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Page "History of Norfolk Island" ¶ 13
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implicit and threat
Justification for attacks on Muslims often comes as takfir, an implicit death threat since under traditional Sharia law the punishment for apostasy in Islam is death.
In a political move to provide some manner of response, Grant met as a civilian with the opposing party heads and, with his potential use of the armed forces an implicit threat, was able to facilitate a settlement.
An autocracy is a system of government in which a supreme political power is concentrated in the hands of one person, whose decisions are subject to neither external legal restraints nor regularized mechanisms of popular control ( except perhaps for the implicit threat of coup d ' état or mass insurrection ).
" Cowdery and the Whitmers, taking this Salt Sermon as a threat against their lives and as an implicit instruction to the Danites, a secret vigilante group, fled the county.
This wealthiest of provinces could be held militarily by a very small force ; and the threat implicit in an embargo on the export of grain supplies, vital to the provisioning of the city of Rome and its populace, was obvious.
Matters were taken out of the Erewash Canal owners hands, for, without their co-operation, there was the implicit threat that a competing canal would be built to the Trent.
" Jawboning " or " moral suasion " in economics and politics is an unofficial technique of public and private discussions and arm-twisting, which may work by the implicit threat of future government regulation.
Sensing the threat implicit in this snub, Philippus requested that Caesar allow him to sit out the war, to remain in Italy for the duration.

implicit and became
Boston University economist Laurence J. Kotlikoff suggests commercial banks only became involved with CDOs, SIVs, and other “ risky products ” after Glass-Steagall was “ repealed ,” but he rejects Glass-Steagall reinstatement ( after suggesting Paul Volcker favors it ) as a “ non-starter ” because it would give the “ nonbank / shadow bank / investment bank industry ” a “ competitive advantage ” without requiring it to pay for theimplicit ” “ lender-of-last-resort ” protection it receives from the government.
He was described, already before he became prime minister, as " gentle, pensive and a good listener " and his " cool, soft-spoken approach " is said to go down well with Swedish voters ; it also fits well with the promotion of the policies of his cabinet as being not ideological, but motivated by non-political reason and common sense, in implicit contrast to the " ideological excesses " of the Social Democrats and their allies.
TVB became famous by its sitcoms ( directed and written by Radivoje-Lola Djukić, Novak Novak and others ( unfortunately, only a small percentage of this production is preserved, due to implicit censorship and lack of tapes ).
In 1974 Broadbent became a fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford and returned to applied problems, developing new ideas about implicit learning from consideration of human performance in complex industrial processes along with his colleague Dianne Berry.
When he became an ethnomusicologist later on, he worked on uncovering implicit musical systems and studied the ways in which a culture builds its cognitive categories as observed in its music – using interactive experiments.
" He showed that, in the case of memes, the intentional stance became increasingly implicit over time: as the idea of an " idea virus " was popularized further, the stance eventually dropped away entirely.
In this way, the implicit subsidies of Ma Bell became explicit post-divestiture.

implicit and apparent
Thus the unconscious mind can be seen as the source of dreams and automatic thoughts ( those that appear without any apparent cause ), the repository of forgotten memories ( that may still be accessible to consciousness at some later time ), and the locus of implicit knowledge ( the things that we have learned so well that we do them without thinking ).

implicit and month
If the firm cannot obtain a profit after deducting £ 10, 000 a month for this implicit cost, it ought to move premises ( or close down completely ) and take the rent instead.

