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Page "learned" ¶ 84
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contents and for
The doctor opened the smallest of his cases, an unimposing straw bag, and exposed the contents for Alex's inspection.
The many linguistic techniques for reducing the amount of dictionary information that have been proposed all organize the dictionary's contents around prefixes, stems, suffixes, etc..
The latter is useful for modifying information about some or all forms of a word, hence reducing the work required to improve dictionary contents.
Its contents are another matter, for they reveal the kinds of interests pursued by the congregation.
* Exploratory laparotomy -- This refers to the opening of the abdominal cavity for direct examination of its contents, for example, to locate a source of bleeding or trauma.
Though the preface initially states Luke ’ s intentions for writing, by closely examining the contents of the work as a whole, scholars have surmised that Luke ’ s purpose is much more complex.
The user can adjust how far the blade extends from the handle, so that, for example, the knife can be used to cut the tape sealing a package without damaging the contents of the package.
The contents are correspondingly varied: a confession of sin and a plea to God not to maintain his anger forever ( ch. 63: 7 – 64: 11 ); a poem on the theme that God has no need of a temple because Heaven is his throne and Earth his footstool ( Isaiah 66: 1 – 2 ); verses setting out conditions for admission to the community ; complaints of sin, incompetence and paganism ; and distinctions between the " righteous " and the " sinners ", foreshadowing the categories used in much later Judaism and early Christianity.
Its title describes its contents: it contains the history of Biblical judges, divinely inspired leaders whose direct knowledge of Yahweh allows them to act as champions for the Israelites from oppression by foreign rulers, and models of wise and faithful behaviour required of them by their god Yahweh following the exodus from Egypt and conquest of Canaan.
The so-called Liturgy of Comprehension of 1689, which was the result, conceded two thirds of the Presbyterian demands of 1661 ; but when it came to Convocation the members, now more fearful of William's perceived agenda, did not even discuss it and its contents were, for a long time, not even accessible.
It is resistant to dissolution or chemical attack, even in the acidic contents of the digestive tract, for example.
And since for normal files, two bytes of each physical sector were used by DOS as a pointer to the next physical track and sector of the file, only 254 out of the 256 bytes of a block were used for file contents.
So, for example, a web browser program might check its local cache on disk to see if it has a local copy of the contents of a web page at a particular URL.
More efficient caches compute use frequency against the size of the stored contents, as well as the latencies and throughputs for both the cache and the backing store.
Isolation of T. cruzi can occur by inoculation into mice, by culture in specialized media ( for example, NNN, LIT ); and by xenodiagnosis, where uninfected Reduviidae bugs are fed on the patient's blood, and their gut contents examined for parasites.
A way to classify databases involves the type of their contents, for example: bibliographic, document-text, statistical, or multimedia objects.
The DSM-IV-TR states, because it is produced for the completion of federal legislative mandates, its use by people without clinical training can lead to inappropriate application of its contents.
The contents of the epistle are intended for publicity — they aim at interesting " the public.
Freenet works by storing small encrypted snippets of content distributed on the computers of its users and connecting only through intermediate computers which pass on requests for content and sending them back without knowing the contents of the full file, similar to how routers on the Internet route packets without knowing anything about files — except with caching, a layer of strong encryption, and without reliance on centralized structures.
Most of these projects had small editorial budgets, and relied in part, or occasionally entirely, on contributions from fellow Futurians for their contents.
After leaving the experiment running for a long period of time a spectral analysis of the contents of the former evacuated space revealed the presence of helium.

contents and liquid
Due to the possibility of confusion between the use of the word " cytosol " to refer to both extracts of cells and the soluble part of the cytoplasm in intact cells, the phrase " aqueous cytoplasm " has been used to describe the liquid contents of the cytoplasm of living cells.
# Some of the contents of the container are then blended until liquid, depending on the desired consistency.
# The remaining contents of the container are added to the liquid, then briefly puréed until there is some texture remaining for garnish.
If the annular muscles are contracted, the body cross-section is reduced, and the corresponding segment stretches, since its volume must remain constant due to the incompressible behaviour of the coelom's liquid contents ; this is the usual mode of operation of the hydrostatic skeleton as also employed by other worms.
The liquid is then removed along with the contents of the stomach.
Vacuum flasks are used to maintain their contents ( often but not always liquid ) at a temperature higher or lower than ambient temperature, while retaining the ambient pressure of approximately 1 atmosphere ( 14. 7 psi ).
The insulation of the vacuum flask results in a very slow " boil ", and thus the contents remain liquid for a long time without the need for expensive refrigeration equipment.
* Stasis ( medicine ), a state in which the normal flow of a body liquid stops, for example the flow of blood through vessels or of intestinal contents through the digestive tract
In the process of smelting, inorganic chlorides, fluorides ( see fluorite ), limestone and other materials are designated as " fluxes " when added to the contents of a smelting furnace or a cupola for the purpose of purging the metal of chemical impurities such as phosphorus, and of rendering slag more liquid at the smelting temperature.
According to this notions, the real rendang is those with less liquid contents.
This combination of density and low pressure permits very lightweight tankage ; approximately 1 % of the contents for dense propellants and around 10 % for liquid hydrogen ( due to its low density and the mass of the required insulation ).
alt = A schematic diagram of two beakers, each filled with water ( light blue ) and a semipermeable membrane represented by a dashed vertical line inserted into the beaker dividing the liquid contents of the beaker into two equal portions.
The liquid transfers heat from the pot walls to its contents, and also distributes flavours.
Plastic foam tubing to surround the hose may be used to reduce heat transfer between the environment and liquid in the hose, keeping a cold liquid refreshing in summer, or forestalling the system's becoming unusable due to freezing of the contents in the winter.
In the struggle, one of the cartons spilled and its liquid contents caught fire as the train pulled into Jungangno Station in downtown Daegu.
While simmering, the cover can be lifted off without the aid of a mitten, enabling the cook to inspect the main ingredients, add vegetables, mix the contents, or add additional braising liquid.
If the cylinder's contents are liquid, but become a gas at ambient conditions, this is commonly referred to as a Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapour Explosion ( BLEVE ).
A pitcher is a container with a spout used for storing and pouring contents which are liquid in form.
The stomach is normally separated from the throat by a valve, but when this valve becomes herniated, there is nothing to stop the liquid contents in the stomach from rising and permeating the esophagus and mouth.
* S5: Keep contents under ... ( appropriate liquid to be specified by the manufacturer ), a safety phrase in chemistry
In medicine, stasis is the state in which the normal flow of a body liquid stops, for example the flow of blood through vessels or of intestinal contents through the digestive tract.
Diphenoxylate ( R-1132 ) is an opioid agonist used for the treatment of diarrhea that acts by slowing intestinal contractions and peristalsis allowing the body to consolidate intestinal contents and prolong transit time, thus allowing the intestines to draw moisture out of them at a normal or higher rate and therefore stop the formation of loose and liquid stools.
In liquid form, the contents of the can will act as a solvent, causing unwanted damage to surface coatings or labels, this is generally only a problem with optical lens coatings.

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