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nature and provisional
Furthermore, they point out that the Instrument of Surrender of Japan was no more than an armistice, a " modus vivendi " in nature, which served as a temporary or provisional agreement that would be replaced with a peace treaty.
), who used it to characterize Consciousness Only teachings as provisional, dealing with the phenomenal appearances of the dharmas, in contrast to Huayan, which deals with the underlying nature on which such phenomenal appearances were based.
In Jersey, provisional legislation of an administrative nature may be adopted by means of triennial regulations ( renewable after three years ), without requiring the assent of the Privy Council .< ref >
Most of the remains had been pillaged for building material over the centuries and there was only time for a partial excavation in 1955, with the result that the excavator could only reach provisional conclusions about the nature of the building and the uses of the rooms.
This measure produced little lasting effects ; according to Kogălniceanu, " the cause this should be sought in the all-mightiness of landowners, in the weakness of the government, who, through its very nature, was provisional, and thus powerless ".
Following the end of the provisional presidency, the reactionary nature Vargas ' regime between 1934 and 1945 — characterized by the co-optation of Brazilian unions through state-run, sham syndicates, suppression of opposition ( particularly ) leftist opposition thus was strongly becoming evident.
Due to the provisional nature of his membership, the band referred to Eric A. K.
Stanislavski's initial choice to call his acting technique his System struck him as dogmatic, so he preferred to write it without the capital letter and in quotation marks to appear as his ‘ system ’ in order to indicate the provisional nature of the results of his investigations.
Since the discovery of Antiope's binary nature, the name " Antiope " technically refers to the slightly larger of the two components, with the smaller component bearing the provisional designation S / 2000 ( 90 ) 1.
The provisional nature of engagements preserves the right of an already-engaged woman to " trade up " ( and, in the process, to " jilt " her until-then partner ).
Diplomatically, a modus vivendi is an instrument for establishing an international accord of a temporary or provisional nature, intended to be replaced by a more substantial and thorough agreement, such as a treaty.
Antoine faces the troublesomely provisional and limited nature of existence itself.
Lal considered his theories to be provisional and based upon a limited body of evidence, and he later reconsidered his statements on the nature of this culture ( Kenneth Kennedy 1995 ).

nature and measures
The treaty forbids < cite > any measures of a military nature </ cite >, but not the presence of military personnel.
Other tasks that don't have this dual-task nature have also been shown to be good measures of working memory capacity.
But Cecil never developed that passionate aversion from decided measures which became a second nature to Elizabeth.
" A close scrutiny of Johnson's public statements ... reveals no mention of preparations for overt warfare and no indication of the nature and extent of covert land and air measures that already were operational.
Apart from the state-required minimums, the town of Columbia has a limited set of regulatory measures to affect the nature and pattern of development.
For any given organization, measures of effectiveness vary, depending upon its mission, environmental context, nature of work, the product or service it produces, and customer demands.
In 1962, the Council of State ruled itself incompetent to judge measures of a legislative nature issued by the President under Article 16.
As the understanding of first aid and lifesaving measures has advanced, and the nature of public health risks has changed, the contents of first aid kits have changed to reflect prevailing understandings and conditions.
Instead, the usual clinical practice is to offer hydration, nutrition, and comfort measures and to " let nature take its course ".
By its very nature it forced Britain into measures that would have been previously unacceptable to the British establishment.
Because of the highly competitive nature of nation states, national security for countries with significant resources and value is based largely on technical measures and operational processes.
While the two conclusions of this article may indicate that industry-funded ICER measures are lower methodological quality than those published by non-industry sources, there is also a possibility that, due to the nature of retrospective or other non-public work, publication bias may exist rather than methodology biases.
Germany waives all claims against Russia which may have arisen through the application, up to the present, of the laws and measures of the Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic to German nationals or their private rights and the rights of the German Reich and states, and also claims which may have arisen owing to any other measures taken by the Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic or by their agents against German nationals or the private rights, on condition that the government of the Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic does not satisfy claims for compensation of a similar nature made by a third Party.
Due to the nature of the sport, any practice of freediving must include strict adherence to safety measures as an integral part of the activity, and all participants must also be adept in rescue and resuscitation.
This " phrase " may be regarded as the fundamental formal unit of music: it may be broken down into measures of two or three beats, but its distinctive nature will then be lost.
The scale and nature of the benefits of CSR for an organization can vary depending on the nature of the enterprise, and are difficult to quantify, though there is a large body of literature exhorting business to adopt measures beyond financial ones ( e. g., Deming's Fourteen Points, balanced scorecards ).
Nonetheless, the Peruvian government at that time regarded this as a minor incident due to the Chilean Sub-secretary of Foreign Relations telling the Peruvian ambassador in Chile on February 2, 1995, that the Chilean government would take immediate measures to stop any other possible operations of this nature.
Harsh repressive measures by the Egyptian government and the unpopularity of the killing of foreign tourists have reduced the group's profile in recent years but the movement retains popular support among Egyptian Islamists who disapprove of the secular nature of Egypt's society and peace treaty with Israel.
He was aware of the fact that the then prevailing environmental policy was not paying enough attention to the great material flows ; he advocated that besides already existing successful legal measures for pollutant emissions limitation it would be necessary to reduce the material flows in order to conserve the finite material, energy and nature resources.
Depending on the nature of the relief of the seabed at the location, i. e. being muddy or rocky, different measures have to be taken to release the ship and carry it to a safe harbor.
While they do not pursue the simplifiying approach of Fayrfax ( an almost exact contemporary of Cornysh junior, and fellow at Court and Chapel ), and remain in a more old-fashioned florid melodic style, they adopt proto-madrigalian manners ( for example in the setting of words like " clamorosa ", " crucifige " and " debellandum " in the Stabat mater ) and have a particularly developed sense of tonal movement ( for example, in the Stabat mater, the closing " Amen " features deliberate use of F sharps as leading notes to give a sense of tonal cadence into G, or employing E flats at " Sathanam " to give a tonal cadence onto B flat, emphasizing the " strong " nature of the text at that moment, employing the bass-movement V-I ), as well as adopting a more modern sense of the expressive apoggiatura in melodic shapes and in bringing out the stresses of the Latin by such devices ( for example, again the Stabat mater, the use of apoggiaturas in the Bassus part to express " ContriSTANtem et doLENtem " in the first few measures, and again at " Contemplari doLENtem cum filio?
Picard notes that with any other race the idea would be out of the question, but the nature of the Borg calls for extreme measures.

