The woodland is seen through poetry, descriptive text and a mosaic of pictures. |
|
His descriptive passages are often a rhapsodic rush to the edge of sentimentality, only undercut in the final moment by a shift in tone. |
|
In producing advice on dyslexia, for example, the council initially defined the problem through a descriptive definition of dyslexia. |
|
I wrote poems, sonnets in blank verse and long, narrative poems about people I knew, descriptive pieces. |
|
Planets which are parental significators in the chart are not only descriptive of parental patterns. |
|
The bulk of the volume consists of descriptive and interpretive catalogue entries for each mask. |
|
I didn't find the plot particularly gripping, but the level of period detail in the book's descriptive passages was excellent. |
|
While I'm here, does anyone actually read the descriptive blurb on the back of dvds? |
|
Most interesting to readers of Environmental History will be long, descriptive passages on the natural environment. |
|
This vexatiousness is one instance of the gap between normative and descriptive domains. |
|
We used survey methods to conduct a descriptive, comparative, multisite study. |
|
The design of this study was descriptive, and a descriptive study cannot produce valid interpretations of causality. |
|
If moral terms have descriptive meaning in addition to their non-cognitive element, one should be able to validly argue in the other direction. |
|
Characteristics of the sample population were analyzed using univariate descriptive statistics. |
|
In practice, scientific laws are simultaneously descriptive, explanatory, and predictive. |
|
Preparation of a descriptive memorandum is a major step in readying your business for market. |
|
A descriptive correlational study on a convenience sample of 49 RNs examines the relationship between personal values and work satisfaction. |
|
You may or may not recognise my guests so I've included a short descriptive text. |
|
As Geoff points out, the Inuit's polysynthetic language puts them in a strong position to make up descriptive words like this. |
|
In the history of ornament it is descriptive or illusionistic figuration that is aberrant. |
|
|
In a descriptive study, they examined the causes that patients and nurses gave for the initiation of restraint and seclusion. |
|
Conner found that both the felt-tip pen and marker enabled him to free the mark from any descriptive function. |
|
Her graphically descriptive vocabulary, emphasizing the surface of the picture plane, recalls traditional Japanese printmaking. |
|
Now they may be willing to listen to quite a lot of descriptive talk about the objects and events pictured in the books. |
|
The first three were easy to distinguish, thanks to the Portuguese language's descriptive suffixes. |
|
The conditional was, in like manner, the infinitive plus a shortened form of the past descriptive indicative of haber. |
|
The real inadequacy of his account lay not in his descriptive approach but in the imprecision of his description. |
|
Back at school, have the students record their memories through illustration or descriptive writing. |
|
Therefore, in the long run, the descriptive praise of the hymns becomes praise that is only response to a human call to praise. |
|
In this work he presented a descriptive and analytical panorama of the development of Prostantism in Cuba. |
|
Table 1 shows descriptive summaries of variables common to both trials for both groups in each trial. |
|
Officially they are referred to now as firefighters, although the old-fashioned and presumably chauvinistic word firemen is more descriptive. |
|
It contains many descriptive black and white drawings, as well as tables, charts, and graphs, to illustrate information in the text. |
|
He characterises descriptive metaphysics as formulating expressions of norms of representation. |
|
The group spent the morning working on a descriptive piece of writing and poems about people they knew. |
|
Ash paused, and recounted his dream to her in descriptive detail but was careful to avoid the part where she dies. |
|
His descriptive powers are impressive, as are his spun-out fantasies and playful wit. |
|
He seems, first of all, to misunderstand that dictionaries of the English language are descriptive, not prescriptive. |
|
The five volumes consisted of an octavo of 786 pages of descriptive matter and four imperial folios containing 213 plates. |
|
Final data were abstracted directly from published articles or estimated from descriptive statistics presented in the articles. |
|
|
Firstly I think one of the big problems is the use of descriptive adjectives as nouns. |
|
Another descriptive name is waxberry because the berries have a strange consistency that really does resemble candle wax. |
|
The original plan to distinguish restrictive and descriptive adnominal modifications has been abandoned. |
|
The mot juste for me was often a very descriptive word which often forced me to turn to a part of the language that was a bit high octane. |
|
