Action potential generation in inhibitory interneurons is critical for cortical excitation-inhibition balance. |
|
Assad the alawite will not go until the balance of power is decisively against him. |
|
Just before serving, add some more lemon juice, salt, pepper, and agave to balance. |
|
They offer no suggestions of aerodynamic speed or a masterful sense of balance and coordination. |
|
My father and I evolved a game of backyard cricket which was a balance of intricate skills and high comedy. |
|
I think the balance of opinion is that we should get out while we're ahead. |
|
I am very well satisfied that it is not in my power to balance accounts with my Maker. |
|
If you add consider all the negative and all the positive factors, it should balance out to something acceptable. |
|
When you broke one of his rules, you had to sacrifice something to earn forgiveness or to balance the books. |
|
Kublai employed people of other nationalities as well, for he was keen to balance local and imperial interests, Mongol and Turk. |
|
Labour has begun to redress the balance, but there is still a long row to hoe. |
|
This increased current provides the additional torque to balance the new load. |
|
The right person for the job will balance vision with pragmatism. |
|
Swamps have most of the balance with only a small amount in rivers, most notably the Amazon River. |
|
The overall balance between sediment in transport and sediment being deposited on the bed is given by the Exner equation. |
|
If a stock market forecaster has been more often right than wrong, on balance, it may be worth the price of a subscription. |
|
It does take some experience with balance and acceleration to keep a snowmobile on keel in the deep woods. |
|
Lord Castlereagh managed to tip the balance in favour of the Union by offering titles, land and in some cases cash payments to Parliamentarians. |
|
Finding the optimal balance between features and price is a common problem. |
|
Ecosystem overfishing occurs when the balance of the ecosystem is altered by overfishing. |
|
|
The minerals are carried by the drainage basin to the mouth, and may accumulate there, disturbing the natural mineral balance. |
|
Their size is determined by a mass balance between snow input and melt output. |
|
The World Glacier Monitoring Service collects data annually on glacier retreat and glacier mass balance. |
|
And the arms of the scale of intake and outgo must likewise remain at level, and they do so maintain balance in health. |
|
Through this program of action we address ourselves to putting our own national house in order and making income balance outgo. |
|
An alternative theory is that standing on one leg reduces the energy expenditure for producing muscular effort to stand and balance on one leg. |
|
Processes that were untenable would have resulted in a new balance brought about by changes and adaptations. |
|
In other cases a stable ecological balance may be upset by predation or other causes leading to unexpected species decline. |
|
The consequences transformed the balance of power in East Asia, resulting in a reassessment of Japan's recent entry onto the world stage. |
|
However, when there is room for conflict, the balance appears to be in favor of the Security Council. |
|
Fluor are now contracted to design, supply, installation and commissioning of the balance of the plant. |
|
Clocks keep time by mechanical resonance in a balance wheel, pendulum, or quartz crystal. |
|
Systems with one degree of freedom, such as a mass on a spring, pendulums, balance wheels, and LC tuned circuits have one resonant frequency. |
|
The celebrated Dutch victory marked a significant moment in the shifting balance of naval power. |
|
In the early 20th century, the dreadnought changed the balance of power in convoy battles. |
|
However, the balance of bomb tonnage being dropped shifted greatly in favour of the RAF as Bomber Command gained in strength. |
|
In addition, this development has adversely affected habitats of wildlife and birds, and the balance of the ecosystem. |
|
The 21st century is witnessing a rapid change in global power balance along with globalization. |
|
Therefore, monitoring sea level rise and the mass balance of ice sheets and glaciers allows people to understand more about global warming. |
|
The precise meaning of shafan remains unclear, but the balance of opinion appears to indicate that the hyrax is indeed the intended meaning. |
|
|
Ceramic paperclay contains a special balance of organic cellulose fibers dispersed uniformly within a base of inorganic traditional clay. |
|
The alteration of the balance between the photobiont and mycobiont can lead to the breakdown of the symbiotic association. |
|
There eventually evolved an international balance of power that held at bay a great conflagration until years later. |
|
The general election in January that year returned a hung parliament with the balance of power held by Labour and Irish Nationalist members. |
|
This proved to be quite an adequate arrangement for as long as the balance of power remained, but flaws emerged when it was disrupted. |
|
As a result, in tornadoes the Coriolis force is negligible, and balance is between pressure and centrifugal forces. |
|
Such features are in geostrophic balance, meaning that the Coriolis and pressure gradient forces balance each other. |
