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caveat and .
Here an important caveat is in order.
As with all types of investment, the principle of caveat emptor applies and study is recommended before buying.
Burke's views were a mixture of liberal and conservative, with the crucial caveat that the meaning of these terms in this time period was markedly different from popular conceptions of the present day.
This caveat also applies to the ultraviolet ( UV ) spectrum, even though almost all of it is not ionizing, because UV can damage molecules due to electronic excitation which is far greater per unit energy than heating effects produce.
Denmark has 760 soldiers in Afghanistan, operating without caveat and concentrated in Helmand province.
" Later measurements confirmed Singer's big " if " caveat: Shklovsky overestimated Phobos ' rate of altitude loss due to bad early data.
that approximately 5 % of all granites will be of concern, with the caveat that only a tiny percentage of the tens of thousands of granite slabs have been tested.
The first caveat is that contrast ratios are measured in a completely dark room.
The second caveat is that the human eye can only image a contrast ratio of a maximum of about 200: 1.
An important caveat about lossy compression is that ( formally, transcoding ) or editing lossily compressed files causes digital generation loss from the re-encoding.
Breeder reactors are a specialized form of research reactor, with the caveat that the sample being irradiated is usually the fuel itself, a mixture of < sup > 238 </ sup > U and < sup > 235 </ sup > U.
At the time, Volkswagen lacked an internal research and design division, and Porsche was doing the bulk of the company's development work, per a deal that went back to the 1950s ; in keeping with this history, Porsche was contracted to develop a new sporting vehicle with the caveat that this vehicle must work with an existing VW / Audi I4 engine.
* 28 December 1871 — Antonio Meucci files patent caveat No. 3335 in the U. S. Patent Office titled " Sound Telegraph ", describing communication of voice between two people by wire.
A ' patent caveat ' was not an invention patent award, but only an unverified notice filed by an individual that he or she intends to file a regular patent application in the future.
* 1874 — Meucci, after having renewed the caveat for two years does not renew it again, and the caveat lapses.
* 14 February 1876 — Elisha Gray files a patent caveat for transmitting the human voice through a telegraphic circuit.
* 19 February 1876 — Gray is notified by the U. S. Patent Office of an interference between his caveat and Bell's patent application.
Gray decides to abandon his caveat.
The second caveat is that antisocial preferences such as sadism, envy and resentment have to be excluded.

caveat and L
Mordell's book starts with a remark on homogeneous equations f = 0 over the rational field, attributed to C. F. Gauss, that non-zero solutions in integers ( even primitive lattice points ) exist if non-zero rational solutions do, and notes a caveat of L. E. Dickson, which is about parametric solutions.

caveat and requires
An important caveat is that imaging during the first 12 hours may be falsely reassuring as the inflammatory and necrotic process usually requires 48 hours to fully manifest.
This caveat of phase precession, which alludes to the potential neural mechanisms underlying it, requires further investigation before arriving at a definitive answer.

