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point and average
Of these states the average `` change-over '' point ( at which a car is substituted for allowances ) is 13,200 miles per year.
Land elevations average, though Clipperton Rock, a barren volcanic outcrop located in the atoll's southeast, is considerably higher and forms the island's tallest point.
Its average width is 1. 7 miles ( 2. 7 km ), and it is at its widest point near Aurora.
Consider also the grade point average.
An observable a is a function that to each point of the phase space associates a number ( say instantaneous pressure, or average height ).
In this case, with perfect competition in the output market the long-run equilibrium will involve all firms operating at the minimum point of their long-run average cost curves ( i. e., at the borderline between economies and diseconomies of scale ).
Its widest point is, and its narrowest is ; the average width is about.
The order of a liquid crystal could also be characterized by using other even Legendre polynomials ( all the odd polynomials average to zero since the director can point in either of two antiparallel directions ).
However, the news media also show a remarkable degree of centrism, just because all outlets but one are located – from an ideological point of view-between the average Democrat and average Republican in Congress.
To return to the quasi-monopoly model, in order for a firm to earn profit, firms would steal part of another firm ’ s market share by dropping their price slightly and producing to the point where higher quantity and lower price exceeded their average total cost.
Once a natural monopoly has been established because of the large initial cost and that, according to the rule of economies of scale, the larger corporation ( to a point ) has lower average cost and therefore a huge advantage.
Summer temperatures ( June, July and August ) average around the freezing point ().
Its horizontal demand curve will touch its average total cost curve at its lowest point.
The average height of the mountains is above sea level, although the highest point reaches.
The average height of this mountain chain is ; the highest point of the chain,, is within Brazilian territory.
The pitot tube is used to measure the local velocity at a given point in the flow stream and not the average velocity in the pipe or conduit.
After his fast start, Clemente finished his rookie season with an average of. 255, owing at least in part to the recurrence, or perhaps persistence, of the counterproductive batting tics noticed three years before by Dodger scout Al Campanis-and, more to the point, the fact that National League pitchers were noticing as well.
From this point forward, Clemente reversed the trend, amassing 33 hits in his next 16 games, and, in the process, raising his average almost 100 points to. 326.
Range voting ( also called ratings summation, average voting, cardinal ratings, score voting, 0 – 99 voting, the score system, or the point system ) is a voting method for one-seat elections under which voters score each candidate, the scores are added up, and the candidate with the highest score wins.
Up to this point, his first-class batting average was below 30 and his bowling average close to 40, and he had never taken more than four wickets in an innings or six in a match.
Approximately 3 to 90 days after the initial exposure ( average 21 days ) a skin lesion, called a chancre, appears at the point of contact.
Turkmenistan's average elevation is 100 to 220 meters above sea level, with its highest point being Mount Aýrybaba ( 3, 139 m ) in the Köýtendag Range of the Pamir-Alay chain in the south-east, and its lowest point in the Sarygamysh Lake ( close to 100 meters below sea level ).

point and grant
On the conclusion of talks in London, Britain agreed to grant Sierra Leone Independence on the 27 of April 1961. however, the outspoken trade unionist Siaka Stevens was the only delegate who refused to sign Sierra Leone's declaration of Independendence on the grounds that there had been a secret defence pact between Sierra Leone and Britain ; another point of contention by Stevens was the Sierra Leonean government's position that there would be no elections held before independence which would effectively shut him out of Sierra Leone's political process.
Although the Sixteenth Amendment is often cited as the " source " of the Congressional power to tax incomes, at least one court has reiterated the point made in Brushaber and other cases that the Sixteenth Amendment itself did not grant the Congress the power to tax incomes, a power the Congress had since 1789, but only removed the possible requirement that any income tax be apportioned among the states according to their respective populations.
The highest point in the grant is along its eastern boundary, on the lower slopes of Middle Carter Mountain, where the elevation reaches above sea level.
Sam Adams — at above sea level, the highest point in the grant — and Mt.
The highest point in the grant is above sea level along Wildcat Ridge on the grant's eastern boundary.
Their distributed technology approach may grant a higher degree of security than centralized anonymizing services where a central point exists that could disclose one's identity.
The EPO provides a single patent grant procedure, but not a single patent from the point of view of enforcement.
It was at this point that the New Zealand Arts Council came to the rescue with a five thousand dollar grant.
By grant dated 15 August 1835, George's arms in right of the United Kingdom were those of his father ( being the arms of the United Kingdom, differenced by a label argent of three points, the centre point charged with a fleur-de-lys azure, and each of the other points charged with a cross gules ), the whole differenced by a label gules bearing a horse courant argent.
) At one point, President Nixon, frustrated with NET's documentaries criticizing his administration, especially its handling of the Vietnam War, almost managed to cut NET's $ 20 million funding grant in half.
The opposing point of view that access is on a ' need to know basis ' is not legal, it is the patient who must grant access.
In reality though, the grant was just as much a reward for the military services he had by that point rendered in France.
The devout Burnet refused, angering the Mexican authorities to the point that they cancelled his grant for operating the saw mill.
" In 1620 Calvert obtained a grant from Sir William Vaughan for all of the land that lay north of a point between Fermeuse and Aquaforte to as far north as Caplin Bay ( now Calvert ) on the southern shore of the Avalon Peninsula.
An unconditional grant is usually a cash or tax point transfer, with no spending instructions.
Conversely, there are cases where a team not only lost ( which might be honest ) but lost by some large amount, perhaps to ensure a point spread was covered, or to grant some non-gambling related favor to the victor.
In 2002 a generous grant from a former editor Nigella Lawson helped the magazine in its financial difficulties ; at this point a sustainable business model, incorporating advertising, was once more being formulated.
) At this point the Irish title became extinct, as well as forfeit, but the descendants of Earl Hugh's illegitimate brothers acted as The O ' Neill, and called themselves Earl of Tyrone by Spanish grant, for the rest of the century.
Magical armor functions in much the same way, although certain kinds can grant a form of invulnerability, limiting all damage to a single point at a time.
Bethune, the holder of the original grant on the point, and he named it after his ancestor, the Duc de Maximilien de Bethune Sully, of Rosny-sur-Seine near Mantes in France.
Khamsing spent the years 1967-68 in America on a Time-Life grant, after which point he returned to Thailand and began contributing regular articles to Sǎŋkhommasàat Pàríthát () Science Review.
The analytic point of view understands that the calculus ratiocinator is a formal inference engine or computer program which can be designed so as to grant primacy to calculations.
The English constitution, he asserted,is originally and essentially free .” Roman sources, such as the reliable Tacitus, made it clear thatthe ancient Britons … were extremely jealous of their liberties .” England ’ s monarchs originally held their throne “ solely by grant of parliament ,” so the ancient English kings ruled “ by the voluntary consent of the people .” After forty pages of such historical discourse, Mayhew reached his major point: the essential rightness of the execution of an English king when he too greatly infringed upon British liberties.
NDP legislator Steve Ashton called for her resignation in 1996, after she refused to grant him permission to raise a point of privilege during a debate on the privatization of Manitoba's telephone system.

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