Still, the externalist conception of justified belief does seem descriptive, whereas the internalist conception is explicitly regulative. |
|
The challenges are not insurmountable, and researchers have done good descriptive work that has advanced knowledge to this point. |
|
The book is on descriptive and explanatory method, avoiding philosophical rhythm. |
|
Here, we discuss some of more interesting preliminary findings garnered from a descriptive statistical analysis of the raw data. |
|
In this book we are committed to a system level of analysis for both descriptive and explanatory purposes. |
|
There's definitely such a thing as a syntactic error, even in your native language, even as judged by descriptive linguists. |
|
There have been a number of 20c scholarly grammars of English characterized by a decidedly descriptive approach and a focus on syntax. |
|
The purpose of this descriptive study was to evaluate nurses' acceptance and use of an IV catheter safety needle designed to reduce injuries. |
|
This descriptive study sought to develop a profile of women in the agricultural and extension education at the post-secondary level. |
|
All forms of congenital jaundice are nearly universally referred to by their eponyms rather than by their descriptive names. |
|
The approach adopted is, in general, descriptive with little critical reflection on the existing body of historical literature. |
|
Less dignified, though more descriptive, names for this tropical climbing or trailing herb are dishcloth gourd and vegetable gourd. |
|
It is a shame that the museum does not offer descriptive text in English or a guidebook to assist the visitor to learn more about what's on show. |
|
They could add descriptive words, phrases or sentences, or they could write a poem, haiku, alliteration, metaphor, or perhaps words from a song. |
|
Survey questions were initially evaluated using simple descriptive statistics. |
|
The tempo markings also use descriptive words, with a specific metronome marking given for each piece. |
|
|
The incidence, location, and type of injury, time loss caused by injury, and onset of injury were evaluated by using descriptive statistics. |
|
This is an argument from the field of descriptive linguistics, made for a rhetorical audience of laypeople. |
|
We tend to become either pedantically descriptive or abstractly emotive, or both. |
|
One descriptive study evaluated the preparation, emotions, and experiences of parents during their child's anesthesia induction. |
|
Their approach is essentially anthropological and descriptive, focusing on the experience of paid work in modem Britain. |
|
The viewer is left to guess what the lensman intends to convey, as there are no descriptive captions. |
|
The presence of large number of candidates makes descriptive answering method onerous and dilatory. |
|
In reality, therefore, there is not a conflict between descriptive and prescriptive grammar and lexicography, but rather a difference of mission. |
|
Hence, physical sciences gravitate towards prescriptive laws, whilst life sciences use descriptive laws. |
|
His renewed interest in Giotto resulted in more rigidly constructed compositions with fewer concessions to descriptive detail. |
|
Functional Grammar is a descriptive and theoretical model of the organization of natural language. |
|
The medical record, as a legal document, must contain factual, objective, descriptive data. |
|
The first two rows of Table 1 present descriptive information on this first set of indexes for the population. |
|
Chris uses the rough hewn descriptive quality of stencils to depict scenes from an urban upbringing in Baltimore. |
|
Classical, descriptive paleontology is very good at dealing with this sort of pattern. |
|
Most of the book is objectively descriptive, be the focus spiritual or scientific. |
|
As the number of negative descriptive adjectives increased, so did the youths' self-reported involvement in delinquency. |
|
At the beginning, such reviews were a blend of descriptive reports and theoretical asides, frequently not devoid of controversy. |
|
Sometimes the descriptive noun phrase has already been used in a previous clause, and to avoid repetition, the anaphor such is substituted. |
|
His early work shows his great flair for the sketch, the moment, as well as his gorgeously descriptive prose. |
|
|
As stated earlier, the present study utilizes a semantic differential scale which was comprised of six contrasting descriptive adjectives. |
|
In very loud and vulgar, descriptive terms, I told him what exactly he could do with his encore. |
|
Artifacts, pictures, and descriptive material about the love feast will be featured in this extensive exhibit. |
|
With brief yet descriptive passages moving quickly from one scene to another, he conveys a sustained air of urgency. |
|
Combining a depressing ending and austere realism with an idealistic, descriptive story is one of Hemingway's particulars of style. |
|
The descriptive passages make the reader feel as if he or she is actually present. |
|
