The chronic guilt that defines modern liberalism makes liberal politicians fundamentally unable to deal with terrorists, wrote a US scholar. |
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This is the antilog in terms of the original unit of measurement that defines the 50th percentile. |
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Thomas Carlyle was perhaps the first to anatomize the note of division that in part defines the cultural crisis inherited by Howards End. |
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Politics defines the world of means subordinate to ends, of instrumental complexes, of conflict, disputation and strife. |
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This is music that deftly defines its era, often more resonantly than the chart-based pop of the time. |
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He's critical of the Anglocentric view which defines Caribbean literature as Walcott, Naipaul and not much else. |
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The addition of an extra day to the calendar once in four years defines a leap year, not a leap day, week or month. |
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To feel animosity for the country as he defines it would indeed be an indication of envy and resentment. |
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Since anisogamy is what defines the sexes it is thus a prerequisite for sexual dimorphism. |
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The existence of a leader who hires the group and essentially defines its artistic mission implies a certain authoritarianism. |
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Just as the previous discrimination did, this reverse discrimination violates the public equality which defines citizenship. |
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The Defence Act defines these items as Commonwealth property and their disposal by private sale is forbidden. |
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Together with the sampling rate, this defines the maximum displacement that a speckle can undergo from one frame to the next. |
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The g parameter defines the gyrator ratio and is used to calculate the gain of the dependent sources. |
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By placing the code which defines the work before the work itself, it emphasizes the link between computational and conceptual art. |
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The variation in dip and orientation of the foliation within the body defines a broad D3 antiform. |
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It also defines why she had proved so adept at slipping into a rich variety of guises, gowns and grotesqueries. |
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This is the pyramidal shape that defines what the viewer can see, or the field of view, with the point starting at the eyes. |
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A diaphragm extends around the shaft and defines fluidly separate upper and lower chambers within a valve body. |
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Public opinion is what matters here, because that defines the boundaries in which politicians act. |
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A gray window pane in the image on the far left defines the boundary between interior and exterior space. |
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The 14-year-old Moorland Line is the boundary that defines moorland within England's less favoured pastures. |
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My point is that Whitehouse Lane currently defines the northern boundary of the airport's operations. |
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Most of us think of identity as the single irreducible thing that defines character, or place, or culture. |
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Authority has shown us that it deserves constant questioning and the very essence of that defines us. |
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The title spreads a layer of hopefulness over the sense of futility that defines the novel's characters. |
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Often, I have people listening to music that I would never listen to personally, because it fits and defines their character. |
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Work still defines a male character's sense of identity and his position within the social order. |
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Now Collins defines the word as grossly offensive, violent or unrestrained behaviour, or extravagant or immoderate. |
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This is not really helpful unless you also know how this same dictionary defines the word, religious. |
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Very fundamentally Marx defines productive labor by its capacity to generate capital in the form of a surplus-value. |
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A digital signal processor in the system defines individual detection zones, which can be programmed by the operator. |
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The printhead assembly includes an elongate manifold that defines a plurality of ink passages and is dimensioned to span a print area. |
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Generation Y, which Scion defines as consumers currently aged 8-22, will grow to rival the Baby Boomers in buying power. |
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The Collisionless Boltzmann Equation defines a galaxy as a self-gravitating system of stars and particles of dark matter. |
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The design's signature is the curved wall that defines an edge of the courtyard. |
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The complex defines a series of cratonic fragments related to the collision of the Amazonian and Sao Francisco Cratons. |
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With the boulevard Massena, they form a triangle of broad, leafy streets that defines Paris' Asian quarter. |
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Arrogance defines its own boundaries, foreclosing new possibilities of knowing. |
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This gas forms part of a gigantic system of hot gas and dark matter that defines the cosmic landscape. |
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This irregular arrangement of atoms not only defines a substance as glass, but also determines several of its properties. |
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He defines evolutes and involutes of curves and, after giving some elementary properties, finds the evolutes of the cycloid and of the parabola. |
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Level II defines more complex procedures in which perioperative medication and sedation are used intravenously, intramuscularly, or rectally. |
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These spheres are then used to compute a three-dimensional density map which, when contoured, defines the surface of the gap region. |
