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parenthetical and is
However, it is now common for many retired judges to serve as arbitrators, and they will often write their names as if they were still judges, with the parenthetical "( Ret.
The use of a parenthetical explanation of the sources relevance following a citation introduced by " see also " is also encouraged.
An explanatory parenthetical is strongly recommended, otherwise the citation's relevance may not be clear to the reader.
The use of a parenthetical explanation of the source's relevance is strongly recommended.
: When a complete participial phrase is unnecessary in context, a shorter parenthetical may be substituted:
Additionally, in legal writing it is permissible to nest several levels of parenthetical material, and it is also permissible for parentheses pointing the same way to " kiss.
: Shorter parenthetical phrases may be used if a complete participial phrase is unnecessary given the context of the citation.
In other citation systems, an inline parenthetical reference is used rather than a citation number, with limited information such as the author's last name, year of publication, and page number referenced ; a full identification of the source will then appear in an appended bibliography.
* Harvard referencing ( or author-date system ) is a specific kind of parenthetical referencing.
An exception to this rule applies when only one end of the parenthetical is italicized ( in which case roman type is preferred, as on the right of this example ).
* As an alternative to parenthetical references ; it is a simpler way to acknowledge information gained from another source.
A parenthetical alternative is the analysis of Miller ( 2011 ).
Sometimes formulas cannot be understood without a written or spoken explanation, but often they are sufficient by themselves, and sometimes they are difficult to read aloud or information is lost in the translation to words, as when several parenthetical factors are involved or when a complex structure like a matrix is manipulated.
The church's actual name is The Church of God ; however, the parenthetical phrase Charleston, Tennessee is added to distinguish it from similar sounding organizations.
The relative importance of the song to Buffett's career is referred to obliquely in a parenthetical plural in the title of a Buffett greatest hits compilation album, Songs You Know By Heart: Jimmy Buffett's Greatest Hit ( s ).
New Impressions of Africa is a 1, 274-line poem, consisting of four long cantos in rhymed alexandrines, each a single sentence with parenthetical asides that run up to five levels deep.
For example, in the phrase: " My wife, a nurse by training, ...", it is necessary to pause before the parenthetical modification " a nurse by training ".
However, if the speaker has only one brother, then the brother's name is parenthetical and the correct way to write it is: " my brother, Nathan, ...".
" In 2006, Slant Magazine ranked the song at # 88 in their 100 Greatest Dance Songs, commenting that " with its parenthetical title, gummy bassline, schmaltzy horns, tinkling keyboards, and half-step key changes, song is definitive ' 80s dance-pop.

parenthetical and meant
Rather, he meant it as he expressed it in the parenthetical clarification later added to Introduction to Metaphysics ( 1953 ), namely, " the confrontation of planetary technology and modern humanity.

parenthetical and be
Because the relevance of the comparison may not be readily apparent to the reader, The Bluebook strongly recommends adding a parenthetical explanation after each authority.
This allows material that would otherwise be included in a parenthetical explanation to be more cohesively integrated.
: Place a parenthetical that must be included as part of a citation before an explanatory parenthetical.
If yes, then a parenthetical that points to the correct and specific information might be helpful.
If the case you are citing has some subsequent history or other related authority that needs to be included, it should come after your parenthetical.
An example of a parenthetical reference would be:
Of González-Torres ’ s nineteen candy pieces, only six, by their parenthetical titles and ideal weights, can be readily interpreted as portraits.
Motion picture screenplays intended for submission to mainstream studios, whether in the US or elsewhere in the world, are expected to conform to a standard typographical style known widely as studio format which stipulates how elements of the screenplay such as scene headings, action, transitions, dialog, character names, shots and parenthetical matter should be presented on the page, as well as the font size and line spacing.
Brian Wilson can be heard fondly mentioning this album in the box set The Pet Sounds Sessions during the highlights of the recording sessions of the album on " Hang on to your Ego " take 2 on Pet Sounds ; a full working title for the album's track " Let's Go Away For Awhile " was " Let's Go Away For Awhile ( And Then We'll Have World Peace )," the parenthetical being an allusion to the album.

