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Often ( e. g. in sampling-based methods ) UA and SA are performed jointly by executing the model repeatedly for combination of factor values sampled with some probability distribution.
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Often, in American legal and business documents that speak of governing bodies ( e. g., a board that governs small businesses in China ) these bodies are described as " creatures of statute " to inform readers of their origins and format although the national governments that created them may not term them as creatures of statute.
Often, there is a partial overlap in meanings, which creates additional complications: e. g. Spanish lima, meaning " lime " ( the fruit ) and " lime " ( the calcium-based material ), but also " file " ( the tool ).
Often, he would describe a delicious, country-style meal ( e. g., chicken and biscuits smothered in rich gravy, and collard greens ), and the audience would reply approvingly, " yum-m yum-m!
Often the concatenation changed the part of speech ; i. e., nouns were produced from verb segments or verbs from nouns and adjectives.
Often, the stencil material covering the interiors of closed letterforms ( e. g. " a ", " b ", " d ", " e ", " g ", etc.
Often used to describe someone who is seen upon as weird or an outcast ( i. e.: She's rimmed, b ' y ).
Often content to raise tantalizing philosophical possibilities and then leave judgment to the reader, Nozick was also notable for drawing from literature outside of philosophy ( e. g., economics, physics, evolutionary biology ).
Often a nemesis is a superhero's doppelganger or foil ( e. g., Sabretooth embraces his savage instincts while Wolverine tries to control his ; Batman is dark, taciturn, and grim, while the Joker is colorful, loquacious, and flamboyant ).
Often one or more voices is divided into two, e. g., SSAATTBB, where each voice is divided into two parts, and SATBSATB, where the choir is divided into two semi-independent four-part choirs.
Often, fetuses with Turner syndrome can be identified by abnormal ultrasound findings ( i. e., heart defect, kidney abnormality, cystic hygroma, ascites ).
Often they have a " sign-in " page where you put your label or name, then each page will often contain a question which you answer ( i. e. When was the last time you said " I love you ") and the signer would write the appropriate response.
Often in such periods, thorough overgrazing would result in a climatic collapse and a repeat of the cycle ( e. g. PPNB, Ghassulian, Uruk, and the Bronze Age cycles already mentioned ).
Often, the functionality of output transponder has been integrated into that of input transponder, so that most commercial systems have transponders that support bi-directional interfaces on both their 1550-nm ( i. e., internal ) side, and external ( i. e., client-facing ) side.
Often methodological solipsism is not held as a belief system, but rather used as a thought experiment to assist skepticism ( e. g. Descartes ' cartesian skepticism ).
Often information is sorted using different methods at different levels of abstraction: e. g. the UK telephone directories which are sorted by location, by category ( business or residential ) and then alphabetically.
# Disagreement between the Houses: Often, when a bill cannot be passed in the same form by both Houses, it is " laid aside ", i. e. abandoned.
Often, most or all of the cells of a single cell type will be composed of a single cell line, i. e. The blood may be composed prominently of one cell line, and the internal organs of the other cell line.
Often a melody is associated with the riddim, and occasionally an artist will produce two different songs with the same riddim ( e. g. Elephant Man's " Ele Melody " and " Father Elephant " were both produced using the Kopa riddim, produced by Supa Dups ).
Often characterized by " must make " moves, i. e. failure to execute a specific maneuver may result in serious injury or death.
Often, an ecotax policy proposal may attempt to maintain overall tax revenue by proportionately reducing other taxes ( e. g. taxes on human labor and renewable resources ); such proposals are known as a green tax shift towards ecological taxation.
Often and .
Often it is recognized that all the details of the pattern may not be essential to the outcome but, because the pattern was empirically determined and not developed through theoretical understanding, one is never quite certain which behavior elements are effective, and the whole pattern becomes ritualized.
Often the historian must consider the use of intuition or instinct by those individuals or nations which he is studying.
Often, in working out-of-doors under all conditions of light and atmosphere, a particular passage that looked favorable in relation to the subject will be too bright, too dull, or too light, or too dark when viewed indoors in a mat.
Often, the finished sign or display incorporates several types of plastics and two or more fabricating techniques.
Often, therefore, there are a number of rules having the same effect, and commonly other sets of rules as well, having the opposite effect.
Often he seems even to have been able to guess correctly, without the tracing motions, solely on the basis of qualitative differences among the blot-like things which appeared in his visual experience.
Often work of this sort is presented as calligraphy -- the pure utterance of the brush stroke seeking only absolute painteresque values.
Often, threading through the overcast, he was forced to fly close to the ground by a low ceiling, skimming above the Winooski or the White River along the line of the broken railroad.
Often it is thin and fragile and gives way readily to the male organ at the first attempt at intercourse.
Often the relatives plead with him not to do this, since they know they may never see the person again .</ br > Rieux works to combat the plague simply because he is a doctor and his job is to relieve human suffering.
Often the abscess will start as an internal wound caused by ulceration, hard stool or penetrative objects with insufficient lubrication.
Often, discussions on the subject focus on the differences among " artist " and " technician ", " entertainer " and " artisan ", " fine art " and " applied art ", or what constitutes art and what does not.
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