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same and strictly
We have sought to be strictly neutral as between the parties, but at the same time we have been required frequently to rule on specific issues or situations as they arose.
While TT is strictly uniform ( being based on the SI second, every second is the same as every other second ), it is in practice realised by International Atomic Time ( TAI ) with an accuracy of about 1: 10 < small >< sup > 14 </ sup ></ small >.
As these closely related languages are commonly treated as dialects of the same language, Japanese is often called a language isolate, but strictly speaking this is a misnomer, since the Ryukyuan languages are linguistically distinct.
In his response he made a number of loose statements that could be strictly considered as errors: " Mars is essentially in the same orbit Earth .... Mars is somewhat the same distance from the Sun, which is very important.
Although born from the same history of Unix, Internet free software, and the hacker culture as the free software movement launched by Richard Stallman and his Free Software Foundation, the Open Source Initiative was formed and chose the term open source, in Michael Tiemann's words, to " dump the moralizing and confrontational attitude that had been associated with ' free software ' in the past and sell the idea strictly on the same pragmatic, business-case grounds that had motivated Netscape.
At the same time, the government strictly controlled pro-Allied labor unions.
The same consideration applies to SMTP email in the sense that the core email relaying network of Mail transfer agents has a peer-to-peer character, while the periphery of e-mail clients and their direct connections is strictly a client – server relationship.
Polymorphism ( which is strictly referring to subtype polymorphism in the context of this article ) is not the same as method overloading or method overriding, ( which is known instead as ad-hoc polymorphism ).
While his logical atomism resembles that of Bertrand Russell, the two views are not strictly the same.
The same NASAMS units has since been used to protect the president and all air space around the White House, which is strictly prohibited to aircraft.
There is some debate within the Jewish community as to whether dairy products are allowed in kosher bread ; some authorities maintain that bread must be strictly pareve to avoid combining meat and dairy in the same meal, while others feel it is acceptable as long as a sign of some sort ( usually a different loaf shape, but others are known ) is baked into the loaf to distinguish it from pareve bread.
Several other fish in the same family are called trout ; the difference is often said to be that salmon migrate and trout are resident, but this distinction does not strictly hold true.
However, strictly speaking, this is not the same as a formal theory of causality, and simple mechanics in no way demands or requires a causal interpretation.
Although isotopes of a single element are normally described as having the same chemical properties, this is not strictly true.
The cummerbund, derived from military dress uniform in British India, is worn with its pleats facing up, and is normally of the same cloth as the bow tie and lapels though strictly, the cummerbund, bow tie and lapels should be of different material.
Since SUVs are considered light trucks in North America, and often share the same platform with pick-up trucks, at one time, they were regulated less strictly than passenger cars under the two laws in the United States, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act for fuel economy, and the Clean Air Act for emissions.
Rowling demanded that the principal cast be kept strictly British, but allowed for the casting of Irish actors such as the late Richard Harris as Dumbledore, and of foreign actors as characters of the same nationalities in later books.
He assumed that, all else being the same, the flux of heat is strictly proportional to the gradient of temperature.
In some castles the kitchen was retained in the same structure, but servants were strictly separated from nobles, by constructing separate spiral stone staircases for use of servants to bring food to upper levels.
In antiquity, Romans may have referred to the Colosseum by the unofficial name Amphitheatrum Caesareum ; this name could have been strictly poetic as it was not exclusive to the Colosseum ; Vespasian and Titus, builders of the Colosseum, also constructed an amphitheater of the same name in Puteoli ( modern Pozzuoli ).
The first five digits are generally ( although not always strictly ) the same in all three countries.
Forms are not things in the ordinary sense, nor strictly ideas in the mind, but they correspond to what philosophers later called universals, namely an abstract entity common to each set of things that have the same name.
* Dragon's Egg — Not, strictly speaking, a planet, but a neutron star on which intelligent life develops in the book of the same name by Robert Forward.

same and centralist
At the same time, the centralist feature requires that subordinate organizational levels follow the dictates of superior levels.
In 1829, when Francisco Antonio Pinto was elected President of Chile, the runner-ups where Francisco Ruiz-Tagle, a liberal federalist, and José Joaquín Prieto, a conservative centralist, who both received the same amount of votes.

