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Parallelism and which
He developed a style which he called Parallelism, characterized by groupings of figures symmetrically arranged in poses suggesting ritual or dance.

Parallelism and also
Parallelism may also be known as parallel structure or parallel construction.

Parallelism and be
This implied computation can be automatically allotted to different processors to achieve concurrency: Parallelism arises from the semantics of the array operations.
# Parallelism: Distributed objects may be executed in parallel.

Parallelism and by
Parallelism, on the other hand, is a term typically used by the supercomputing community to describe executions that physically execute simultaneously with the goal of solving a problem in less time or solving a larger problem in the same time.

Parallelism and .
: Parallelism is the repetition of previous line using a different word order or different words meaning the same thing.
* Stavros Frangoulidis, " Trimalchio as Narrator and Stage Director in the Cena: An Unobserved Parallelism in Petronius ' Satyricon 78 ," Classical Philology, 103, 1 ( 2008 ), 81-87.
:* Parallelism is increased when read request is served.
Parallelism exploits concurrency.
Parallelism has been employed for many years, mainly in high-performance computing, but interest in it has grown lately due to the physical constraints preventing frequency scaling.
( This is an example of MLP, Memory Level Parallelism.
* " Parallelism in rendering algorithms.
Eggers, and H. M. Levy, " Simultaneous Multithreading: Maximizing On-Chip Parallelism ," In 22nd Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture, June, 1995
Parallelism between John the Baptist, Jesus, and Old-Testament prophets implies that the New Testament was written before the Old Testament.
Parallelism is an important part of Ojibwe language artistry.
* " Parallelism and Complementarity: The Psycho-Physical Problem in Spinoza and in the Succession of Niels Bohr.
Parallelism is a term in geometry that refers to a property in Euclidean space of two or more lines or planes, or a combination of these.
Parallelism is not required for the first and the last couplets.
Parallelism is another way to disambiguate the figure of an image.
Parallelism is often achieved in conjunction with other stylistic principles, such as antithesis, anaphora, asyndeton, climax, epistrophe, and symploce.
* 1933 Parallelism and path-spaces, Mathematische Zeitschrift, 37, 608-622.
* 1945 Parallelism in the tensor analysis of partial differential equations, Bull.
16th annual ACM symposium on Parallelism in algorithms and architectures, 2004, pp. 216 – 224.

lent and itself
The Rule of St. Augustine was an obvious choice for the Dominican Order, according to Dominic's successor, Jordan of Saxony, because it lent itself to the " salvation of souls through preaching ".
In addition to the relatively looser constraints on character and message at lower budgets, the nature of B production lent itself to the noir style for directly economic reasons: dim lighting not only saved on electrical costs but helped cloak cheap sets ( mist and smoke also served the cause ); night shooting was often compelled by hurried production schedules ; plots with obscure motivations and intriguingly elliptical transitions were sometimes the consequence of hastily written scripts, of which there was not always enough time or money to shoot every scene.
The devotional nature of its description lent itself to a few Jewish movements in history being known as " Hasidim ".
Sartre's philosophy lent itself to his being a public intellectual.
This method lent itself to images consisting of large areas of flat color, and resulted in the characteristic poster designs of this period.
One particular incident that lent itself to the superstition was the Astor Place Riot.
* Deprecation of the Aristotelian theory that matter was continuous and made up of the elements Earth, Water, Air, and Fire because its classic rival, Atomism, better lent itself to a " mechanical philosophy " of matter.
" Since CUE was fairly streamlined, it lent itself to these sorts of encounters.
This had the advantage of never " flooding " the engine, as any liquid fuel droplets would fall out of the carburetor instead of into the intake manifold ; it also lent itself to use of an oil bath air cleaner, where a pool of oil below a mesh element below the carburetor is sucked up into the mesh and the air is drawn through the oil-covered mesh ; this was an effective system in a time when paper air filters did not exist.
The i860's VLIW mode was used extensively in embedded DSP applications since the application execution and datasets were simple, well ordered and predictable, allowing the designer to take full advantage of the parallel execution advantages that VLIW lent itself to ; in VLIW mode the i860 was able to maintain floating-point performance in the range of 20-40 double-precision MFLOPS ( an extremely high figure for its time and for a processor operating at 25-50Mhz ).
In 2006 the party announced that it would disband itself: it owed a large debt to the Ministry of Home Affairs, who had lent them money for the 2003 elections, and only a handful of paying members were left.
The pointed arch lent itself to elaborate intersecting shapes which developed within window spaces into complex Gothic tracery forming the structural support of the large windows that are characteristic of the style.
The geology and topography of the village lent itself to urbanisation and domestic industries ; primitive weavers ' cottages, coal pits and stonequarries were propelled by Bacup's natural supply of water power in the Early Modern period.
The term lent itself to several " in " jokes: in Mel Brooks ' film High Anxiety, which parodies many Hitchcock films, a minor plot point is advanced by a mysterious phone call from a " Mr. MacGuffin ".
Their reliability has lent itself to occasional use on mail routes, such as the Great Barrier Pigeongram Service established between Auckland, New Zealand and Great Barrier Island in November 1897.
Masque thus lent itself to Mannerist treatment in the hands of master designers like Giulio Romano or Inigo Jones.
Probably his most popular short narrative among today's readers, " The Turn of the Screw " ( 1898 ) is a ghost story that has lent itself well to operatic and film adaptation.
In the original design of the armed force, Zapata was a mere colonel among several others ; however, the true plan that came about through this organization lent itself to Zapata.
In a foreword to a subsequent edition of No Bed for Bacon ( which traded on the association by declaring itself " A Story of Shakespeare and Lady Viola in Love ") Ned Sherrin, Private Eye insider and former writing partner of Brahms ', confirmed that he had lent a copy of the novel to Stoppard after he joined the writing team, but that the basic plot of the film had been independently developed by Marc Norman, who was unaware of the earlier work.
The tripartite foundation plan lent itself naturally to a very strict Vitruvian construct.
The locally plentiful limestone ( Oamaru stone ) lent itself to carving and good designers, such as J. M.
The system also lent itself naturally to photographic images, albeit at only moderate resolution.
The many natural features of the Hamburg have lent itself to the development of " open space " zoning and planning techniques employed by the developers of numerous subdivisions in the 1990s and early 2000s.
The French fur traders described the place as " le portage ", which eventually lent itself to the name of the community.

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