parenthetical and .
Given any expression involving complex numbers, bras, kets, inner products, outer products, and / or linear operators ( but not addition ), written in bra-ket notation, the parenthetical groupings do not matter ( i. e., the associative property holds ).
Most denominations ( a notable exception being the Seventh Day Adventists ) would affirm the statement from the Catechism of the Catholic Church ( above ), with the exception of the parenthetical phrase, " through a purification or immediately.
The United States Revenue Cutter Service, which merged with the United States Lifesaving Service in January 1915 to form the modern Coast Guard, began following the Navy's lead in the 1890s, with its cutters having parenthetical numbers called Naval Registry Identification Numbers following their names, such as ( Cutter No. 1 ), etc.
Having calculated the parenthetical part of the expression, we start over again beginning with the left most value and move right.
Legal scholars generally encourage the use of parenthetical explanations of the source material's relevance following each authority, using ' see generally.
If the parenthetical quotes one or more full sentences, then the parenthetical should begin with a capital letter and end with punctuation.
: Punctuation and Spacing: Insert one space before the opening parenthesis of the explanatory parenthetical.
Note that if the parenthetical does not contain a complete sentence, the writer should not place final punctuation, such as a period, inside the parenthetical.
If your source directly quotes or supports your argument ( meaning you either used no signal or " see " in front of your citation ) then you probably do not need a parenthetical.

aside and is
To say this is to set aside the realness of time.
The day is now appropriately set aside to honor the American men and women who have contributed to the success of our merchant marine fleet in peace and war.
A number of semiempirical estimates by various workers lead to the conclusion that the Af bond becomes symmetric when the Af bond length is about 2.4 to 2.5 A, but aside from the possible example of nickel dimethylglyoxime there have been no convincing reports of symmetric Af bonds.
aside from her specifically regional accent, she reveals by the use of the triad, `` irritable, tense, depressed '', a certain pedantic itemization that indicates she has some familiarity with literary or scientific language ( i.e., she must have had at least a high-school education ), and she is telling a story she has mentally rehearsed some time before.
A frequent pitfall in this sort of arrangement, experts warn, is a tendency to pay the wife more than her job is worth and to set aside an excessive amount for her as retirement income.
This is well evidenced by the Quietist doctrines carried over in Zen: the idea of the inward turning of thought, the enjoinder to put aside desires and perturbations so that a return to purity, peace, and stillness -- a union with the Infinite, with the Tao -- could be effected.
The first Saturday in each month is set aside for new recordings.
It is commendable that a regularly scheduled hour is set aside for an introduction to the contemporary musical scene.
This seems to pose a serious problem for the empirical account, though Hume brushes it aside as an exceptional case by stating that one may experience a novel idea that itself is derived from combinations of previous impressions.
Art is set aside from ordinary life and made a dramatic focus of experience.
Analytical chemistry plays an increasingly important role in the pharmaceutical industry where, aside from QA, it is used in discovery of new drug candidates and in clinical applications where understanding the interactions between the drug and the patient are critical.
In terms of ultra vires actions in the broad sense, a reviewing court may set aside an administrative decision if it is unreasonable ( under Canadian law, following the rejection of the " Patently Unreasonable " standard by the Supreme Court in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick ), Wednesbury unreasonable ( under British law ), or arbitrary and capricious ( under U. S. Administrative Procedure Act and New York State law ).
Some reports suggest Haznawi was pulled aside for screening while others claim there is no record of whether any of the four were screened ; the lack of CCTV cameras at the time has compounded the problem.
Similarly, in 1971, Alistair Campbell stated that the apologue technique used in Beowulf is so infrequent in the epic tradition aside from when Virgil uses it that the poet who composed Beowulf could not have written the poem in such a manner without first coming across Virgil's writings.
In Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox and Anglican cathedrals there is a special chair set aside for the exclusive use of the bishop.
They argue that Banquo is merely setting aside his sword for the night.
He also often employed inanimate objects in his films, often transforming them into other objects in an almost surreal way, such as in The Pawnshop ( 1916 ) and One A. M. ( 1916 ), where Chaplin is the only actor aside Chester Conklin's brief appearance in the very first scene.
Phenomenology is a method of inquiry that attempts to examine the structure of consciousness in its own right, putting aside problems regarding the relationship of consciousness to the physical world.
* In Japan the calendar is referred to as ( 西暦, seireki ), literally meaning as it is written, " west calendar ," and sounding like, " Western calendar ," which carries no religious connotation, aside from the fact that Christianity is a Western religion.
The wealth of greenspace afforded by Chicago's parks is further augmented by the Cook County Forest Preserves, a network of open spaces containing forest, prairie, wetland, streams, and lakes that are set aside as natural areas which lie along the city's periphery, home to both the Chicago Botanic Garden in Glencoe and the Brookfield Zoo in Brookfield.
Additionally, an interface that is difficult to navigate or understand can hinder the CRM ’ s effectiveness, causing users to pick and choose which areas of the system to be used, while others may be pushed aside.

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