nature and has
In what has aptly been called a `` constitutional revolution '', the basic nature of government was transformed from one essentially negative in nature ( the `` night-watchman state '' ) to one with affirmative duties to perform.
If any one of them has any power to veto the Secretary General's decisions the nature of the organization will have changed.
Taxation of tangible movable property in Rhode Island has been generally of a `` hands off '' nature due possibly to several reasons: ( 1 ) local assessors, in the main, are not well paid and have inadequate office staffs, ( 2 ) the numerous categories of this component of personal property make locating extremely difficult, and ( 3 ) the inexperience of the majority of assessors in evaluating this type of property.
By the very nature of the situation, it is the union which has been able to select the time and place to bring pressure upon management.
By its nature it has always been of great psychological advantage and small efforts have required considerably greater counter-efforts.
Beyond a certain point, of course, no woman can be dominant -- nature has seen to that.
This has been a working session of an organization that, by its very nature, can only proceed along its route step by step and without dramatic changes.
It has been my lot all through life to associate with eminent scientists and at times to discuss with them the deepest and most vital of all questions, the nature of the hope of a life beyond this.
Through which he has granted us the very great and precious promises, so that through them you may become partaker of the divine nature.
The adoption of a standard recognizable type for a long time, is probably because nature gives preference in survival of a type which has long be adopted by the climatic conditions, and also due to the general Greek belief that nature expresses itself in ideal forms that can be imagined and represented.
Others suggest the alphabet was developed in central Egypt during the 15th century BC for or by Semitic workers, but only one of these early writings has been deciphered and their exact nature remains open to interpretation.
Miss Marple solves difficult crimes because of her shrewd intelligence, and St. Mary Mead, over her lifetime, has given her seemingly infinite examples of the negative side of human nature.
The main scholarly outlet has been the journal Annales d ' Histoire Economique et Sociale (" Annals of economic and social history "), founded in 1929 by Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch, which broke radically with traditional historiography by insisting on the importance of taking all levels of society into consideration and emphasized the collective nature of mentalities.
In contrast to Newton's vision of wretchedness as his willful sin and distance from God, wretchedness has instead come to mean an obstacle of physical, social, or spiritual nature to overcome in order to achieve a state of grace, happiness, or contentment.
In his book The Science Delusion ( 2012 ) he wrote that the philosophy of the organism ( organicism ) has updated the ideas of animism as it treats all of nature as alive.
He also attempts to illustrate the way in which humanity, through sexual perversion and specifically homosexuality, has defiled itself from nature and God.
The unwieldy nature of the Japanese kana with its inability to accurately represent terminal consonants has contributed to the degradation of the original Ainu.
Of other works only fragments and the titles have survived: Messeniakos, advocating the freedom of the Messenians and containing the sentiment that " God has left all men free ; nature has made no man a slave "; a Eulogy of Death, in consideration of the wide extent of human sufferings ; a Techne or instruction-book in the art
The exhaustion which visibly pervades his whole frame proves the terrible nature of the conflict in which he has been engaged.
The city ’ s lush tree canopy, which filters out pollutants and cools sidewalks and buildings, has increasingly been under assault from man and nature due to heavy rains, drought, aged forests, new pests, and urban construction.
There are additional inefficiencies arising from the highly fragmented nature of the municipal bond market which has two million outstanding issues and 50, 000 issuers in contrast to the Treasury market which has 400 issues and a single issuer.

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