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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 491
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discrepancy and between
In the first place, a large part of the discrepancy between President Eisenhower's estimate of a 1.5 billion dollar surplus for the same period and the new estimate of an almost seven billion dollar deficit is the result of the outgoing President's farewell gift of a political booby-trap to his successor.
It is the discrepancy between the actual attained achievement test score and the score that would be predicted by the I.Q..
Why the discrepancy between the builders' forecasts for themselves and for the industry??
As an example, if one was trying to profit from a price discrepancy between IBM on the NYSE and IBM on the London Stock Exchange, they may purchase a large number of shares on the NYSE and find that they cannot simultaneously sell on the LSE.
When Liddell Hart was questioned about this in 1968, and the discrepancy between the English and German editions of Guderian's memoirs, " he gave a conveniently unhelpful though strictly truthful reply.
After one year with a work entitled Correction of severe discrepancy between electrodynamic theory and the relativistic one of electromagnetic charges.
( There is a common discrepancy in the chronology between Spanish and British sources, the reason being that England still used the Julian calendar.
This often creates a discrepancy between contemporary usage and that which has been accepted, over time, as being correct.
As with the K-S test, the discrepancy statistics D < sup >+</ sup > and D < sup >−</ sup > represent the absolute sizes of the most positive and most negative differences between the two cumulative distribution functions that are being compared.
There are a number of reasons cited for the discrepancy between the vast mineral wealth of the province and the failure of the wealth to increase the overall standard of living.
Based on the discrepancy between the wages of labor and the value of the product, the " Ricardian socialists " — Charles Hall, Thomas Hodgskin, John Gray, and John Francis Bray — applied Ricardo's theory to develop theories of exploitation.
Because the discrepancy is not fully explained, uncertainty of our prediction of UT ( rotation angle of the Earth ) may be as large as the difference between these values: 11 s / cy < sup > 2 </ sup >.
However, it is our everyday arithmetical practices such as counting which are fundamental ; for if a persistent discrepancy arose between counting and Principia, this would be treated as evidence of an error in Principia ( e. g., that Principia did not characterize numbers or addition correctly ), not as evidence of an error in everyday counting.
The apparent discrepancy between the Irish and English versions of the Constitution has discouraged Presidents from contemplating the use of the power.
However, there is a discrepancy between the English-and Irish-language texts of Article 12. 4. 1 °.
Any architectural project we do takes at least four or five years, so increasingly there is a discrepancy between the acceleration of culture and the continuing slowness of architecture.
It should be noted, however, that white-tailed deer were largely absent from the last wild refuge of red wolves on the Gulf Coast between Texas and Louisiana ( where specimens were trapped from the last wild population for captive breeding ), which likely accounts for the discrepancy in their dietary habits listed here.
It is also the derivative of the formula for the volume with respect to r because the total volume of a sphere of radius r can be thought of as the summation of the surface area of an infinite number of spherical shells of infinitesimal thickness concentrically stacked inside one another from radius 0 to radius r. At infinitesimal thickness the discrepancy between the inner and outer surface area of any given shell is infinitesimal and the elemental volume at radius r is simply the product of the surface area at radius r and the infinitesimal thickness.
Eusebius gives some extracts from his letter to one Aristides, reconciling the apparent discrepancy between Matthew and Luke in the genealogy of Christ by a reference to the Jewish law of Levirate marriage, which compelled a man to marry the widow of his deceased brother, if the latter died without issue.
It was believed that, with the great discrepancy between the emotions of the witnesses and those translating them, much of the impact was lost in interlingual rendition.
the large discrepancy between the number of ravens and
The discrepancy between the curves is attributed to dark matter.
In general, losses are estimated from the discrepancy between energy produced ( as reported by power plants ) and energy sold to end customers ; the difference between what is produced and what is consumed constitute transmission and distribution losses, assuming no theft of utility occurs.

discrepancy and what
He believed that anomie is common when the surrounding society has undergone significant changes in its economic fortunes, whether for good or for worse and, more generally, when there is a significant discrepancy between the ideological theories and values commonly professed and what was actually achievable in everyday life.
The discrepancy may come from a misinterpretation of what unit of measure was meant by a certain Greek term in Aristarchus ' text.
Ultimately, the discrepancy was restricted with what some labelled artificial logic in the cases of R v Pora and R v Poumako.
A balance isn't always reflected in reported figures for the current and capital accounts, which might, for example, report a surplus for both accounts, but when this happens it always means something has been missed — most commonly, the operations of the country's central bank — and what has been missed is recorded in the statistical discrepancy term ( the balancing item ).
The main premise of this theory is that satisfaction is determined by a discrepancy between what one wants in a job and what one has in a job.
Reed " came through the scandal .. over MPs ' expenses unscathed ", although in May 2009, the Daily Telegraph wrongly implied a discrepancy between claims for Reed ’ s second home in Westminster and what he told constituents.
The paradox is the discrepancy between what people seem willing to pay to enter the game and the infinite expected value suggested by the above naïve analysis.
The World Wide Fund for Nature criticized the government, however, for what it called a discrepancy between the standards for closing Mai Po and the comparably less strict standards applied in urban areas.
After voting on the bill brought forward by Kenyatta, Gitobu Imanyara brought up discrepancy questions as to what exactly had been approved by the house.
When Chamber called on the minister to answer about the discrepancy, he declared himself " astonished " by news of the retreat, attributing it to British pressures, and indicated that " we have entered Belgium in good will ; good will is what led us to withdraw ".
The discrepancy between what's listed on the cover and what is actually recorded is there again as sleeve announces the track called " KPGS " which would, this time for real, appear on the next live album, but does not list " Halid invalid Hari " and " Prijatelju, prijatelju " which were included and became big hits.
The UK equivalent is the specialty trainee ( ST2-ST9 ) grade of sub-specialty training, but note that while US fellowship programmes are generally 3 years in duration after completing the residency, UK trainees spend 3 to 7 years in additional specialist training equivalent to US fellowships with an additional general medicine component ; this discrepancy lies in the competing demands of NHS service provision and UK postgraduate training stipulating that even specialist consultant ( attending ) physicians must be able to accommodate the general acute medical take — equivalent to what dedicated attending internists perform in the United States.
It recognizes that a discrepancy between what is happening and what should be happening is often the first indicator that an error is occurring.
The Rescorla – Wagner model is a model of classical conditioning in which the animal is theorized to learn from the discrepancy between what is expected to happen and what actually happens.
CSI researcher Richard Wiseman said, " When I saw her do her usual readings, I couldn't believe the discrepancy between what I was hearing and how impressed the individuals were ...
The status of women in the Victorian era is often seen as an illustration of the striking discrepancy between the United Kingdom's national power and wealth and what many, then and now, consider its appalling social conditions.
In the 1983 debut album Script for a Jester's Tear, by British progressive rock group Marillion, the Saracen was referred to in the final song: "... crawling behind a Saracen's hull from the safety of his living room chair ..." The lyrics of Forgotten Sons describe the conflict in Northern Ireland and the discrepancy between what was really happening and the perception of the conflict by the British public.
A resolution to this discrepancy includes the possibility that primary sensory areas can not be classified as a single group, and thus may be far more different from what was previously thought.

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