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gap and set
The pamphlets are about law, the corporation, forms of government, the idea of freedom, the defense of liberty, the various lethargies which overtake our major institutions, the gap between traditional social ideals and the working mechanisms that have been set in motion for their realization.
With the Academies in Europe ( second half of 16th century ) the gap between fine and applied arts was definitely set.
The increasing importance of user productivity resulted in innovations such as ' Auto-Gap ' where for the first time the print mechanism would measure paper thickness ( as with dot matrix printers ) and, rather than the user, set the gap.
Medicare ’ s unfunded obligation is the total amount of money that would have to be set aside today such that the principal and interest would cover the gap between projected Part A revenues and spending over a given timeframe.
However this 15 month gap between mobilization and the launch of a full-scale invasion allowed ample time for Vienna to prepare its defense and for Leopold to assemble troops from the Holy Roman Empire and to set up an alliance with Poland, Venice and Pope Innocent XI.
A number of artists in the group were interested in setting up Flux communes, intending to ' bridge the gap between the artist community and the surrounding society ' The first of these, The Cedilla That Smiles, was set up in Villefranche-sur-Mer, France, by Robert Filliou and George Brecht, 1965-1968.
When Washington set up his first administration, and the first Congress began passing laws, both quickly discovered an inconvenient gap in the constitutional design of the government: It had no provision for a regional administrative structure stretching throughout the country.
As a plug ages, and the metal of both the tip and hook erode, the gap will tend to widen ; therefore experienced mechanics often set the gap on new plugs at the engine manufacturer's minimum recommended gap, rather than in the middle of the specified acceptable range, to ensure longer life between plug changes.
On the other hand, since a larger gap gives a " hotter " or " fatter " spark and more reliable ignition of the fuel-air mixture, and since a new plug with sharp edges on the central electrode will spark more reliably than an older, eroded plug, experienced mechanics also realize that the maximum gap specified by the engine manufacturer is the largest which will spark reliably even with old plugs and will in fact be a bit narrower than necessary to ensure sparking with new plugs ; therefore, it is possible to set the plugs to an extremely wide gap for more reliable ignition in high performance applications, at the cost of having to replace or re-gap the plugs more frequently, as soon as the tip begins to erode.
In 1929, after financial problems had forced the BNOC to disband, the Covent Garden management set up a touring company to fill the gap, and appointed Barbirolli as its musical director and conductor.
Experiment shows that significant speed improvements can be made if the gap is set to 11 whenever it would otherwise become 9 or 10.
The play can also be seen as a comedy of manners, where, set in a polite society, the comedy arises from the gap between the characters ' attempts to preserve standards of polite behaviour, that contrasts to their true behaviour.
The spindle is carried by the tentering gear, a set of beams forming a lever system with which the runner stone can be lifted or lowered slightly and the gap between the stones adjusted.
The Weavers ' mainstream popularity set the stage for the folk revival of the 1950s and early 1960s and also served to bridge the gap between folk, popular music, and topical song.
Following Hysteria, the band quickly set out to work on their fifth album, hoping to avoid another lengthy gap.
" Allmusic editor Jason Ankeny viewed the album as the band's artistic breakthrough and " ticket to the big leagues ", calling it " an incendiary and insidious set which bridges the gap between the noisy aggression of the band's early releases and the soulful swagger of their later work.
Adaptations that lynx have for manoeuvering through the deep snow are feet with a large gap between the first and second toes and their big toe set at a wide angle which gives them a better vicelike grip on the snow.
On August 15, 2010 The Observer reported that the gap between the A Level achievement at private schools and that at state schools in the UK was set to widen, with three times as many privately educated students achieving the new grade A *.
Given the preceding information, the knowledge gap hypothesis can be expressed using the following set of related propositions:
In the gap between work on the second and third albums, the Lo Fidelity Allstars took on another set of pseudonyms to perform live as the group ' Technically Men '.