draws and parallel
he usually draws some kind of comparison with the jazz tradition and the poem he is reading -- for instance, he draws the parallel between a poem he reads about an Oriental courtesan waiting for the man she loves, and who never comes, and the old blues chants of Ma Rainy and other Negro singers -- but usually the comparison is specious.
Whatever the precise nature of Hecate's transition into folklore in late Antiquity, she is now firmly established as a figure in Neopaganism, which draws heavily on folkloric traditions associating Hecate with ' The Wild Hunt ', witches, hedges and ' hedge-riding ', and other themes that parallel, but are not explicitly attested in, Classical sources.
Cynthia hypothesizes that John had a " mother complex ," allowing himself to be dominated by strong women and draws a parallel between his relationship with Ono and that with his domineering aunt Mimi Smith in childhood.
Bangladeshi director Tanvir Mokammel in his 2008 film Rabeya ( The Sister ) also draws inspiration from Antigone to parallel the story to the martyrs of the 1971 Bangladeshi Liberation War who were denied a proper burial.
Ecofeminism originated in the 1970s and draws a parallel between the oppression of women in patriarchal societies and the oppression of the environment.
Donald A. Mackenzie, an early popularizer of mythology, draws a parallel between the love goddess Aphrodite and her " dying god " lover Adonis on one hand, and the love goddess Ishtar and her " dying god " lover Tammuz on the other.
Joseph Campbell, a more recent scholar of comparative mythology, equates Ishtar, Inanna, and Aphrodite, and he draws a parallel between the Egyptian goddess Isis who nurses Horus, and the Babylonian goddess Ishtar who nurses the god Tammuz.
The first draws are made in August, then the competition runs as two parallel north and south area competitions, before the two winners meet in late March or early April in the final at England's national stadium, Wembley.
The historian George Garnett draws the parallel between the treatment of King Harold in Domesday Book, where he is essentially ignored as king, and Stigand's treatment after his deposition, where his time as archbishop is as much as possible treated as not occurring.
Michael Shermer, founder of The Skeptics Society, draws a parallel between scientism and traditional religious movements, pointing to the cult of personality that develops around some scientists in the public eye.
Scholar Hilda Ellis-Davidson draws a parallel between berserkers and the mention by the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII ( AD 905 – 959 ) in his book De cerimoniis aulae byzantinae (" Book of Ceremonies of the Byzantine court ") of a " Gothic Dance " performed by members of his Varangian Guard ( Norse warriors working in the service of the Byzantine Empire ), who took part wearing animal skins and masks: she believes this may have been connected with berserker rites.
In an article in the journal Ancient Egypt ( in 1923 ), and again in an appendix to her book, The Splendor that was Egypt, Margaret Murray expands on such depictions, and draws a parallel to a Scythian deity, who is referenced in Sebastian Münster's Cosmographia universalis.
It draws a parallel between the custom of the Easter egg hunt observed in many Western nations and the last Russian imperial family's tradition of giving elaborately jeweled egg-shaped creations by Carl Fabergé which contained hidden surprises.
The term, used by health practitioners in New Zealand draws parallel to the usual prescriptions given to patients for medications, and emphasises the importance of exercise in improving their condition, and not relying on drugs.
In " The Road to Wickenburg ", Paladin draws a parallel between his methods and the chess piece's movement: " It's an attack piece, the most versatile on the board.
Shortly after the turn of the 20th century, St Kilda served a similar function for Melburnians as did Coney Island to the residents of New York City and its history draws an interesting parallel.
He says that a single design persisting across such a span of time and space cannot be explained by cultural imitation and draws a parallel between bowerbirds ' bowers ( built to attract potential mates and used only during courtship ) and Pleistocene hominids ' handaxes.
The film draws a parallel between sport and warfare, with a recruiter for the Light Horse at the Kimberley Gift race calling war " the greatest game of them all.
To illustrate his point, that this treatment of Germans is absurd, he draws a parallel with Jews, who, he argues with painstaking submission of evidence, have, to a remarkable extent taken part in communist activities, such as the Russian revolution.
This, and the fact that prince Vseslav is transformed into a wolf during the night, while " crossing the path of Hors ", draws a very interesting parallel with the Serbian Dabog, who, as stated already, was believed to be a lame " wolf shepherd " who rules over the underworld.
Most of the content of the psalm is a prayer for the peace and prosperity of Jerusalem, and its use in the coronation service clearly draws a parallel between Jerusalem and the United Kingdom, as William Blake had in his poem Jerusalem ( which Parry set to music later, in 1916 ).
The New American Bible commentary draws a parallel to the Epistle of Jude and the statements set forth in Genesis, suggesting that the Epistle refers implicitly to the paternity of nephilim as heavenly beings who came to earth and had sexual intercourse with women.
It draws perspicacious comparative insights from one revival attempt to another, thus acting as an epistemological bridge between parallel discourses in various local attempts to revive sleeping tongues all over the globe.

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