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equivalent and few
Conventional energy for processing foods is available in the range of at most a few cents per kwhr for electric power and the equivalent of a few mills per kwhr for process steam.
Though the TeX typesetting language has an equivalent, the CTAN ( and in fact the CPAN's name is based on the CTAN ), few languages have an exhaustive central repository for libraries.
Caste system in Czech Republic and neighboring countries emerged few centuries after an equivalent system was prevalent in Western Europe.
The exponential function e < sup > x </ sup > for real values of x may be defined in a few different equivalent ways ( see Characterizations of the exponential function ).
With judicious use of a few cards, the 4GL deck could offer a wide variety of processing and reporting capability whereas the equivalent functionality coded in a 3GL could subsume, perhaps, a whole box or more of cards.
However, except for a few sheltered inland valleys during December and January, precipitation in Japan is above of rainfall equivalent in all months of the year, and in the wettest coastal areas it is above per month throughout the year.
There are only a few other languages that have an equivalent native word.
After a few months of negotiations, a selling price of $ 25 million ( This is equivalent to $ in 2010 dollars ) was agreed.
Outer space is an even higher-quality vacuum, with the equivalent of just a few hydrogen atoms per cubic meter on average .< ref name = tadokoro > This source estimates a density of for the Local Group.
One of the earliest was a competition to win ' a ton of money ' a pointed satire of tabloid newspapers promising huge cash prizes to boost circulation-the prize was in fact a metric tonne of one-and two-pence pieces, equivalent to a few hundred pounds sterling.
Although the original hand tool has a few advantages over the power tool equivalent and retains favour with some workers, since about 1960, it has all but been replaced by the modern spindle router, which was designed for the same work, although the first electric hand routers appeared in the years just after World War I.
While quite a few travellers successfully make the trip, it still requires substantial planning and a convoy of well-equipped four-wheel drives or equivalent vehicles, and is only practical during the cooler months.
* In a few ' Crown lands ' of the Austrian Empire, one seat in the Landtag ( regional legislature of semi-feudal type ) was reserved for the Rector of the capital's university, notably: Graz in Steiermark ( Styria ), Innsbruck in Tirol, Wien ( Vienna ) in Nieder-Österreich ( Lower Austria ); in Bohemia, two Rectors seated in the equivalent Landesvertretung
PALs and GALs are available only in small sizes, equivalent to a few hundred logic gates.
In thus providing for the support of millions of civilized beings, they will not violate any dictate of justice or of humanity ; for they will not only give to the few thousand savages scattered over that territory an ample equivalent for any right they may surrender, but will always leave them the possession of lands more than they can cultivate, and more than adequate to their subsistence, comfort, and enjoyment, by cultivation.
In 1702, a group of settlers left Newark and purchased a large tract of land northwest of their home city for the equivalent of a few hundred dollars from the Lenni Lenape Native Americans.
In the early 18th century, a group of settlers left Newark and purchased a large tract of land northwest of their home city for the equivalent of a few hundred dollars from the Lenape Native Americans.
Instead, the only Hindu title which is commonly rendered as Emperor is Samraat or Samraj ( a ), a personal distinction achieved by a few rulers of ancient dynasties such as the Mauryas and Guptas ; the Muslim equivalent of emperor would be Padshah, applied to the Mughal dynasty.
In a few armies, such as the French Army, a platoon is specifically a cavalry unit, and the infantry use " section " as the equivalent unit.
In 2009, Neil Pearson, an antiquarian books expert, said that " A Black Sun book is the literary equivalent of a Braque or a Picasso painting — except it ’ s a few thousand pounds, not 20 million.
To put these numbers into perspective, one's annual risk of being hit by a meteorite is estimated to be one chance in 17 billion, that means the probability is about 0. 00000000006 ( 6 × 10 < sup >− 11 </ sup >), equivalent to the odds of creating a few tens of trillions of UUIDs in a year and having one duplicate.
Returning to Edinburgh, the Company raised 400, 000 pounds sterling in a few weeks ( equivalent to roughly £ 40 million in 2007 ), with investments from every level of society, and totalling roughly a fifth of the wealth of Scotland.
Brazil and a few countries uses major general as the equivalent of brigadier general.

equivalent and pennies
It was rendered as L ' Opéra de quat ' sous ; ( quatre sous, or four pennies being the idiomatically equivalent French expression for Threepenny and, by implication, cut-price, cheap ).
The half crown was a denomination of British money worth half of a crown, equivalent to two and a half shillings ( 30 pennies ), or one-eighth of a pound.
The pound was a unit of account in Anglo-Saxon England, equal to 240 silver pennies and equivalent to one pound weight of silver.
The matching pennies game is mathematically equivalent to the games " Morra " or " odds and evens ", where two players simultaneously display one or two fingers, with the winner determined by whether or not the number of fingers match.