gap and by
He reminds readers that " there is a gap between the narrator ’ s meaning and the text ’ s, and that a moral-political argument is being carried out by means of parody ".
The canines were somewhat elongated and were followed by a short gap in each jaw, and the cheek-teeth were adapted for succulent food.
Other chemicals, known as DNA intercalators, fit into the gap between adjacent bases on a single strand and induce frameshift mutations by " masquerading " as a base, causing the DNA replication machinery to skip or insert additional nucleotides at the intercalated site.
This means there is an energy gap for single-particle excitation, unlike in the normal metal ( where the state of an electron can be changed by adding an arbitrarily small amount of energy ).
: which is of the form suggested the previous year by M. J. Buckingham in Very High Frequency Absorption in Superconductors based on the fact that the superconducting phase transition is second order, that the superconducting phase has a mass gap and on Blevins, Gordy and Fairbank's experimental results the previous year on the absorption of millimeter waves by superconducting tin.
To support the centre, Captain Thompson of Leander abandoned the futile efforts to drag the stranded Culloden off the shoal and sailed down the embattled French line, entering the gap created by the drifting Peuple Souverain and opening a fierce raking fire on Franklin and Orient.
Although Connecticut is a wealthy state by most measures, the income gap between its urban and suburban areas is striking, with several of Connecticut's cities ranking among the nation's poorest and most dangerous.
Some commentators have identified a growing gap between national and economic conservatism: " most parties of the Right are run by economic conservatives who, in varying degrees, have marginalized social, cultural, and national conservatives.
However, a 2005 study by H. Michael Crowson and colleagues suggested a moderate gap between RWA and other conservative positions.
Although the concept of consilience in Whewell's sense was widely discussed by philosophers of science, the term was unfamiliar to the broader public until the end of the 20th century, when it was revived in Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge, a 1998 book by the humanist biologist Edward Osborne Wilson, as an attempt to bridge the culture gap between the sciences and the humanities that was the subject of C. P. Snow's The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution ( 1959 ).
Naturalistic dualism comes from Australian Philosopher, David Chalmers ( born 1966 ) who argues there is an explanatory gap between objective and subjective experience that cannot be bridged by reductionism because consciousness is, at least, logically autonomous of the physical properties upon which it supervenes.
Door guards protect fingers in door hinges by covering the gap that is created by opening doors by covering the hinges of doors with a piece of rubber or plastic that wraps from the door frame to the door.
Both the playwright and his work were travestied by comic poets such as Aristophanes, the known dates of whose own plays thus serve as a terminus ad quem for those of Euripides, though sometimes the gap can be considerable ( e. g. twenty-seven years separate Telephus, known to have been produced in 438 BC, from its parody in Thesmophoriazusae in 411 BC!
In either case it is generally considered a " clumsy forgery " and an attempt to seek to fill the ' gap ' suggested by Colossians 4: 16.
Rancid News filled the gap left by these two zines for a short while.
Ramaprasad ( 1983 ) defines feedback generally as " information about the gap between the actual level and the reference level of a system parameter which is used to alter the gap in some way ", emphasising that the information by itself is not feedback unless translated into action.
At daylight, two British armoured brigades — 2nd Armoured Brigade and the fresh 23rd Armoured Brigade — would sweep through the gap created by the infantry.
The South Africans were to make and mark a gap in the minefields to the south-east of Miteirya by midnight of 26 / 27 July.
The 69th Infantry Brigade would pass through the minefield gap created by the South Africans to Deir el Dhib and clear and mark gaps in further minefields.

gap and distance
The resolution in proximity lithography is approximately the square root of the product of the wavelength and the gap distance.
Hence, except for projection lithography ( see below ), contact printing offers the best resolution, because its gap distance is approximately zero ( neglecting the thickness of the photoresist itself ).
At gap junctions, cells approach within about 3. 5 nm of each other, rather than the 20 to 40 nm distance that separates cells at chemical synapses.
Graves hoisted two signals: one for " line ahead ", under which the ships would slowly close the gap and then straighten the line when parallel to the enemy, and one for " close action ", which normally indicated that ships should turn to directly approach the enemy line, turning when the appropriate distance was reached.
The M79 was designed to bridge the gap between the maximum throwing range of a grenade and the minimum distance of mortar fire.
The village lies in the gap below the castle, and is some eight kilometres ( five miles ) south-east of Wareham, and the same distance west of Swanage.
In bubble sort, when any two elements are compared, they always have a gap ( distance from each other ) of 1.
The distance is indicated numerically at the midpoint of the dimension line, either adjacent to it, or in a gap provided for it.
On-board vehicle electronic systems measure the dipole gap distance 100, 000 times per second, to guarantee the clearance between the coils attached to the underside of the guideway and the magnetic portion of the vehicle wrapped around the guideway edges.
Although portions of the original SRAAM design were used, the airframe was extensively redesigned to produce a missile with greater speed and range, closing the distance gap as well as making it difficult to avoid simply because it was so fast.
Race regulations typically dictate a minimum distance behind the cyclist which the car must maintain and a minimum gap that must exist between two cyclists before the car may enter that gap.
The natural gap in the North Downs north of Merstham is at an elevation of 135 metres above sea level, and there are gently undulating slopes of significant chalk, sand, and some fuller's earth deposits, underlying regular fertile humus topsoil in the distance to Redhill's town centre, at an elevation ranging from 81-83 metres.
In any case, the Mantineans and the right part of the Argives, the elite Argive Thousand entered the gap and routed the Brasideans and the Sciritae and pursued them for a long distance.
The distance between First and Second Avenues was 650 feet, but 610 feet was the gap between Second and Third Avenues, while the blocks between Third and Sixth Avenues were 920 feet, and 800 feet from Sixth to 12th.
At gap junctions, such cells approach within about 3. 5 nm of each other, a much shorter distance than the 20 to 40 nm distance that separates cells at chemical synapse.
:, distance or gap between the surfaces ( called the mean free path )
He studied the breakdown voltage of gas between parallel plates as a function of pressure and gap distance.
Where is the breakdown voltage, is the pressure, and is the gap distance.
The abstract to this states that the literacy gap between Protestants ( as a result of the Reformation ) and Catholics sufficiently explains the economic gaps, and that the: " Results hold when we exploit the initial concentric dispersion of the Reformation to use distance to Wittenberg as an instrument for Protestantism "..
While 14 clubs is a maximum, it is not a minimum ; players are free to use any lesser number of clubs they think will be useful, so substitutions for the common omissions above are not always made ; a player may simply choose to play without a 5-wood or 2-4 irons, instead using a 4-wood and moving directly to their 5-iron as desired distance decreases ( a 4-wood in a skilled golfer's hands averages 200 yards ; a 5-iron in the same player's hands would be about 160, which is a large gap but not unplayable ).
She explains that ten days have passed since the accident, although Kimberly had only found her some distance from the crash site two days prior, leaving a strange eight-day gap where she was mysteriously taken care of.
Typically when the gap between boards is greater than the distance required for expansion, the crate would be considered an open crate.

1.989 seconds.