James, who has just returned to school as a Year 10 pupil, chose to write the descriptive passage as a homework task for English. |
|
What my schematic reading of his memoir fails to indicate adequately is the beautiful luminosity of his descriptive writing. |
|
I enjoy the excess of precision, a kind of maniacal exactitude of language, a descriptive madness. |
|
Enriques was appointed to the University of Bologna where he taught projective geometry and descriptive geometry. |
|
Gone are the days of listing an entire thesaurus of descriptive terms in the site's meta tags to gain a high search-engine rank. |
|
This book is primarily a descriptive work, seeking to provide detail about a specific historical missionary activity. |
|
In his role as professor Olivier lectured on descriptive geometry and mechanics. |
|
Legal Lynching is a convenient vade mecum on the death penalty, descriptive as well as critical. |
|
Summary descriptive statistics were computed by using proportions or medians and interquartile ranges. |
|
Harris's descriptive powers and his characteristic knack for instant thumbnail sketches are given full rein in Pompeii. |
|
On a related note, and something that we mentioned previously, the manuals should have descriptive tab separators. |
|
For descriptive metadata it may even be an entry in a catalog if the catalog record can be adequately referenced. |
|
The tale is more realistic, the characters deeper and troubled and the descriptive passages delightful. |
|
The methodology is case studies which, although mainly historical in format, do periodically furnish topologies and descriptive statistics. |
|
|
She presents a wide variety of descriptive material concerning Aboriginal life, dating from the earliest years of European settlement. |
|
His descriptive letters painted a picture of life in Tasmania for readers back in England. |
|
Some of his descriptive passages are composed with great power and elegance. |
|
Her beautiful descriptive poetic language, even in translation, goes some way to helping this happen. |
|
One could certainly consider this work as laying the foundations for the theory of descriptive and projective geometry. |
|
The descriptive statistics vary with number of samples, and tribometers report average friction values based on different sample sizes. |
|
The beautiful pictures and descriptive commentary showed what a fine country Zimbabwe is. |
|
A particularly concise and elegant passage of descriptive work comes from a fellow essayist. |
|
Offering critics a helping hand by planting for their use a ready-made descriptive vocabulary reflects his shrewdness of strategy. |
|
This descriptive floristic study will provide foresters, biologists, educators, and KSNPC personnel with data on the flora and vegetation of the Preserve. |
|
If any historian has taken to heart Gustave Flaubert's mandate to find le mot juste in his descriptive efforts, it is the babyfaced, articulate Burns. |
|
Beside the descriptive grammar based on the inscriptions there are numerous historical and comparative sections in the book, tracing the history of Kanarese. |
|
Each building is presented in a double-page spread, with a brief descriptive text, an image or two and, of course, the plans, sections and elevations of the title. |
|
We just wanted to hear the dry, descriptive case that BDS, for better or worse, is gaining ground. |
|
Generic words are never protectable as trademarks, and descriptive words are protectable as trademarks only upon showing of acquired distinctiveness. |
|
I'm descriptive as all get out when it comes to how people speak, but once those words are on paper and there's a grade involved, I turn in to the Prescriptive Grammar Queen. |
|
A construction of the fertilisation and copulatory events is proposed based on descriptive and experimental evidence in other zygopterans as well as in this species. |
|
She avoids an exhaustively descriptive definition because she opposes condemning all novels based on the flaws of some novels. |
|
The compelling visuality of the work of art resists appropriation by either the cleverness of historical explanations or the eloquence of descriptive language. |
|
It is a descriptive fact that some people do eat peas with a knife, just as many speakers of English do not follow the rules of prescriptive grammars. |
|
|
The author favours short, spare sentences and a terse descriptive style. |
|
Frondel thus committed himself to a career in descriptive mineralogy. |
|
Many popular roses are also susceptible to three fungal diseases, whose names black spot, mildew, and rust are descriptive of their appearance on rose leaves. |
|
All good objects will have descriptive and administrative metadata. |
|
If political debate is less sharp in the Neronian books, foreign affairs and Nero's flamboyant behaviour fully extend Tacitus' descriptive powers. |
|
The qualifying examinations were never objective, but descriptive. |
|
One of the strengths of this book lies in the descriptive passages. |
|
This is a handbook, with many tables and lengthy descriptive passages. |