equivalent and ...
The BFI declared Life of Brian to be the 28th best British film of all time, in their equivalent of the AFI's original 100 Years ... 100 Movies list.
It is not in any sense a judgement ... hence it is not in any way binding on any state ", while Charles de Visscher argued that in certain situations, an advisory opinion could be binding on the League of Nations Council and, under certain circumstances, some states ; M. Politis agreed, saying that the Court's advisory opinions were equivalent to a binding judgment.
Hence, the Shakespeare quote above is semantically distributive, because there's not a man who ... is logically equivalent to every man does not ....
:...: " All ravens are black " and: " All nonblack things are nonravens " are not strictly equivalent ... due to their different existential presuppositions.
Bion's concept of maternal " reverie " as the capacity to sense ( and make sense of ) what is going on inside the infant has been an important element in post-Kleinian thought: " reverie is an act of faith in unconscious process ... essential to alpha-function '" It is considered the equivalent of Stern's attunement, or Winnicott's maternal preoccupation.
Several critics have compared the film favorably to Bergman's 1973 film, Scenes from a Marriage, including Joseph McBride in Variety, who found it Allen's " most three-dimensional film to date " with an ambition equal to Bergman's best even as the co-stars become the " contemporary equivalent of ...
After some consideration, Cage said that he realized it was possible “ to place in the hands of a single pianist the equivalent of an entire percussion orchestra ... With just one musician, you can really do an unlimited number of things on the inside of the piano if you have at your disposal an exploded keyboard ” ( Cage and Charles, 38 ).
... We must therefore admit that the statement which we have enunciated here, and which is equivalent to the first law of thermodynamics, is not well founded on direct experimental evidence.
That is, he asserted the equivalent material nature of all bodies within the solar system, the identical nature of the sun and distant stars (" the light of the fixed stars is of the same nature with the light of the sun, ... and lest the systems of the fixed stars should, by their gravity, fall on each other, hath placed those systems at immense distances from one another "), and thus the uniform extension of the physical laws of motion to a great distance beyond the observational location of earth itself.
:"... in Special Circumstances we deal in the moral equivalent of black holes, where the normal laws-the rules of right and wrong that people imagine apply everywhere else in the universe-break down ; beyond those metaphysical event-horizons, there exist ... special circumstances.
for n = 0, 1, 2, 3, ... which is a variant ( equivalent transpose ) of Schröder's equation,
In 1922 the society's principal journal, The Watchtower, described its chronology as " no stronger than its weakest link ", but also claimed the chronological relationships to be " of divine origin and divinely corroborated ... in a class by itself, absolutely and unqualifiedly correct " and " indisputable facts ", while repudiation of Russell's teachings was described as " equivalent to a repudiation of the Lord ".
General Gul refused and, politely told the Prime minister in mocking French accent that, " Madame ' Prime Minister, keeping Punjab destabilized is equivalent ... to the Pakistan Army .... having an extra division at no cost to the taxpayers ...".
b < sub > 0 </ sub > x < sup > 0 </ sup > + b < sub > 1 </ sub > x < sup > 1 </ sup > + ... then the product ab is equivalent to W ( x )
Notice that the sequence ( 0, 0. 9, 0. 99, 0. 999, 0. 9999 ,...) is equivalent to the sequence ( 1, 1. 0, 1. 00, 1. 000, 1. 0000 ,...); this shows that 0. 999 ...
In mathematics, the limit of a sequence of sets A < sub > 1 </ sub >, A < sub > 2 </ sub >, ... is a set whose elements are determined by the sequence in either of two equivalent ways:
The arms of the Matroosberg Transitional Representative Council in South Africa give an example of dancetty ... in the shape of a letter W. The arms of the French department of Côtes d ' Armor show émanché, which would be equivalent to the English per fess dancetty of two full points upwards.
From this, Miller concludes: " A further and perhaps equal mystery is the fact that since 1797 the Barlow translation has been trustfully and universally accepted as the just equivalent of the Arabic ... yet evidence of the erroneous character of the Barlow translation has been in the archives of the Department of State since perhaps 1800 or thereabouts ..." It is important to note, though, that as Miller said:
The cycle of the decimal equivalent of 1 / 109 ends ... 853211, the first six Fibonacci numbers in reversed order.
Jerry Fodor in " Psychosemantics " states that a statement of the form Ceteris paribus A is equivalent to saying, A ... unless not A, making them vacuously true and really rather pointless.
Writer Thomas admits he had no " master plan " in writing the " Kree-Skrull War ," other than that the two " rapacious, galaxy-spanning races ... would be at war in the far reaches of space, and that their conflict would be threatening to spill over onto the Earth, turning our planet into the cosmic equivalent of some Pacific island during World War II.
From one perspective, ' the shadow ... is roughly equivalent to the whole of the Freudian unconscious '; and Jung himself considered that ' the result of the Freudian method of elucidation is a minute elaboration of man's shadow-side unexampled in any previous age '.
The move was met with derision from other Conservatives with one MPP telling the Toronto Star: “ This is the equivalent of crossing the floor ...
The French archaeologist Jean-Pierre Mohen in his book says: " British Isles megalithism is outstanding in the abundance of standing stones, and the variety of circular architectural complexes of which they formed a part ... strikingly original, they have no equivalent elsewhere in Europe — strongly supporting the argument that the builders were independent.

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