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inaccuracy and most
The presence of the German destroyer in the Atlantic Ocean is a likely inaccuracy, as most of the surface fleet of the Kriegsmarine never ventured that far west, and none did so from 1942 onwards.
The most vehement critic of the film's inaccuracy was Professor A. W.
While historical cost is criticised for its inaccuracy ( deviation from " true " value ), it remains in use in most accounting systems.
The most glaring inaccuracy is about the bridge being lost.
Terminological confusion regarding the liturgical development in this area is common, and most names proposed bear a degree of inaccuracy ; hence qualifications are the norm in the discussion of this history.
Recognising this, Brent quickly grows to despise Neil, and spends most of series two trying to one-up him at every point, most memorably with a dance routine in episode five, which he describes with typical false modesty and inaccuracy, saying " I've sort of fused Flashdance and MC Hammer shit ".
A member of the Grossdeutschland Division, showing the special cuff title in the correct position on the right sleeve The most frequently cited inaccuracy was Sajer's statement that, after being awarded the coveted Grossdeutschland division cuff title, he and his friend were ordered to sew it on their left sleeves ( when it was actually sewn on the right ), an obvious error that critic Edwin Kennedy called " unimaginable " for a former member of such an elite German unit.
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross | Knight's Cross recipient Walter von Wietersheim of the II ./ Panzer-Regiment " Großdeutschland " sporting the Großdeutschland cuff title, showing the special cuff title in the correct position on the right sleeve The most frequently cited inaccuracy was Sajer's statement that, after being awarded the coveted Grossdeutschland division cuff title, he and his friend were ordered to sew it on their left sleeves ( when it was actually sewn on the right ), an obvious error that critic Edwin Kennedy called " unimaginable " for a former member of such an elite German unit.
However, this level of inaccuracy would not be acceptable in most applications of an ANPR system.

inaccuracy and machine
He also ' corrected ' the date of the machine from 1805 to 1804, possibly in a dispute about steamboat patents, and this inaccuracy has since been perpetuated by several commentators.

inaccuracy and pistols
Machine pistols have long been criticized for their inaccuracy.

inaccuracy and occurs
Noise shaping occurs by use of the 64 × oversampled signal to reduce noise / distortion caused by the inaccuracy of quantization of the audio signal to a single bit.

inaccuracy and because
After World War II predicted methods were invariably applied but the fall of shot usually needed adjustment because of inaccuracy in locating the target, the proximity of friendly troops or the need to engage a moving target.
However it does not mean that the algorithm will converge rapidly to this solution, just that it won't diverge arbitrarily because of inaccuracy on the source data ( backward error ), provided that the forward error introduced by the algorithm does not diverge as well because of accumulating intermediate rounding errors.
Although taxonomically incorrect, the name koala bear is still in use today outside Australia – its use is discouraged because of the inaccuracy in the name.
The MAC-10 is "... known on the streets as ' Spray and pray ' because of its popularity in drive by shootings and its ability to fire up to 1000 rounds of ammunition every minute " ( sic ); gun websites claim that the nickname is also a reference to the weapon's inaccuracy.
This first version was censored for being considered " subversive " because it portrayed Sebastian being deposed, its comments in favor of an Anglo-Spanish alliance and possible pro-Catholicism, which led to the final version changing to the story of Antiochus ( which led to historical inaccuracy in exaggerating his defeat at that phase in history to fit the earlier text ), turning Spaniards into Romans and the Catholic eremite into a Stoic philosopher.
High explosive rockets were used by British, U. S., Soviet and German aircraft though they were ( along with bombs ) found to be " barely adequate " because of their inaccuracy.
Punched card voting systems are being replaced by other voting systems because of a high rate of inaccuracy related to the incomplete removal of the perforated chad and the inaccessibility to voters with disabilities.
* Sumas, Washington — northernmost incorporated place in the 48 contiguous states ( because of 19th century survey inaccuracy placing the international border slightly north of the 49th parallel here.
Naval painting became conventionalized in 17th century Dutch Golden Age painting, and from then on artists tended to specialize in it or not attempt it ; apart from anything else " Marine artists have always dealt with a particularly demanding class of patron ", as JMW Turner found when the " Sailor King " William IV of England rejected his version of The Battle of Trafalgar because of inaccuracy.
Because of the inaccuracy and because of the finite number of steps in the exposure grid the writing field is of the order of 100 micrometre – 1 mm.
The relative inaccuracy of the musket was not considered to be significant on the battlefield, because smoke from the black powder used at the time quickly obscured the battlefield and rendered the longer range of the rifle useless.