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The ply is a factor that defines the number of single yards which are twisted to become the ply yard from which the bedding is woven. |
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Compulsory schooling defines good citizens as those who play by the rules, stay in line, and do as they're told. |
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This standard defines the rules for exchanging information between SCSI devices using a serial interconnect. |
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Likewise, her voice has a matter-of-fact plaintiveness that defines, but can also box in, her performance. |
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Bourdieu defines social capital as resources that are gained from institutionalized relationships. |
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A functional computer needs input and output devices, memory, data to work on, and a program that defines how the data are handled. |
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Maltese culture defines correct behavior and comportment in a variety of ways depending on status, familiarity, age, and social connections. |
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Some people say the best things in life happen incidentally, by chance, that fate defines what becomes of us. |
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It defines the word assembly as a company of persons collected together in one place usually for a common purpose. |
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The two filmmakers converge on questions of what defines us as fallibly human, even as they reach vastly different conclusions. |
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This defines permissible speech according to what somebody thinks the public should know about. |
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In fact, the thickness of the oil determines its coefficient of friction and defines four distinct regions of lubrication. |
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The intimacy of signifier and signified in the iconic sign negates the distance which defines phonetic language. |
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My dictionary defines a pedagogue as a pedantic or dogmatic teacher and there is a lot of that about Waters. |
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In another passage Weber defines the tasks of economic history as a precursor of neoclassical cliometrics. |
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The result of a cladistic analysis is a cladogram, a diagram of nested synapomorphies that defines relationships in a relative way. |
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Reflected LED lighting gives the tail-lights an even red glow and defines the chiselled, chronographic shapes of the instruments. |
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The first chapter defines anxiety and the related constructs of worry, fear, and panic, and then goes on to discuss social anxiety in detail. |
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Based on fundamentalist revolutionary ideas, Fascism defines itself through intense xenophobia, militarism, and supremacist ideals. |
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Another correspondent defines as holocausts the almost total destruction of some Maori tribes by other tribes. |
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Evangelical Protestantism defines itself over against mainline Protestantism. |
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This proposal defines an easier micro tuning that sets offsets from an equal-tempered half-step by the cent. |
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Moreover, the charge that people are denying what Orsekes defines as the consensus appears to be a straw man. |
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This distribution defines an antithetic relationship between breccia facies in the red mudrock sequences and stratiform mineralization. |
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The NHSDA defines cannabis as both marijuana and hashish, and tells how it is typically used. |
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Hebden is a steersman, not a dictator, even though it's his hand that places and defines every aspect of this music. |
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How one defines a clone seems to depend on to which side of the issue one stands. |
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Redmond defines critical security vulns as those which might be exploited remotely and without any interaction by end users. |
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Theodosius defines a sphere to be a solid figure with the property that any point on its surface is at a constant distance from a fixed point. |
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A diver's suspended body defines the topmost edge of a soft sepia-gray sky. |
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Now, though, country defines its influences so narrowly it almost seems inbred. |
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The roughly oval outline, which narrows to a neck at the bottom, defines a head that is fused with the cityscape. |
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Binah defines what is possible from the unlimited permutation of infinite creativity. |
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Consider the development of an Honor Code and Honor Board at your school that defines violations as including uncivil behavior. |
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The cabinet defines an outer region outside of the computer system and an inner region inside of the computer system. |
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Its design studio has to style cars with the sinuous, feline grace that defines the brand, while making sure new offerings look fresh. |
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People often act contrary to their expressed beliefs, including morality. so what defines morality? |
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Understanding how things work makes troubleshooting easier and defines a true system or network administrator. |
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Every marketer defines the Gen X, Gen Y and Millennial crowds a little differently. |
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Subsequently, one defines planes perpendicular to such lines, positioning them at the midpoint between the connected particles. |
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A radiology technologist carefully defines and marks the midline of the vertebral body. |
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The current federal blood level that defines lead poisoning is 10 micrograms of lead per deciliter. |
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It basically defines a sensory perception that has no source in their world. |
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He defines limits of positive variable quantities using ideas that he had used in looking at limits of series. |
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Nonetheless, each perspective defines hegemony with regard to different conceptions of agency. |