|
Even when intended to serve merely as descriptive terms of classification, the terms carry much historical and ideological baggage that bears on human rights concerns. |
|
Despite these limitations, descriptive studies, interpreted with suitable caution, can offer some useful insight to complement the data from studies using randomisation. |
|
As indicated above, we view this range as descriptive, not evaluative. |
|
Each portrait includes a descriptive evaluation of each space and a precis of its legal requirements, accompanied by a photograph and a scaled schematic site plan. |
|
These techniques are referred to as object oriented because they focus on modeling real-world objects, including both descriptive data and behavior. |
|
The main argument concerns the relationship between syntactic, textual, and ideological analysis, and the descriptive methods required in text analysis. |
|
Such an analytic and descriptive approach has many advantages. |
|
As the subject matter becomes increasingly broad, non-technical, and abstract, descriptive vocabularies vary and sources become scattered and diffuse. |
|
Although absent from the novel's descriptive chain of images, the noyade makes itself known to the reader by scattered traces throughout the text. |
|
Since these tumors characteristically contained calcifications and large cells, the descriptive term large cell calcifying Sertoli cell tumor was preferred. |
|
Brief descriptive captions would have enhanced the understanding of the life of the people and perhaps added more understanding to the text of the folktales as well. |
|
This is a comprehensive descriptive grammar of Trio, a Cariban language, spoken in the remote rainforest of Suriname and along the border in Brazil. |
|
|
In a descriptive passage that recalls Pickthall's poetry, the story attributes a pre-verbal understanding of the signs of the oncoming winter to both men. |
|
The following descriptive mineralogy is based on a study of specimens in private collections that represent all of the orebodies that have been mined to date. |
|
But his verse is not without a certain Hudibrastic force, and it frequently contains graphic touches descriptive of modes of life now passed away. |
|
Thus descriptive claims cannot entail the extra expressive or imperatival component that according to the non-cognitivist is part of the meaning of moral terms. |
|
It is a descriptive account, with occasional physiocratic remarks, that essentially transcribes documents from diverse origins, mainly the companies themselves. |
|
Yet scientific popularizers and educators have to deal with the fact that in our society, many people are still religious, and still accept descriptive religion. |
|
Balbastre's early keyboard pieces have descriptive titles in the manner of Couperin and Rameau, but he gradually turned to writing sonatas in the galant style. |
|
The lesson here is that you actually need to have a pretty good control of descriptive grammar before you can intelligently engage in prescriptive grammar. |
|
In Catania he taught projective geometry and descriptive geometry. |
|
He began a teaching career in 1870 in a secondary school in Milan, then two years later he went to the University of Rome to teach descriptive and projective geometry. |
|
As in the pronominal anaphora case, descriptive material does the work that reference does in most other accounts of the semantics of temporal and modal discourse. |
|
We therefore developed proteogest, a program that generates basic descriptive statistics for both the intact and proteolytically processed proteome. |
|
The robust version of descriptive philosophy of science derives from, or superimposes upon, the conclusions of modest descriptivism, a theory about evaluative practice. |
|
Historically, the focus of most research on developmental biology of nemerteans was limited to descriptive and experimental embryology and larval development. |
|
Susan has a whimsical, descriptive and deeply emotive writing style. |
|
This descriptive study documents the cardiovascular and respiratory responses to performing abdominal stabilization exercises on a therapeutic exercise ball. |
|
It is also accurately descriptive of the projectile's expanded shape. |
|
I am not interested in being a descriptive and expository writer. |
|
Thus when Kagame showed up to make a speech in Montreal, he was greeted by hundreds of Congolese and Rwandans bearing very descriptive placards. |
|
The name Tawantinsuyu was, therefore, a descriptive term indicating a union of provinces. |
|
|
It represents one of the very first mappings of America's East Coast, and includes descriptive place names. |
|
Adventure novels were popular, including Sir John Barrow's descriptive 1831 account of the Mutiny on the Bounty. |
|
The map contains hundreds of detailed illustrations and more than 3000 descriptive texts. |
|
Mela's descriptive method follows ocean coasts, in the manner of a periplus, probably because it was derived from the accounts of navigators. |
|