|
Here the momentum of the current overcomes the vorticity balance holding the current to the topography and the current leaves the shelf. |
|
The Ekman layer is the layer in a fluid where there is a force balance between pressure gradient force, Coriolis force and turbulent drag. |
|
The magnetopause, the area where the pressures balance, is the boundary of the magnetosphere. |
|
This found that the East Antarctic Ice Sheet was in balance but the West Antarctic Ice Sheet was losing mass. |
|
Rome and Italy generally produced little to nothing of value and so the balance of trade was greatly unequal. |
|
Its function has also traditionally been associated with balance, fine motor control but more recently speech and cognition. |
|
Both sides were anxious about effects of these decisions on the balance of power in the Senate. |
|
The slave owners also argued that banning slavery in new states would upset what they saw as a delicate balance of free states and slave states. |
|
They feared that ending this balance could lead to the domination of the federal government by the northern free states. |
|
Some birds exposed to petroleum also experience changes in their hormonal balance, including changes in their luteinizing protein. |
|
Clouds also affect the radiation balance through cloud forcings similar to greenhouse gases. |
|
The balance is restored by rain over the continents entering rivers and then being returned to the sea. |
|
Certain species of passerines have stiff tail feathers, which help the birds balance themselves when perching upon vertical surfaces. |
|
|
Milk is passed between every other set of plates with water being passed between the balance of the plates to remove heat from the milk. |
|
Form may also include visual design principles, such as arrangement, balance, contrast, emphasis, harmony, proportion, proximity, and rhythm. |
|
In 1815 at the Congress of Vienna, the major powers of Europe managed to produce a peaceful balance of power among the various European empires. |
|
With that accomplished by 1871 he then skillfully used balance of power diplomacy to preserve Germany's new role and keep Europe at peace. |
|
It seems, on balance, likely that the core population of Bastarnae had always been, and continued to be, Germanic in language and culture. |
|
However, in 2004, deputies introduced changes to the Constitution, which tipped the balance of power in favour of a parliamentary system. |
|
In 2012, all Nordic countries had a surplus on the total balance of payments. |
|
The outcome indicates increased military might by Byzantium since 911, suggesting a shift in the balance of power. |
|
To this day, in French around the world, solde means the balance of an account or invoice, and is the specific name of a soldier's salary. |
|
The Spanish and Portuguese word saldo, like the French solde, means the balance of an account or invoice. |
|
It favors compositional tension and instability rather than the balance and clarity of earlier Renaissance painting. |
|
This accounting made extremely clear the inflow and outflow of trade, contributing to the close scrutiny given to the balance of trade. |
|
Hume famously noted the impossibility of the mercantilists' goal of a constant positive balance of trade. |
|
Keynes and other economists of the 20th century also realized that the balance of payments is an important concern. |
|
This changed the former balance of power, and new conflicts arose between the southern populations and Moors. |
|
The animal relies on the forward and backward motions of its head and neck to maintain balance and the counter momentum while galloping. |
|
Health in the human body relied on keeping these humors in balance within each person. |
|
Maintaining the balance of humors within a patient occurred in several ways. |
|
The physician could determine which humor was unbalanced in the patient and prescribe a new diet to restore that balance. |
|
The export of yerba mate and valuable wood products maintained the balance of trade between Paraguay and the outside world. |
|
|
Spirit houses were an important folk custom which were used to ensure balance with the natural and supernatural world. |
|
The Chamber for Sustainable Tourism Law Pearlas aims to preserve the islands' delicate ecological balance. |
|
An inconsiderable weight, by distance from the centre of the balance, will preponderate greater magnitudes. |
|
The major determining factors include feed cost, availability, nutrient balance and energy density required. |
|
The balance of power was heavily weighted toward the local and regional governments. |
|
The harsh climatic conditions of the region have in turn created a fragile balance between humans, society and the environment itself. |
|
However, they had failed to change the balance of power in Italy, or break the Habsburg encirclement. |
|
The balance between these elements is still debated by art historians today. |
|
Specie flowed through Spain increasing Spanish prices and then spread over Western Europe as a result of Spanish balance of payments deficit. |
|
When precious metals entered Spain, this influx drove up the Spanish price level and caused a balance of payments deficit. |
|
With the enlargement of the European Union, the balance between French and German is slowly changing. |