inaccuracy and is
The headline is offensive, particularly in view of the total inaccuracy of the editorial.
The 20th-century historian Frank Stenton said of the Anglo-Saxon chronicler that " his inaccuracy is more than compensated by his preservation of the English title applied to these outstanding kings ".
The same book famously featured a devastating inaccuracy: the eponymous Ringworld is not ( in ) a stable orbit and would crash into the sun without active stabilization.
A common inaccuracy is the use of the plural pronoun when the antecedent is a distributive expression such as each, each one, everybody, every one, many a man, which, though implying more than one person, requires the pronoun to be in the singular.
This is a semantic assessment ( note the words " inaccuracy ", " implying ", " requires ", " justification " and " intention "),
Peirce defines truth as follows: " Truth is that concordance of an abstract statement with the ideal limit towards which endless investigation would tend to bring scientific belief, which concordance the abstract statement may possess by virtue of the confession of its inaccuracy and one-sidedness, and this confession is an essential ingredient of truth.
( In computational mechanics, when solving a system such as Ax = b there is a distinction between the " error " — the inaccuracy in x — and residual — the inaccuracy in Ax.
Like Payne's and Burton's texts, it is based on the Egyptian recension and retains the erotic material, indeed expanding on it, but it has been criticized for inaccuracy.
While the film is neither " the full story of Lawrence's life or a completely accurate account of the two years he spent fighting with the Arabs ," Korda argues that criticizing its inaccuracy " misses the point ": " The object was to produce, not a faithful docudrama that would educate the audience, but a hit picture.
A minor inaccuracy is that, at the time of the Battle of Bastogne, the 327th Glider Infantry Regiment did not have an Item Company.
Although " Encounter " is a taut drama with excellent performances by Brand and Takei, this historical inaccuracy ( and the complaints it engendered ) has caused this episode to be omitted from syndicated broadcasts of The Twilight Zone.
The pastoral genre is not known for precise verisimilitude, and, like the assortment of mixed references to ancient religion and contemporary religious figures and customs, this possible inaccuracy may have been included to underscore the play's fantastical and chimeric quality.
It is notoriously prone to inaccuracy: In some cases, sources will just make up imaginative stories for pay, or they may try to settle grudges by identifying personal enemies as enemies of the state that is paying for the intelligence.
Requiem sharks are responsible for a large proportion of attacks on humans ; however, due to the difficulty in identifying individual species, there is a degree of inaccuracy in attack records.

inaccuracy and weapon
However, their very poor rate of fire ( which often meant that only one shot was fired in the course of an entire battle ) and their inaccuracy made them more of a psychological force multiplier than an effective anti-personnel weapon.
An underwater firearm variant of the Gyrojet called the Lancejet was considered for use by the United States military, but the inaccuracy of the weapon eventually removed it from consideration.

inaccuracy and has
" The biographer of both Gosses, Ann Thwaite, has established just how inaccurate Edmund's recollections of his childhood were, that Edmund indeed, as Henry James remarked, had " a genius for inaccuracy.
The name is sometimes incorrectly spelled Carpentier, which came from later studio press releases in an attempt to sound more aristocratic, and the inaccuracy has been frequently repeated.
Prosecutors filed new charges against Khodorkovsky, alleging that he stole 350 million tons of oil, charges which Kommersant described as " Compared with the previous version, only stylistic inaccuracy has been improved, and some of the paragraphs have been swapped.
Though his work has frequently been accused of inaccuracy, this charge is somewhat misguided.
The term was coined by Finnish historians during the 1920s, but since then there has been an effort to drop it from professional historiography due to its inaccuracy.
This method is, however, tedious and suffers from inaccuracy ( errors up 22 dynes / cm has been reported ), and is dependent on user's experience and capabilities.
The book has met with criticism, primarily for the inaccuracy of geographical information, compounded by numerous factual errors and an apparent reliance on largely unverifiable claims.
Greg Palast, who has investigated this issue and identified occurrences of these problems, provides a sample of 23 names as they appear on the Florida 2000 felons list, with five examples of these erroneous listings highlighted ( this represents a minimum rate of inaccuracy of 22 % in this sample ).
It has been recognized by scholars as discredited and has been called a " tribute to historical inaccuracy and know-nothing religious bigotry " with " shoddy scholarship, blatant dishonesty " and a " nonsensical thesis ".
However, Thomas Pangle has critiqued the inaccuracy of the " civic humanist " reconstruction and thus its distortion of classical republicanism on the one hand and of Machiavelli's political science on the other hand.
The new Southeastern re-branded station signage and livery has since corrected this inaccuracy.
Cycle time, inaccuracy, cost and level of expertise required for the test engineer has precluded the implementation of any screening of plastic component in a manufacturing or in a product qualification / validation environment.
The Beethoven Compendium ( Cooper 1991, p. 52 ) goes so far as to say that Schindler's propensity for inaccuracy and fabrication was so great that virtually nothing he has recorded can be relied on unless it is supported by other evidence.
Research in change blindness has uncovered the possibility of inaccuracy in eyewitness testimony.
Beginning in 1996, FARC-EP began applying a new military strategy involving multi-front attacks on military objectives, and the use of both 61mm and 80mm mortars and of homemade mortars known as " cylinder bombs " ( the use of which has been condemned by many, due to their inaccuracy and potential for causing collateral damage ).

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