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In his individuated free-floating imagery that defines his iconography, he is rooted in the social and cultural matrix. |
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He defines sea power broadly to include maritime trade and ocean resources, and he analyzes the importance of sea lines of communication. |
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It is not only the culture of MTV that defines the lives and aspirations of young, urban Balinese. |
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Because the winemaker can have such a strong influence it is often technique that defines the flavors of Chardonnay wines more than terroir. |
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Weinstein's group defines badware as software over which the user is not in control. |
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The most commonly used method defines the location of the distal high pressure zone manometrically. |
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A smooth band defines the posterior edge of the axial region, and two raised ridges define the backwardly directed edge of the fixed cheek. |
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To the same degree that Hughes defines manhood through compassion, Du Bois defines manhood through intellectual curiosity. |
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Hence, the possession of feathers is unique to birds and defines all members of the class Aves. |
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He defines the technostructure as the leadership of the modern industrial enterprise. |
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The pommel by and large defines the date of the sword and the site where it was most likely to have been made. |
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This is because a single locus does not define the polygenic trait, but rather it is the net effect over multiple loci, which defines the trait. |
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Thus, human parenthood is an aspect of the divine image that defines authentic human identity. |
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The nominally independent Financial Accounting Standards Board defines accounting and auditing standards. |
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The law defines the use of terms such as harassment, sexual harassment, stalking and abetment to discrimination and racial segregation. |
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What defines a journalist is their ability to sidestep the bumfuzzle, and look for actual fault lines. |
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International law defines this type of action as a war crime under the Geneva conventions. |
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As noted earlier, the NTSB defines any event that led to human injury, death, or serious equipment damage as an accident. |
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Goss defines military effectiveness as the fulfillment of assigned missions and the accomplishment of political objectives. |
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The valuing of both a distinct ethnic identity and intergroup contact defines the integration mode of acculturation. |
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The shape, size, and configuration of the transmitting antenna defines the wave frequency and the shape of the transmitted wave. |
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From here, you can also admire the ingenuity of the wave-like, or hilly, structure that defines the centre. |
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His title means nothing, and, to his way of thinking, the only thing left that defines him is his service in the army. |
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Tridosha defines the three fundamental doshas or principles that govern the function of our bodies on the physical, mental and emotional levels. |
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Make sure you get a job description which clearly defines your role and responsibility while at camp. |
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The expectation is that the action defines what is terrorism rather than the actor. |
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His radically innovative use of the material defines spaces in unique new ways. |
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The industry defines collectible teddy bears as hard, not floppy, and fully jointed. |
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Root growth defines the extent to which a plant explores soil for water and mineral nutrients. |
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Stephanie Medley-Rath defines this process as cultural diffusion and explains why she just might serve fried cicadas at her next dinner party. |
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It demands a class identity that recognizes difference, but defines what we hold in common in society and who the enemy is. |
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No stretch of road defines and dominates a city the way the Strip does Las Vegas. |
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The skillful artist defines objects with the lucidity of sunlight, and needs no epithets. |
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Meat eating is certainly wrong according to the way he defines wrongness but there are many conceptions of wrongness. |
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One is what I call categorical, where a category defines an equivalence class. |
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But there is not a single all-embracing protocol which defines existing practice around complaints and discipline. |
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This directive defines the lactoproteins to which it applies and reserves the names corresponding to those definitions. |
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It defines social relations, possible marriage partners, and often jobs as well. |
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So given that combination of factors, poverty and much greater cost for alterative chemicals, that alone defines a rather severe problem. |
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Here, as in all his paintings, McCleary simplifies his forms and clearly defines his architectonic spaces with carefully positioned planes. |
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He learned from it, for here he eviscerates American culture as he defines class distinctions. |
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The Church defines Christmas as the twelve days from Christmas Day until the eve of Epiphany. |
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The tinsel town rolled out the red carpet, promising not just money and fame, but an opportunity to break free from mundaneness that defines the middle class. |
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Sure, Nancy has the fish-out-of-water thing going on, but that attribute often defines Piper. |