implicit and after
The paradox implicit in the whole affair is shown by the demand of the government, after the conviction, that General Electric sign a wide-open consent decree that it would not reduce prices so low as to compete seriously with its fellows.
The following may be applied to individual dimensions of multidimensional data, after transformation, although some of these involve their own implicit transformation of the data.
Such anxiety is ironic to the reader, who knows of the narrator's implicit survival: the text refers to the black-robed judges having lips " whiter than the sheet upon which I trace these words ", showing that he himself is writing the story after the events have happened.
An implicit function can sometimes be successfully defined as a true function only after " zooming in " on some part of the x-axis and " cutting away " some unwanted function branches.
It is widely believed that his adventures had the implicit support of the French state, even after the 1981 election of the French Socialist Party candidate, François Mitterrand, despite moderate changes in France's policy in Africa.
Later, after several political humorists started employing " lifting your luggage " as an implicit or explicit reference to various sexual acts, Savage suggested that " Whatever lifts your luggage " supplant " whatever floats your boat " in common parlance.
This says to print every line ( implicit ), and quit after the fifth.
All these injuries were acquired long before death, showing extensive healing and this has been used to infer that Neanderthals looked after their sick and aged, denoting implicit group concern.
The restriction may be implicit, or may be explicitly included as an extra line such as " when the sound is e " placed before or after the main part of the rhyme.
The late decision to withdraw was taken after the Lebanese broadcasters conceded to the European Broadcasting Union that they could not guarantee they would uphold the fairness of the event by transmitting it without selective interruption, an implicit reference to the requirement of screening the performance of Shiri Maymon, the representative of Israel.
It was exactly this implicit awareness of the immorality of existing social relations that didn't endear Nelson Rodrigues to fellow conservatives: after reading Album de Família, his close friend, the poet Manuel Bandeira, offered him the advice to try his hand at writing about " normal people ".
His implicit call for a ceasefire in the western region of Sudan came after the Khartoum government withdrew its ultimatum for African Union peacekeepers to pull out.
There was a certain element of sexual attraction implicit in their relationship, in the books after Interview with the Vampire Lestat refers to Louis as his lover.
As murids of the Safaviyya sheikhs ( pirs ), the Kizilbash owed implicit obedience to their leader in his capacity as their murshid-e kāmil (" supreme spiritual director ") and, after the establishment of the kingdom, as their padshah (" king "), changing the purely religious pir-murid relationship into a political one.

implicit and decision
Advocates of counterfactual history often respond that all statements about causality in history contain implicit counterfactual claims — for example, the claim that a certain military decision helped a country win a war presumes that if that decision had not been made, the war would have been less likely to be won, or would have been longer.
Solzhenitsyn had been in touch with them about the upcoming publication, which he knew he could not put off much longer, but the final decision was taken by the YMCA Press itself with the author's implicit approval ( two years previously, it had published August 1914 ).
In Sociology ' household work strategy ', a term coined by Ray Pahl, is the division of labour between members of a household, whether implicit or the result of explicit decision – making, with the alternatives weighed up in a simplified type of cost-benefit analysis.
Though Roberts claims to take a distance from studies of canonical fiction, he justifies his ( implicit ) decision to impose canonical models on popular fiction as follows: " If people who read Goethe and Alessandro Manzoni and Pushkin with pleasure are also reading detective fiction with pleasure, there is more in the detective story than its critics have recognized, perhaps more than even its writers and readers have recognized ", This illustrates a frequent strategy: the legitimation of popular fiction on the basis of its use of canonized literary fiction, and of the legitimized public's response to it.
League schedulers tried to avoid putting the Fighters and the Giants at Korakuen on the same day, but when they both had home games scheduled, league officials made the implicit decision that the Giants would play during the day and the Fighters during the night.
Through a decision by the African Commission on Human and Peoples ' Rights, SERAC v Nigeria ( 2001 ), the Charter is also understood to include a right to housing and a right to food as “ implicitin the Charter, particularly in light of its provisions on the right to life ( Art.
An example is the case of Kay v. Lambeth LBC, on which a panel of seven of their Lordships sat, and from whose opinions emerged a number of competing ratios, some made express by their Lordships and others implicit in the decision.
Nearest neighbor rules in effect compute the decision boundary in an implicit manner.
As stated above, a regime is defined by Stephen D. Krasner as a set of explicit or implicit " principles, norms, rules, and decision making procedures around which actor expectations converge in a given issue-area .” This definition is intentionally broad, and covers human interaction ranging from formal organizations ( i. e., OPEC ) to informal groups ( i. e., major banks during the debt crisis ).
A decision of the Estates was made by a summarizing of all the statements of the delegates by the Grand Pensionary, with an implicit conclusion about what collective decision had been made.

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