of such an endeavor is, as suggested above, glaringly rare.
The book concerned with the Negro's role in an urban society is rare indeed ; ;
It is one of the rare public ventures here on which nearly everyone is agreed.
Self-criticism is a rare but needed commodity in Congress.
On those rare occasions when a faculty member on tenure is not meeting the standards of the institution, the president must also bear the ultimate burden of decision and action.
In the rare case where a corporation's only substantial asset, or its most important one, is a claim for refund, perhaps its transfer should not be permitted, whether the reorganization takes the form of a statutory merger or of the acquisition of assets for stock.
The inhibition of the enzyme by very low concentrations of lanthanum ion is probably the strongest known biological effect of rare earth salts.
He is still heir to the rare gifts of space and silence, if he chooses to be.
For that matter, Stan Musial is rare, possessing the disposition that enabled him to put out the same for seven managers, reserving his opinions, but not his effort.
Actually Johnny is a glib, garrulous guy, with a rare sense of humor.
Beadle is even that rare scientist who takes an interest in money matters ; ;
Another cue is having the same family name, especially if rare, and this has been found to increase helping behavior.
Relief in post-conviction is rare and is most often found in capital or violent felony cases.
Generally, there is no trial in an appellate court, only consideration of the record of the evidence presented to the trial court and all the pre-trial and trial court proceedings are reviewed — unless the appeal is by way of re-hearing, new evidence will usually only be considered on appeal in " very " rare instances, for example if that material evidence was unavailable to a party for some very significant reason such as prosecutorial misconduct.
German uses the tesseragraphs ( four letters ) " tsch " for the phoneme and " dsch " for, although the latter is rare.
An example is modern Greek which may write the phoneme in six different ways: ⟨ ι ⟩, ⟨ η ⟩, ⟨ υ ⟩, ⟨ ει ⟩, ⟨ οι ⟩, and ⟨ υι ⟩ ( although the last is rare ).
Phytomelan is not unique to Asparagales ( i. e. it is not a synapomorphy ) but it is common within the order and rare outside it.
Fossil evidence of the Asterales is rare and belongs to rather recent epochs, so the precise estimation of the order's age is quite difficult.

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