Ellis's objection that Buddhist scholars are only concerned with descriptive ethics is a sticking point for him. |
|
These are most specifically geometric constructions and descriptive geometry. |
|
For secondary efficacy outcomes cross-sectional descriptive statistics and changes from baseline were calculated. |
|
Survey data will be analyzed with descriptive statistics and qualitative data will be analyzed using a constant comparative analysis method. |
|
The analogy is based on the idea that pejorative slurs are used to express both a descriptive belief and a negative attitude. |
|
Kate's report of Blyth Spartans' game with Lancaster City on October 20 was concise, informative and made good use of descriptive adjectives. |
|
Is there a fallacy involved in deriving an ought from a set of exclusively factual or descriptive premises? |
|
This is a question that might occur when one confronts a descriptive bibliography of the works of Joseph Heller. |
|
I notice the media yarn spinners haven't used that appropriate descriptive adjective when reporting on the histrionics of certain politicians. |
|
Consequently, descriptive empirical studies of languages are usually carried out using only native speakers. |
|
As a field of intellectual enquiry, moral philosophy also is related to the fields of moral psychology, descriptive ethics, and value theory. |
|
Where annotations are used, they are in most cases descriptive blurbs provided by publishers with value judgments edited out. |
|
The 1788 code is much more detailed and descriptive than the 1774 code but, fundamentally, they are largely the same. |
|
For this reason, weighted data was preferred to unweighted data for the descriptive analysis. |
|
The MetaGrove Suite toolset optimizes descriptive metadata to fuel digital workflows. |
|
In common usage, tabloid and broadsheet are frequently more descriptive of a newspaper's market position than physical format. |
|
|
The tanka poems are brief, descriptive, and evocative, compressed verse in five lines, varying between five and seven syllables each. |
|
Much laughter, discussion and plenty of descriptive language could be heard as the students recorded their thoughts in a shape poem. |
|
An SGML document consists of text that is marked up with descriptive tags that specify the function of a given element within the document. |
|
In this paper we develop a descriptive theory to analyze games with such characteristics using a fuzzy set-theoretic toolkit. |
|
The most common of these descriptive statistics are the measures of central tendency. |
|
This equation is descriptive of a Cornu spiral, a spiral whose curvative increases linearly with arclength. |
|
The descriptive term secretory carcinoma, therefore, replaced the original designation of juvenile carcinoma. |
|
Although the term is usually only descriptive, in some cases people use it as the name of a genre. |
|
The term ruderal means growing in waste places or rubbish, and is descriptive of the habitat of perhaps the majority of weeds. |
|
But this descriptive commonplace is not sufficient to account for the sort of comportability-predicated integrity we have been talking about. |
|
Even her descriptive imagery, when describing landscapes, is Kikuyu. |
|
The unofficial status of microtoponymy on Vernon is illustrated by the matter-of-fact, spontaneous, and descriptive nature of such names. |
|
It was descriptive, prescriptive, and exemplary in its clarity. |
|
At the frontier of digital commerce, autolearning software can generate both descriptive and prescriptive knowledge for action. |
|
Firstly, in descriptive statistic method a list research is regulated for each of replier characteristics. |
|
Methodologically, Wiktionary represents an implementation of the descriptive approach to linguistics and specifically to grammar. |
|
In a flat metal workpiece, the flatness is a descriptive attribute characterizing the extent of the geometric deviation from a reference plane. |
|
Those results suggest that Becker's descriptive division between rule creators and rule enforcers may turn out to be prescriptively desirable. |
|
Metasyntactic values, in the sense I'm using here, are descriptive of syntax, as for example the nonterminals of a Chomsky grammar. |
|
Their descriptive study revealed that this client population is likely to use ethnomedical approaches in the treatment of medical conditions. |
|
|
Excellent descriptive power and frequent brilliant lines in this adoxographic poem. |
|
So perhaps, in the absence of individuating criteria, descriptive traits can serve to individuate. |
|
As early as 1814, we find King James' version, evidently a descriptive phrase, being used. |
|
But is the concept of an information superhighway inadequate as a descriptive device? |
|
The text is essentially descriptive, interlarded with perhaps too much history exhibiting the author's pedagogic background. |
|
The qualifier is the descriptive part of the name that would probably make up the entire name if you weren't using Hungarian. |
|