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It is the Kelvin temperature scale that defines its zero point as absolute zero, and is calculated by adding 273 degrees to the Centigrade temperature. |
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Preflight mission planning defines waypoints using GPS and specifies particular maneuvers, such as circling, by making annotations with a pen on a digital map. |
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When Archimedes defines a spiral, he gives fundamental properties connecting the length of the radius vector with the angles through which it has revolved. |
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A narrator defines specific passages to be reflected in the music. |
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Every so often a jazz record label defines the music of its era. |
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The characteristic that distinguishes benzene from the aliphatics and alicyclics, and that defines the aromatics, is the arrangement of electrons in the ring. |
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Meads defines the term banquet precisely, pointing out that a banquet served as a light repast or perhaps the final course of a feast rather than a feast in itself. |
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More repetitions using less weight defines muscles without creating bulk. |
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Like the Mississippi amendment, the Oklahoma law defines an embryo as a legal person. |
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Perhaps what really defines this classic of lingerie is its artificiality. |
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The capacity to outthink the competition, to convert knowledge to power and smarts to money, defines the shift from an economy of tangibles to one of intangibles. |
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The show coasted on sheer mastery of compas, the rhythmic measure that defines all flamenco, and on the charisma of the artists probing the art's dark and light moods. |
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Many of my old friends seem to have constructed their self-images around the belief that it is their political liberalism that defines them as good. |
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There has always been an edge to the relationship but it was never scented with sulphur or cordite or laced with the naked hostility that defines other rivalries. |
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The transference of that vision, as Algren helps the defeated Katsumoto perform an impromptu seppuku on the field of battle, defines the real last samurai. |
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This tonic contraction defines the lower esophageal sphincter. |
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He turned that story into an ending about the unity and teamwork that defines America at its best. |
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The price for being flexible has traditionally meant a lower standard of living but Payne is raising the benchmark for what defines prefabricated, mobile housing. |
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In cross section, the line formed by this point and the midpoint of the transverse glenoid diameter at the level of the articular surface defines the axis of the scapula. |
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Rabh's proof defines a bijection between a disk and a triangle. |
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The way they were mixing their drinks basically defines British drinking culture where people drink to get drunk, not for the pleasure of drinking. |
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One theorist defines trust as a belief in the goodness of others. |
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Kurginyan defines ussr 2.0 as a new form of Soviet Union that takes into account the mistakes of the past. |
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That is, the Moon defines the dates of all moveable feasts in the liturgical year, reckoned from Easter, which is based on the full moon after the spring, or vernal, equinox. |
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The government defines excessive drinking as drinking too much on one occasion over the course of a week. |
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It takes the reader into the world of six ordinary women and slowly unfolds each life, layer by layer, to reveal the secret that defines their existence. |
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And if horse racing endures and survives, it will be the result of an overdue focus on the august animal that defines the pastime. |
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The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality defines a pressure ulcer as a lesion caused by unrelieved pressure resulting in damage to underlying tissue. |
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Next comes the minimum unstick speed, Vmu, which defines the point at which the aircraft could take off if the maximum possible rotation angle were reached. |
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Sadly this defines the recent history of Bradford whereby a once-bustling, thriving city has slipped into a dreadful, run-down, empty and soulless place in terminal decline. |
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The floor is covered in potato chip wrappers, discarded water bottles, and the ever-present dust that defines Cairo. |
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Moser defines the appropriate occurrent association relation as follows. |
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Many of the vertebrae of the Ada Ophiacodon are represented by isolated centra or neural arches, or a suture clearly defines the boundary between these two elements. |
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The main-phase foliation is subparallel to the nappe contact of the Gran Paradiso massif with the overlying Zermatt-Saas zone and defines a broad regional dome structure. |
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Perhaps one characteristic above all else defines explorers. |
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The combination of forms in use in a particular stratum defines each assemblage, and the relative sequence of the four horizons presented here is secure. |
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The papakainga of the Ngati Whatua people at Okahu Bay in Auckland is a place where the people and the land are so inseparable that each defines the other. |
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He defines a pathfinder as someone who has been there and knows how to operate in an environment where 20,000 bills are introduced and maybe 2,000 become law. |
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Where the sky would be is a uniform grayish blank, which defines both the far horizon and the uppermost cleft of the rock with one long, graceful curve. |
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He defines style as involving the latter two of his three processes of expression-the collocation of words into sentences and the construction of rhetorical figures. |