|
The energy balance of Quebec has undergone a large shift over the past 30 years. |
|
The rapid influx of blacks disturbed the racial balance within Northern cities, exacerbating hostility between both black and white Northerners. |
|
The Episcopal Church website glossary defines the sources of authority as a balance between scripture, tradition, and reason. |
|
Others, however, view this pluralism as an asset, allowing a place for both sides to balance each other. |
|
On 5 May, the House of Lords created a committee with the customary religious balance to examine and determine doctrine. |
|
Nevertheless, the Court's balance began to shift within months when Justice van Devanter retired and was replaced by Senator Hugo Black. |
|
Emerson expanded on this defense when he argued that freedom of speech helps to provide a balance between stability and change. |
|
Any state law which operates to jar the balance, however incidentally, is, per se, an illegitimate impediment and to be condemned. |
|
Pluralists also seek the construction or reform of social institutions in order to reflect and balance competing principles. |
|
|
Such laws may seek to balance dueling needs for preservation and harvest and to manage both environment and populations of fish and game. |
|
By the way, the balance is protected by Constitution also between these two branches. |
|
They say that whereas, in a state of wildness, all life shares and competes for resources, domestication destroys this balance. |
|
This decreased environmental impact depends strongly on the balance between stream flow and power production. |
|
He was well practiced in such military affairs as deploying formations, but did not know the balance of authority involved in court warfare. |
|
To balance the desires of individuals and the needs of the general will, humanity requires civil society and laws that benefit all persons. |
|
However, in order to maintain sediment balance, adequate mangrove forest width needs to be present. |
|
As with most beers, ale typically has a bittering agent to balance the sweetness of the malt and act as a preservative. |
|
Reservoirs can be used to balance the flow in highly managed systems, taking in water during high flows and releasing it again during low flows. |
|
In some texts one mass balance equation is replaced by an equation of charge balance. |
|
A distinction can be made by defining any ascent as a climb, when hands are used to hold body weight, rather than just for balance. |
|
To prevent the elixir from reaching mankind and thereby upsetting the balance of the universe, two gods secret it away. |
|
Maybe one is more introspective and the other is more outgoing. Whatever the sitch, you two balance each other out. |
|
There's a painful disparity between the snazziness of TiVo's technology and the decrepitude of its balance sheet. |
|
There is nothing of the artificial Johnsonian balance in his style. It is as often marked by a pregnant brevity as by a sonorous amplitude. |
|
The effect of the two VBFs on balance was studied through classical postural parameters and a subset of stabilogram diffusion coefficients. |
|
The balance is mounted externally on top of the wind tunnel test section. A sting connects the balance to the model. |
|
The copyright laws attempt to strike a balance between protecting original works and stifling further creativity. |
|
Tayras forage for food on the ground and also in the trees, where their long tail helps them to balance as they move through the branches. |
|
I have a minor quibble with Gleason's decision to throw Lefty Williams in Game Eight with the Series in the balance. |
|
|
Class II A-2 is supported by Class II B-1 and privately placed subordinate classes, which total 6 percent of the collateral balance. |
|
Thrust balance is achieved with a balance piston with labyrinths on the rotating part and abradable seals on the stationary part. |
|
With two aircraft riddled with hits and no longer flyworthy, the balance of four flights were called off. |
|
Let us not balance the books of oppression of the deaf on the backs and minds of other oppressed linguistic ethnic and cultural minorities. |
|
Sure and begorra, 'twas the second time I lost me balance and fell into yer drink. |
|
He jerked me off balance and the hand with the brass knucks came around in a looping bolo punch. |
|
But the most critical tension concerns the need to balance minimal own-casualties and low collateral damage with operational effectiveness. |
|
The final vote between Hollande and Sarkozy now depends on a delicate balance of how France's total of rightwing and leftwing voters line up. |
|
As opposed to striving for balance or objectivity, Foxification pushes journalism towards more comment, speculation and politicisation. |
|
The key to making good guac is the proper balance of acidity, salt and spice. |
|
Now there's an opportunity to employ a man who, heaven forfend, actually thinks about tactics and team balance. |
|
London's largest industry is finance, and its financial exports make it a large contributor to the UK's balance of payments. |
|
Nearly all professional cymbals are made from bronze, which gives a desirable balance of durability and timbre. |
|