Most authors speak of a quasi-isomorphism or quism, but Bourbaki's term is more descriptive. |
|
Yet it is not mentioned by descriptive phoneticians until the early 20th century, and even then at first only in American English. |
|
Furthermore, Johnson, unlike Bailey, added notes on a word's usage, rather than being merely descriptive. |
|
A fully explicit grammar that exhaustively describes the grammatical constructions of a language is called a descriptive grammar. |
|
Women's rights activist Grace Mera Molisa, who died in 2002, achieved international notability as a descriptive poet. |
|
It was never defined as a political border and the names were more or less descriptive. |
|
This criteriological or normative aspect is what distinguishes the sciences of mind from the sciences of nature, which are said to be descriptive rather than normative. |
|
Out of the fifteen sentences in the broadcast, one is a question and thirteen are simple parataxis structures that are mainly descriptive statements. |
|
So while foundationalism and descriptive metaphysics are not the same project, they share a metaphysical impulse shown in their reliance on an unanalyzed notion of necessity. |
|
In other words, does reflection on human action justify the formulation of prescriptive propositions, or is it merely delineable in descriptive terms? |
|
This last section is more descriptive than the previous ones in order to properly introduce the Riemannian geometry and the construction of the generalized algorithms. |
|
The series is a chronicle written in the first person of a young girls journey into womanhood overlayed with undertones of paranormal descriptive. |
|
The associated strategies of colligation and periodisation are processes of categorising and ordering to make sense of disparate events, again primarily descriptive processes. |
|
The set-theoretic descriptive language developed by Allen Forte is totally absent, as is any reference to Forte's work in the chapter bibliographies. |
|
|
At the same time, it should be noted that the descriptive patterns documented here do not necessarily capture a causal effect of living in a single-parent family. |
|
There he became acquainted with the civil engineer John Smeaton, who during the course of his studies on windmills had devised a descriptive scale for grading wind speed. |
|
The chapter also includes the level-2 segmentation of the techniques, giving descriptive data sets for various types of drilling, cutting, and marking. |
|
There is no bright-line, per se rule that the addition of a TLD to an otherwise descriptive mark will never, under any circumstances, operate to create a registrable mark. |
|
Other poems written in the following years, especially On the Mount's Bay and St Michael's Mount, are descriptive verses, showing sensibility but no true poetic imagination. |
|
From descriptive research published to date, it is evident that tear production can vary substantially in birds of different sizes and phylogenic classification. |
|
We notice here a shift from 'literal' in a wordly sense, pertaining to written words as such, to a descriptive sense, pertaining to how a text is understood. |
|
Nonetheless it has now replaced cromlech as the usual English term in archaeology, when the more technical and descriptive alternatives are not used. |
|
Here's a descriptive adjective making its General Ramblings debut. |
|
Although all scholarly research articles generally report descriptive data in some way, even this relatively simple presentation of basic data can lead to confusion. |
|
Renewed professionalism takes ethics beyond descriptive and prescriptive information to meaningful reflection and analysis at meta-ethical and normative levels. |
|
He draws eclectically on studies of baboons, descriptive anthropological accounts of hunter-gatherer societies and, in a few cases, the fossil record. |
|
That is why they are phrased in the descriptive terms of a judge announcing the law to be applied in a given case rather than in the mandatory terms of a statute. |
|
These names are variously descriptive of attributes of the god, refer to myths involving him, or refer to religious practices associated with the god. |
|
When properly understood, the argument anticipates the contemporary position whereby the meaning of indexicals cannot be captured by descriptive contents. |
|
Kin terminologies can be either descriptive or classificatory. |
|
First, they had a speaker intone the descriptive Italian annotations from the score, with Hungarian and English supertitles shown above the stage. |
|
Microfossil is a descriptive term applied to fossilized plants and animals whose size is just at or below the level at which the fossil can be analyzed by the naked eye. |
|
Analytic, or 'clarificatory', jurisprudence means the use of a neutral point of view and descriptive language when referring to the aspects of legal systems. |
|
The influence of John Keats and other Romantic poets published before and during his childhood is evident from the richness of his imagery and descriptive writing. |
|