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The capacitance and inductance defines the resonant frequency. |
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The Potomac rises in West Virginia, carves its way through the piedmont for 100 miles and turns tidal at Washington, DC, where it defines the city's western boundary. |
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Our phylogenetic analysis demonstrates that glyphcoids are legitimate members of the infraorder Astacidea and defines their relationship to other taxa within the clade. |
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The conductor defines the task, for example, raising one arm. |
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From this call-and-response interaction with Joyce, Lucas gains strength, and from their musical fusion emerges the blues catharsis that defines him and inspirits his people. |
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Given the fiery contentiousness that defines our current academic milieu, we would do well to emulate the tough-minded but collegial exchange between Howe and Ellison. |
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In describing them, Tanner sets the context in which they were convoked and, in passing, describes and defines the nomenclature used in conciliar deliberations. |
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Furthermore, based in our own sense of embodiment and observation of other bodies, our corporeality defines the starting point and ultimate limit of human perception. |
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Far from being naive or credulous in the face of blind biology I say that it is our human experience of heroism and selflessness which best defines us. |
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He's SO cringeworthy, he's surpassed the point that defines comedy. |
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Webster's perennial dictionary defines fad as a hobby, freak, or a whim. |
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Music defines place not by isolating it, but rather by opening its borders so that different genres, styles, and repertories cross the borders and cross-fertilize one another. |
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The Act defines a customary marriage as one negotiated, celebrated or concluded in terms of any of the systems of indigenous African customary law in South Africa. |
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The first stop surface defines a swung-out position in which the box contents are easily get-at-able through the box top, and a swung-in storage position. |
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These challenges, though unpleasant at times, ultimately produce within us the character and determination that defines the very essence of the Coast Guard. |
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I read somewhere recently that it is often not the exact order of notes which defines the real essence of a piece of music but the feel of the sound. |
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More than the internationals, club football defines the sport. |
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For closed-set believers, how one defines the boundary is crucial. |
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Just as the water that brushes the shoreline of their Gulf Island home defines their boundaries, it also protects the residents from the concerns of mainlanders. |
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The fundamental characteristic of software radio is that software defines the transmitted waveforms, and software demodulates the received waveforms. |
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The ability of a joint to move the limbs through its full range, be it flexion, extension or circumduction is what defines flexibility when one muscle contracts, the opposing muscle stretches and vice versa. |
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A search bar quickly translates and defines each individual Chinese character in a sentence or paragraph. |
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Within a gene, the sequence of bases along a DNA strand defines a messenger RNA sequence, which then defines one or more protein sequences. |
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This division largely defines the popular perception and understanding of Western Europe and its borders with Eastern Europe. |
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In the US, the Sustainable Fisheries Act defines sustainable practices through national standards. |
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According to Noam Chomsky, any property can be considered material, if one defines matter such that it has that property. |
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The Scandinavian mountain range generally defines the border between Norway and Sweden. |
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The meridian defines the eastern limit of the New Swabia area in Queen Maud Land, Antarctica. |
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The World Meteorological Organization defines several kinds of ice depending on origin, size, shape, influence and so on. |
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This then defines the rates of employee and employer contribution which apply. |
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In other words, liberalism defines government as tyrant father but demands it behave as nurturant mother. |
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The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce defines it as all of Cook and DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties. |
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This defines the derivative function of the squaring function, or just the derivative of the squaring function for short. |
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The Illinois Department of Tourism defines Chicagoland as Cook County without the city of Chicago, and only Lake, DuPage, Kane and Will counties. |
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These two terms occur frequently, though Irish law never strictly defines them. |
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The modern evolutionary synthesis defines evolution as the change over time in this genetic variation. |
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It is led by the First Minister of Scotland, who selects the cabinet secretaries and ministers and defines their areas of responsibility. |
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Brazil's current constitution, formulated in 1988, defines it as a democratic federal republic. |
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Every professional association defines its own admission criteria and modus operandi. |
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The editors' helpful introduction defines the perspective that frames the volume, Yeats's deliberate belatedness. |
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Each bitmap file contains a bitmap-file header, a bitmap-information header, a color table, and an array of bytes that defines the bitmap bits. |