The balance plough had two sets of ploughs facing each other, arranged so when one was in the ground, the other set was lifted into the air. |
|
In 202 BC, internal problems led to a weakening of Egypt's position, thereby disrupting the power balance among the successor states. |
|
The death of Crassus removed some of the balance in the Triumvirate and, consequently, Caesar and Pompey began to move apart. |
|
Trends in modern and recent scholarship attempted to balance the extremes of previous scholarship. |
|
Within a single organization scheme, you will need to balance the tension between exclusivity and inclusivity. |
|
The deaths of Count Geoffrey and the king in 1060 cemented the shift in the balance of power towards William. |
|
With the succession of her minor son Charles IX in 1560, Catherine de' Medici maneuvered for a balance of power. |
|
|
Although physical imports exceeded exports, when invisible exports were accounted for the balance of payments was healthy. |
|
However, that in itself was far from enough to balance the Crown's finances. |
|
Although the Whigs were William's strongest supporters, he initially favoured a policy of balance between the Whigs and Tories. |
|
Metternich's motivation was to maintain France as a balance against Russian threats, while ending the highly destabilizing series of wars. |
|
Sometimes an extra disc known as a balance piston has to be added inside the rotor. |
|
England is therefore governed according to the balance of parties across the whole of the United Kingdom. |
|
On the French side, owing to the greater permeability to water, earth pressure balance TBMs with open and closed modes were used. |
|
In May 2008, the IMF advised the UK government to broaden the scope of fiscal policy to promote external balance. |
|
The UK relied on foreign investors to plug the shortfall in its balance of payments. |
|
The UK's exports of financial and business services make a significant positive contribution towards the country's balance of payments. |
|
It examines the banks' balance sheets and behaviour and policies toward consumers. |
|
However, recently there has been substantial criticism of the importance of the shifting balance theory. |
|
It is also the fundamental principle behind the spring scale, the manometer, and the balance wheel of the mechanical clock. |
|
They then purchased the balance of the shares in 1943 to form the GM Truck and Coach Division. |
|
Since Independence, Pakistan has attempted to balance its relations with foreign nations. |
|
The publisher must estimate the potential sales in each market and balance projected revenue against production costs. |
|
However, after a certain number of years, the balance of the loan is forgiven. |
|
Her marriage would have enormous implications for the political balance of Europe. |
|
Of the 80 Academicians, there must always be at least 14 sculptors, 12 architects and 8 printmakers with the balance being painters. |
|
Locke argues that a country should seek a favourable balance of trade, lest it fall behind other countries and suffer a loss in its trade. |
|
|
The Treasury would receive monthly statements of the Paymaster's balance at the Bank. |
|
The lender must balance the return on the loan with the risk of default for each loan. |
|
Most of the reviews were short and on balance favourable, although superficial and cautious. |
|
Handel secured a balance between soloists and chorus which he never surpassed. |
|
Eton has the balance of wins, but the victor in the bicentenary year was Harrow. |
|
Lewis fought a tactical fight, keeping Holyfield off balance with a long jab and peppering him with combinations almost at will. |
|
In the 1st round, Hatton caught Mayweather with a left jab which knocked Mayweather off balance. |
|
Thoroughbreds can travel medium distances at fast paces, requiring a balance between speed and endurance. |
|
Despite this, Bailey was soon replaced by Johnny Herbert for the balance of the season. |
|
The car couldn't heat up the tyres enough and both drivers struggled with balance issues. |
|
However, the arrival of craftsman and supplies transported by the Genoese to Jaffa tilted the balance in their favour. |
|
Finally, there is a microliterature on transfers that appears, on balance, to reject the altruism model. |
|
Speakers are drawn from across Scotland and are chosen to represent the balance of religious beliefs according to the Scottish census. |
|
Normally, the Presiding Officer tries to achieve a balance between different viewpoints and political parties when selecting members to speak. |
|
Committees comprise a small number of MSPs, with membership reflecting the balance of parties across Parliament. |
|
By the dawn of the 20th century, the balance of world power had changed substantially since the Congress of Vienna. |
|
The direct motivation for Soviet weapons development was to achieve a balance of power during the Cold War. |
|
Aspects such as geographical balance and population representation also played a major part. |
|
Blake suggested that, on balance, these appointments cost Disraeli more votes than they gained him. |
|
From December 1943 to November 1944 the strategic balance of the Burma campaign shifted decisively. |
|
|
The influx of this advanced weaponry altered an already shaky balance of power. |
|
