Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Trotskyism" ¶ 29
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

term and permanent
An individual may be represented at a permanent address, perhaps a family home for students or long term migrants.
It began with four permanent members ( Great Britain, France, Italy, Japan ) and four non-permanent members that were elected by the Assembly for a three-year term.
The term has gained some currency in sociobiology, where it refers, analogously, to a mating system in which one female forms more or less permanent bonds to more than one male.
Some hobbyists, for one-off construction or permanent prototyping, use point-to-point wiring with DIPs, and their appearance when physically inverted as part of this method inspires the informal term " dead bug style " for the method.
A popular example of such usage of the term in distributed applications, as well as PVCs ( permanent virtual circuits ), is the organization of nodes in peer-to-peer ( P2P ) services and networks.
The term is used in analogy to ferromagnetism, in which a material exhibits a permanent magnetic moment.
There were no permanent members ; each year ( usually in May ) approximately a third of the seats of the Commission would come up for election, and the representatives were appointed for a three-year term.
As short term overdosing of insulin causes short term insulin resistance, it has been hypothesized that chronic high dosing contributes to more permanent insulin resistance.
* Inherent-long term natural features underline adjoining vegetation, they are stable and permanent
After the 7 February deadline, Katrina victims were left to their own devices either to find permanent housing for the long term, or to continue in social welfare programs set up by other organizations.
While the words " synod " and " council " usually refer to a transitory meeting, the term " Synod of Bishops " or " Synod of the Bishops ", is also applied to a permanent body established in 1965 as an advisory body of the Pope.
Granulation is a generic term for particle enlargement, whereby powders are formed into permanent aggregates.
Flooring is the general term for a permanent covering of a floor, or for the work of installing such a floor covering.
This collective effort was at the origin of many of Britain's building societies, which however developed into " permanent " mutual savings and loan organisations, a term which persisted in some of their names ( such as the former Leeds Permanent ).
This type of rail was known as the plate-rail, tramway-plate or way-plate, names which are preserved in the modern term " platelayer " applied to the men who lay and maintain the permanent way of a railway.
Citizenship act of the Republic of Belarus ( 2002 ) states that permanent residence term requirements may be waived for ethnic Belarusians and descendants of ethnic Belarusians born abroad.
The French term régiment entered military usage in Europe at the end of the 16th century, when armies evolved from collections of retinues who followed knights, to formally organised, permanent military forces.
Although he hadn ’ t originally intended to leave the band in the long term, the breakdown of MacNeil's relationship with Kerr and Burchill ensured that his break with the band was permanent.
) Because δ < sup > 13 </ sup > C indicates the original source of primary producers, the isotopes can also help us determine shifts in diets, both short term, long term or permanent.
In military parlance, the term refers to the buildings and permanent installations necessary for the support, redeployment, and operation of military forces.
Military strategists use the term infrastructure to refer to all building and permanent installations necessary for the support of military forces, whether they are stationed in bases, being deployed or engaged in operations, such as barracks, headquarters, airfields, communications facilities, stores of military equipment, port installations, and maintenance stations.
Abortion in Northern Ireland is only legal in exceptional circumstances where the life of the pregnant woman is at immediate risk and if there is a long term or permanent risk to her physical or mental health.

term and revolution
At the beginning of the " genomic revolution ", the term bioinformatics was re-discovered to refer to the creation and maintenance of a database to store biological information such as nucleotide sequences and amino acid sequences.
Interestingly, the term bioinformatics was coined before the " genomic revolution ".
The Mexican archeologist and anthropologist Manuel Gamio reported in 1930 that the term " chicamo " ( with an " m ") was used as a derogatory term used by Hispanic Texans for recently arrived Mexican immigrants displaced during the Mexican revolution in the beginning of the early 20th century.
After the revolution Egypt ’ s foreign exchange reserves fell from $ 36 billion in December 2010 to only $ 16. 3 billion in January 2012, also in February 2012 Standard & Poor ’ s rating agency lowered the Egypt ’ s credit rating from B + to B in the long term.
Furthermore, the United States persuaded El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua to join in declaring that, under the 1923 treaty provision, no leader of the recent revolution would be recognized as president for the coming term.
Other commentators place the Holocene – Anthropocene boundary at the industrial revolution while also saying that " Formal adoption of this term in the near future will largely depend on its utility, particularly to earth scientists working on late Holocene successions.
Some 20th-century historians such as John Clapham and Nicholas Crafts have argued that the process of economic and social change took place gradually and the term revolution is a misnomer.
The Denim Revolution is a term used by the radical opposition in Belarus and their supporters in the West, who support a color revolution to implement the reintroduction of democracy, to describe their effort and aspirations.
Two years later, in July 1924, at the fifth congress of the Communist International ( Comintern ), Grigory Zinoviev popularized the use of the term Leninism to denote vanguard-party revolution.
The term " proximate cause " is also used by historians, in the sense of a specific event or incident setting off an event, such as a war or revolution, which had deeper roots and causes.
The term People's Republic is used to differentiate themselves from the earlier republic of their countries before the people's revolution, like Republic of China and Republic of Korea.
The European concept of " race ", along with many of the ideas now associated with the term, arose at the time of the scientific revolution, which introduced and privileged the study of natural kinds, and the age of European imperialism and colonization which established political relations between Europeans and peoples with distinct cultural and political traditions.
Philosopher and historian Alexandre Koyré coined the term scientific revolution in 1939 to describe this epoch.
James Hannam says that, while most historians do think something revolutionary happened at this time, that " the term ' scientific revolution ' is another one of those prejudicial historical labels that explain nothing.
" Although historians of science continue to debate the exact meaning of the term, and even its validity, the scientific revolution still remains a useful concept to interpret the many changes in science.
In the United States, " the Sixties ", as they are known in popular culture, is a term used by historians, journalists, and other objective academics ; in some cases nostalgically to describe the counterculture and social revolution near the end of the decade ; and pejoratively to describe the era as one of irresponsible excess and flamboyance.
The term is often used by socialists who favour spontaneous revolution from below or gradualist reformism over organised revolutionary socialism, in effort to distinguish themselves from Leninist socialists, who seek to organise a revolutionary movement by a vanguard party based on principles of democratic centralism.
* Criticism of the post-1924 leadership of the Soviet Union, analysis of its features and after 1933, support for political revolution in the Soviet Union and in what Trotskyists term the deformed workers ' states ;
The term ' social revolution ' has been applied to a range of mostly violent activities of the left that included both altruistic attempts to organise real revolution and simple expressions of revenge, resentment and assertions of power.
Before the sexual revolution of the 1960s, there was no common non-derogatory vocabulary for non-heterosexuality ; the closest such term, " third gender ", traces back to the 1860s but never gained wide acceptance in the United States.
The term deformed was used rather than degenerated, because no workers ' revolution had led to the foundation of these states.
Political commentator Bruce Jesson argued that Douglas acted fast to achieve a complete economic revolution within one parliamentary term, in case he did not get a second chance.

0.363 seconds.