same and hierarchical
The details changed with time, the core was the same: a hierarchical society, with each strata closed, privileges that were hereditary, and mobility was non-existent.
IBM ’ s IMS system and the RDM Mobile are examples of a hierarchical database system with multiple hierarchies over the same data.
Indirect hierarchical links can extend " vertically " upwards or downwards via multiple links in the same direction, following a path.
Hierarchiology is the term coined by Dr. Laurence J. Peter, originator of the Peter Principle described in his humorous book of the same name, to refer to the study of hierarchical organizations and the behavior of their members.
Bibliographic classification systems group entities together that are relevant to the same subject, typically arranged in a hierarchical tree structure ( like classification systems used in biology ).
The Cardassian Central Command uses a system of hierarchical ranks, which is the same for all branches of the service.
The Federal Supreme Court has established that treaties are subject to constitutional review and enjoy the same hierarchical position as ordinary legislation ( leis ordinárias, or " ordinary laws ", in Portuguese ).
Additionally, as per the 45th amendment to the constitution, human rights treaties which are approved by Congress by means of a special procedure enjoy the same hierarchical position as a constitutional amendment.
The communications processors supported only hierarchical networks with a mainframe at the center, unlike modern routers which support peer-to-peer networks in which a machine at the end of the line can be both a client and a server at the same time.
However, as Gerhard Kubik points out, performers of African popular music do not necessarily perceive these progressions in the same way: " The harmonic cycle of C-F-G-F prominent in Congo / Zaire popular music simply cannot be defined as a progression from tonic to subdominant to dominant and back to subdominant ( on which it ends ) because in the performer ’ s appreciation they are of equal status, and not in any hierarchical order as in Western music.
For example holders of titles of which there are many at the same time, such as ambassadors, senators, judges, and military officers who retire retain use of their hierarchical honorific for life.
They were used together in the same capacity and this dual title did not put him on a higher ecclesiastical / hierarchical level than the other Patriarchs of the Pentarchy.
He is adopting the same hierarchical principles adopted by Iblis in his jahl, and thus falling into shirk of Tawhid.
The same advantage exists with regards to other hierarchical storage systems, such as NUMA or virtual memory, as well as for multiple levels of cache: once a sub-problem is small enough, it can be solved within a given level of the hierarchy, without accessing the higher ( slower ) levels.
While this is not true, both were written around the same time in Philadelphia by people who knew each other and who sought to " replace hierarchical rule with egalitarian, democratic government ".
As application of hierarchical differences and the rules regarding each position, all the sisters are on the same footing as servants of Our Lady.
* SuperMenu: The first commercial hierarchical Apple menu, developed by Fred Hollander of Utilitron, Inc. Again, Apple would make a hierarchal Apple menu standard in System 7, by buying one of the many shareware versions of the same concept as SuperMenu.
The radical liberal shares the same paradigms as the classical liberal, however it differs in that its hierarchical nature does not apply to its elections, and its competitive nature is more limited.
The theory states that " dogs are wolves " essentially because they come from the same species and since wolves live in hierarchical packs where an alpha male rules over everyone else, then humans must dominate dogs in order to modify their behavior.
* Wikipedia: News sources-This has much of the same material organised in a hierarchical manner to help encourage NPOV in our news reporting.
* Wikipedia: News sources – This has much of the same material organized in a hierarchical manner to help encourage NPOV in our news reporting.
" From a brief interview with Milken after his release, quote, " Our structure consisted of top-down hierarchical which benefited everyone from an associate trader to a managing director in the same regards.
However, as Gerhard Kubik points out, performers of African popular music do not necessarily perceive these progressions in the same way: " The harmonic cycle of C-F-G-F prominent in Congo / Zaire popular music simply cannot be defined as a progression from tonic to subdominant to dominant and back to subdominant ( on which it ends ) because in the performer ’ s appreciation they are of equal status, and not in any hierarchical order as in Western music.
Space-partitioning systems are often hierarchical, meaning that a space ( or a region of space ) is divided into several regions, and then the same space-partitioning system is recursively applied to each of the regions thus created.

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