The industrial base was so reduced that thereafter the balance of payments in manufactured goods was in deficit. |
|
This was another effect of the changed balance of power in industrial relations. |
|
A process of balance sheet deleveraging has spread to nearly every corner of the economy. |
|
Nevertheless, prime ministers can usually do only as much as public opinion and the balance of party membership of parliament will let them do. |
|
The Senate generally had the same party balance as the House of Commons, though abstaining parties and very small parties were not represented. |
|
Because he never spent any money, his bank balance increased monotonically. |
|
The goal was not simply to restore old boundaries but to resize the main powers so they could balance each other off and remain at peace. |
|
The Treaty of Chaumont became the cornerstone of the European Alliance which formed the balance of power for decades. |
|
The balance of payments model holds that foreign exchange rates are at an equilibrium level if they produce a stable current account balance. |
|
Their flows go into the capital account item of the balance of payments, thus balancing the deficit in the current account. |
|
Imports and exports are accounted for in a country's current account in the balance of payments. |
|
Ratios vary depending upon formation pressure, depth of coal and oxidant balance. |
|
The study differed from prior research that there is more balance in familiarity of the dominant language. |
|
Indian Ayurvedic medicine includes a belief that the spiritual balance of mind influences disease. |
|
And in their dance to that end they show a frenetic vitality and a wry sense of the ridiculous that balance heartache and laughter. |
|
The first diagram reveals a multi-polar system, in which a plurality of forces and interests balance each other in precarious equilibrium. |
|
What I need is to find a balance, spiritually, with the way I live and my demise. |
|
Needless to say, he nails it. His Deadpool strikes the perfect balance between acerbic smartass and comic doofus. |
|
This seems to tip the balance in favour of saying that Mill is best classified as an act utilitarian. |
|
|
The sport requires strong core balance, physical strength, flexibility, and cardiovascular endurance. |
|
When in 1985 the FAW moved its headquarter from Wrexham in the north to the capital Cardiff, the balance of power shifted firmly to the south. |
|
Employees must balance the needs of each individual case against the needs of all other current cases as well as their own needs. |
|
In fact, minimizing the numbers of Hindus and Muslims on the wrong side of the line was not the only concern to balance. |
|
For example, suppose a netbank website sends instructions to the main bank office requesting a change in the balance of an account. |
|
Gladstone wanted to maintain a balance between direct and indirect taxation and to abolish income tax. |
|
Gladstone's popularity rested on his taxation policies which meant to his supporters balance, social equity and political justice. |
|
The Irish Nationalists held the balance of power in Parliament at this time. |
|
Athenian education also provided a balance between developing the mind and the body. |
|
The Sikh population has the lowest gender balance in India, with only 903 women per 1,000 men according to the 2011 Indian census. |
|
Tony Blair, defending FPTP, argued that other systems give small parties the balance of power, and influence disproportionate to their votes. |
|
Another name for net exports is the trade balance, as it tells us the difference between imports and exports from being equal. |
|
The national income accounts identity shows that net capital outflow always equals the trade balance. |
|
The women were assessed on their strength, stamina, flexibility and balance. |
|
The health of a glacier is usually assessed by determining the glacier mass balance or observing terminus behavior. |
|
Trends in modern and recent scholarship have attempted to balance the extremes of previous scholarship. |
|
In June 1937, the Roosevelt administration cut spending and increased taxation in an attempt to balance the federal budget. |
|
In contrast, France is one of the developed nations whose migratory balance is rather weak, which is an original feature at the European level. |
|
Of primary significance in these studies is the complex balance of continuity over change in both their design and their decoration. |
|
So bouncing and swinging rhythms and rhymes encourage development of balance and coordination in infants and children. |
|
|
Giggs is said to have inherited his balance and athleticism from his father. |
|
If you want to make a negatively charged particle, such as an electron, out of energy, you also have to make a positively charged particle to balance the books. |
|
The memorandum items of the balance sheet provide additional information on the debt including its maturity and whether it is owed to domestic or external residents. |
|
The first bow ards were likely adapted from hoes and like instruments and therefore suffered from poor balance due to their narrow bodies with only one point in the soil. |
|
Biting her lip, she held his biceps for balance and waded farther. |
|
As of 2002, no such events have been detected, either directly or indirectly as a deficiency of the mass balance in particle accelerator experiments. |