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It defines the rules and regulations of the licensing, violations and fines imposed on school buses. |
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The American Diabetes Association defines the diabetic foot as the anatomical area below the malleoli in a person with diabetes mellitus. |
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A robotic mower is contained by a border wire around the lawn that defines the area to be mowed. |
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Plus, the way you handle your mess-ups defines the kind of person you really are. |
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Another class of repair enzymes specifically excises mismatched bases and defines a third mode of excision repair called mismatch repair. |
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The market report defines and segments the shotcrete market with analysis and forecast of the market size. |
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According to ICAO, the new metric system defines how aircraft CO2 emissions can be evaluated in a manner that is relevant to its operation. |
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The model defines families of African descent from an Afrocentric intergenerational perspective. |
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Towers Watson simplistically defines alternative credit as all credit which is not traditional investment grade government or corporate debt. |
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The powder on the floor defines the surface of the floor and the objects appear to be partially submerged, like icebergs. |
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The course also defines military equipment, allowing the business financial manager to distinguish between capitalizable vs. |
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A patent may include many claims, each of which defines a specific property right. |
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The solution of these equations of motion defines how the configuration of the system of rigid bodies changes as a function of time. |
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Sue argues that ethnocentric monoculturalism defines a reality that puts white European American males at an advantage. |
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In systems that use constituencies, apportionment or districting defines the area covered by each constituency. |
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It defines the administrative act, the most common form of action in which the public administration occurs against a citizen. |
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Public law defines the structure and the workings of the government as well as relationships between the state and individuals. |
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It also defines the government and monarch, and their powers, as well as the rights of the citizens. |
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For example, the United States Census Bureau defines four statistical regions, with nine divisions. |
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Once a module gets to Deadhorse, its level of movability defines it as temporary, or relocatable, and directs where and when it is used. |
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His work, and its use of parody, probably defines the basic premise of pop art better than any other. |
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Yet, Hund contends that the fact that rules might sometimes be arrived at in the more ad hoc way, does not mean that this defines the system. |
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Large white and colored text against a contrasting green background describes and defines matter for the emerging natural scientist. |
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The EPA defines the broader process to include acquisition of source water, well construction, well stimulation, and waste disposal. |
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Article Three also protects the right to trial by jury in all criminal cases, and defines the crime of treason. |
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Because XHTML 1 only defines an XML syntax for the language defined by HTML 4, the same differences apply to XHTML 1 as well. |
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Instead, it tries to treat mater and consciousness coextensively parallel, when it defines human in life. |
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This definition of companionate love most closely defines older African American adults' perceptions of love. |
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Chapter 14 defines saving faith as that which enables people to believe to the saving of their souls. |
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Orthography thus describes or defines the set of symbols used in writing a language, and the rules about how to use those symbols. |
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Normative ethics defines moral standards or guidelines that regulate right and wrong conduct. |
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It is actively involved in the negotiation of treaty changes and defines the EU's policy agenda and strategies. |
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Modern evolutionary theory defines fitness not by how long an organism lives, but by how successful it is at reproducing. |
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Traditional grammar defines the object in a sentence as the entity that is acted upon by the subject. |
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Article 42 defines the Government as the Monarch and the ministers, and that only ministers are responsible for acts of government. |
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This account fails to provide any basis for doubting that animals of subhuman species enjoy the freedom it defines. |
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Within states, a constitution defines the principles upon which the state is based, the procedure in which laws are made and by whom. |
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Grammatical person typically defines a language's set of personal pronouns. |
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This volume defines many of the author's leadership concepts such as dilemma flipping and constructive depolarizing. |
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In the United States, suffrage is equated to citizenship and citizenship defines membership, decision-making authority, and deservingness. |
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It defines 'victims' are those who are directly affected by 'bereavement', 'physical injury' or 'trauma' as a result of the conflict. |
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The European Union Customs Union defines an area where no customs are levied on goods travelling within it. |
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The law defines the basic concepts, principles, objectives, and tasks of peacekeeping activities. |