|
One morning after the budget had failed to balance Finanzminister von Scholz picked up Der Reichsanzeiger and found he had been broken to sergeant. |
|
Montesquieu devotes four chapters of The Spirit of the Laws to a discussion of England, a contemporary free government, where liberty was sustained by a balance of powers. |
|
We recognise the sensitive balance between provincial autonomy and the expression of critical opinion by others on the internal actions of a province. |
|
The fleet of defeated France, one of the most powerful and modern in the world, might have tipped the balance against Britain if it had been captured by the Germans. |
|
While Fighter Command claimed to have inflicted heavy casualties on the Luftwaffe the ultimate balance sheet showed Allied aircraft losses as being serious. |
|
His life was left hanging in the balance after he was shot in the side. |
|
How many heartfuls of sorrow shall balance a bushel of wheat? |
|
Of course, if there were other cases where sufficient evidence was available, the balance of that evidence may lead the authorities to reach a different judgment. |
|
Doesn't anybody recognize humor anymore, or have our faces gone completely stiff from thinking about good vs. evil or character balance or munchkin-zapping? |
|
Germany acquired a number of colonies in Africa and the Pacific, but Chancellor Otto von Bismarck succeeded in achieving general peace through his balance of power strategy. |
|
Noting that ruminants had multiple stomachs and weak teeth, he supposed the first was to compensate for the latter, with Nature trying to preserve a type of balance. |
|
Alternatively, the defendant will not be liable if the damage would, or could on the balance of probabilities, have occurred anyway, regardless of his or her negligence. |
|
Cecily lived out the balance of her life quietly, far from court. |
|
The criterion for assessing a belief system for Hume is based on the balance of probability whether something is more likely than not to have occurred. |
|
|
Hemans herself was able to balance both roles without much public ridicule, but left hints of discontent through the themes of feminine death in her writing. |
|
To stooze, you transfer the balance from the credit card and stash it in a high-interest savings account, one with as high a rate of interest as possible. |
|
The balance of power tipped steadily in favour of the English. |
|
Ergometers do not simulate the lateral balance challenges, the exact resistance of water, or the exact motions of true rowing including the sweep of the oar handles. |
|
Pigeons adjust their drinking rates and food intake in parallel, and when adequate water is unavailable for excretion, food intake is limited to maintain water balance. |
|
It uses the function of the kidneys to maintain homeostatic balance of ions such as sodium and potassium while preserving water quantity in the body. |
|
In 2008 and 2011, Ethiopia's growth performance and considerable development gains were challenged by high inflation and a difficult balance of payments situation. |
|
The head of government and the other ministers are appointed by the Prince upon the proposal and concurrence of parliament, thus reflecting the partisan balance of parliament. |
|
The military balance tipped decisively in favour of Parliament. |
|
The 1901 and 1911 censuses came closest to recording a balance. |
|
William sought to prevent the Spanish inheritance from going to either monarch, for he feared that such a calamity would upset the balance of power. |
|
As in previous campaigns, his fundamental objective was to destroy one opponent before reinforcements from another could tip the balance of the war. |
|
After kicking the baboon so hard, the zebra lost his balance and tripped over a fire, and the fire sticks left scorch marks all over his white coat. |
|
The model is based on overall energy balance of the body, which is regulated by neurocentric sensing of fat-mass accumulation via insulin and leptin. |
|
This delicate balance was disturbed when a new batch of refugees arrived that included Richard Cox, one of the principal authors of the Book of Common Prayer. |
|
On balance, the Code benefitted the masters but had more protections and flexibility than did the institution of slavery in the southern Thirteen Colonies. |
|
The most important rules for corporate governance are those concerning the balance of power between the board of directors and the members of the company. |
|
To fertilize, take a hose-end sprayer. Pour in one cup of liquid lawn food and follow with a can of beer, a cup of flea-and-tick shampoo and the balance in household ammonia. |
|
Then, the balance sheet of the buyer will be modified and the decision maker should take into account the effects on the reported financial results. |
|
With Tiny, it is good as a surprise strat. If another team doesn't realize where he fits into the whole lineup, then you can really throw the opposition off balance. |
|
|
Coming to the third proposition, von Hertling says, with justice, that the doctrine of the balance of power is a more or less antiquated doctrine. |
|
The long tail helps the squirrel to balance and steer when jumping from tree to tree and running along branches, and may keep the animal warm during sleep. |
|
Such being the case, it has been regarded as the political interest of England to balance and divide the enmity of France by a strict alliance with some limitaneous state. |
|
Like Edmund Burke, this view concerns itself with balance, and subordinating any single abstract principle to a plurality or realistic harmony of interests. |
|
Vibration, applied as a subsensory stimulus to the foot improves posture and balance in older adults, patients with diabetes, and individuals with stroke. |
|
Future listmakers must balance the benefits of being comprehensive against the costs of burdening law enforcement and research efforts, say bioterror experts. |
|
This ensured a balance between the two movements in the command structure. |
|
He also proposed the use of a balance spring to regulate clocks. |
|
Tourism can be domestic or international, and international tourism has both incoming and outgoing implications on a country's balance of payments. |
|
From hydrostatic balance, the warm core translates to lower pressure at the center at all altitudes, with the maximum pressure drop located at the surface. |
|
Through succeeding centuries and empires, the balance between the ulema and the rulers shifted and reformed, but the balance of power was never decisively changed. |
|
Yet the balance of power is so evenly matched that the superpowers are superpowerless to use their awesome might in any situation short of an actual enemy attack. |
|
The treaty enregistred the defeat of French ambitions expressed in the wars of Louis XIV and preserved the European system based on the balance of power. |
|
The North Sea has been overfished to the point where the ecological balance has become disrupted and many jobs in the fishing industry have been lost. |
|
But when the deflation is severe falling asset prices along with debtor bankruptcies lead to a decline in the nominal value of assets on bank balance sheets. |
|
Their fights are visually dramatic, with spitting, ramming each other with their chests, neck wrestling and kicking, mainly to knock the other off balance. |
|
Nevertheless, Lepanto marked a permanent reversal in the balance of naval power in the Mediterranean and the end of the threat of Ottoman control. |
|
Some balance must be struck that maximizes return and minimizes risk. |
|
This was a measure taken to preserve a European balance of power. |
|
Even so, Europe still has a trading surplus with all regions of the world except Japan and China where in 2011 there was a chemical trade balance. |
|
|
This led to disputes over the balance between amateurs and professionals. |
|
Unlike blocking, causing an opponent to miss a punch disrupts his balance, this permits forward movement past the opponent's extended arm and keeps the hands free to counter. |
|
This time it admitted a number of clubs from the north of England to balance things out, as the last expansion brought mainly clubs from the south. |
|
Reduction of habitat, hunting and fishing of some species to extinction or near extinction, and pollution tend to tip the balance of biodiversity. |
|
Maharashtrian cuisine is an extensive balance of many different tastes. |
|
A scleral rim should be maintained in contact lenses to off-hold and balance the corneal portion from the cornea, preventing exertion of any pressure. |
|
The balance of the growth in output has come from using more inputs. |
|
Button missed out on a podium at the British Grand Prix, finishing fourth after problems with the balance of his car in qualifying had left him fourteenth. |
|
Many sports, such as dressage, eventing and show jumping, have origins in military training, which were focused on control and balance of both horse and rider. |
|
The balance of power was very delicately calculated, so that winning a battle here was worth the slice of territory there, with no regard to the wishes of the inhabitants. |
|
The design focus on balance was exemplary, but the extreme yacht also required the skills of an excellent skipper, which defaulted choice options to Charlie Barr. |
|
These weights are used as a balance for the overhanging verandah. |
|
As the aerosols grow and coagulate, they settle down into the upper troposphere where they serve as nuclei for cirrus clouds and further modify the Earth's radiation balance. |
|
Most of them have highly individualistic cultures, and have worked to balance the interests of urban development, recreation, and the environment. |
|
Fresh British reinforcements arrived, tilting the balance in their favour. |
|
Millwrights in the power generation industry can assemble, set, align and balance turbines or rotors, as well as install pumps, valves, cranes, fans, and travelling screens. |
|
This gives BT tooling greater stability and balance at high speeds. |
|
Subject Committees are established at the beginning of each parliamentary session, and again the members on each committee reflect the balance of parties across Parliament. |
|
Over time, the relative power of these five nations fluctuated, which by the dawn of the 20th century had served to create an entirely different balance of power. |
|
Wood is a hygroscopic material, which means it naturally absorbs and releases water to balance its internal moisture content with the surrounding environment. |
|