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I get the reverence for tradition that defines a place like ole Miss. |
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However, Australian Thoroughbred racing defines colts and fillies as less than four years old. |
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Federalism in India defines the power distribution between the federal government and the states. |
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The Treaty defines sovereignty and maritime boundaries in the area between the two countries. |
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Cape Chignecto defines Chignecto Bay whereas Cape Split defines the Minas Channel, leading to the Minas Basin. |
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However, there is no unanimous agreement among authorities as to the current status of these powers or what precisely defines a great power. |
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The spontaneous intellect of man always defines the divine which it feels in ways that harmonise with its temporary intellectual prepossessions. |
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After the Supreme Leader, the Constitution defines the President of Iran as the highest state authority. |
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The Episcopal Church website glossary defines the sources of authority as a balance between scripture, tradition, and reason. |
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The difference is that GDP defines its scope according to location, while GNI defines its scope according to ownership. |
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In his classic essay on the topic George Orwell distinguishes nationalism from patriotism, which he defines as devotion to a particular place. |
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Diagram of the application specification parameters is hierarchic diagram that defines designated application properties. |
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We need to know how racism operates in the art business because it is the business of art that defines and historicizes our culture. |
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Anthropologist Victor Turner defines rites of affliction actions that seek to mitigate spirits that inflict humans with misfortune. |
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The type of research is casual, as it defines the relationship among different variables to ascertain the impact of Profit Sharing. |
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The Oxford English Dictionary defines five meanings of the noun barbarian, including an obsolete Barbary usage. |
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He defines his work as software, and that means he's more interested in the executability of a set of instructions than in the final appearance. |
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An important parameter in the AWG is the free spectral range which defines the wavelength periodicity of fixed width. |
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The 1993 reform, which defines the Nationality law, is deemed controversial by some. |
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He is the first to name the Orcades or Orkney Islands, which he defines and locates pretty correctly. |
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Section 1 defines female genital mutilation using the well-known World Health Organization definition. |
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The initialism PC is being published more and more nowadays, albeit only one 1990s dictionary defines it. |
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Mauss defines the gift as creating a special bond between the giver and the receiver. |
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Customarily, China defines an inverter driving a AC motor with a rated voltage of 3-10kV as a high-voltage inverter. |
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Statistical mechanics defines temperature based on a system's fundamental degrees of freedom. |
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The Mousterian largely defines the latter part of the Middle Paleolithic, the middle of the West Eurasian Old Stone Age. |
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Local law defines real property or personal property for property tax purposes. |
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The amended article now defines the participation of the Federal Council and the 16 German states in matters concerning the European Union. |
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It defines the subject as the persons or idea represented, and the content as the artist's experience of that subject. |
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The Black Country Society defines the Black Country's borders as the area on the thirty foot coal seam, regardless the depth of the seam. |
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Depending on how a specific publication defines the Sangamonian Stage of North America, the Eemian is equivalent to either all or part of it. |
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The area within the ring road now defines the town's central business district. |
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Airservices Australia defines the exact limits of restricted airspace in their annual handbook. |
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The exception is between Zones 1 and 2, where the River Thames defines the boundary. |
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Massachusetts defines aquaculture to include farms that raise trout, salmon, tilapia, barramundi, bait, mollusks, leeches, alligators and eels. |
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He defines it carefully, mentioning the previous geographers whom he had read, but whose works are now missing. |
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John Saeed defines an idiom as collocated words that became affixed to each other until metamorphosing into a fossilised term. |
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Alberta defines an infestation as two or more rats found at the same location, since a single rat cannot reproduce. |
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It is the choice and treatment of subject matter that defines Realism as a movement in painting, rather than the careful attention to visual appearances. |
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The European contact level sensor market report defines and segments the contact level sensor market with an analysis and forecast of the revenue. |
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The result defines and teaches classical physics and provides cutting edge information and research in a way general readers without science backgrounds can readily absorb. |
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In this vein, Peter Tarlow defines dark tourism as the tendency to visit the scenes of tragedies or historically noteworthy deaths, which continue to impact our lives. |
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In this chapter, Gong defines neorealism and contrasts it to realism. |
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