In contrast, the 12 essential genes known to exist within the mitotic heterochromatin of chromosome 3 have remained only imprecisely mapped. |
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The estimates for waiting times are not quantitatively reliable because they depend exponentially on imprecisely known quantities. |
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Be very careful when filling in the form, as CVs which have been filled in incorrectly or imprecisely will not be considered. |
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But all of this is imprecise, not least because the notion of set itself was imprecise and imprecisely formulated. |
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There is a third strand of evidence that speaks more directly, if somewhat imprecisely, to the welfare effects. |
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Moreover, there have also been examples of contracts which are imprecisely drawn up in terms of what is to be delivered and to what standard. |
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Under these circumstances, in most of the areas of expenditure the Court has identified Community policies and programmes that are imprecisely designed and cannot be properly evaluated. |
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Furthermore, the relationship between real-wage changes and the unemployment rate is estimated imprecisely in the 1990s, because of small sample sizes. |
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The EU has raised the particular issue of Article 301 of the Turkish Criminal Code and other imprecisely worded articles systematically at all levels within the framework of the ongoing reform process in Turkey. |
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It represents that, when He searches the heart of a man, God doesn't take the measure imprecisely or imperfectly, but that He searches it perfectly. |
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In some aspects, this National Programme for the Incorporation of the Acquis is imprecisely worded, which will lead to problems of interpretation before it can move ahead. |
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It is most often used imprecisely and in a very negative sense. |
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The gingerbread was delicately, if imprecisely, captured by the brushstrokes. |
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In common parlance and legal usage, it is often used imprecisely to mean illicit drugs, irrespective of their pharmacology. |
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The parameter relative to the real exchange rate is estimated imprecisely, and the overidentifying restrictions test clearly rejects the model in all cases. |
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However, it is now used imprecisely to refer to anything from malevolent globalisation to free market fundamentalism. |
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The more imprecisely this time difference is known, the greater the potential error. |
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A final approach is to create imprecisely defined criteria, and then assign a neutral body to evaluate each method according to these criteria. |
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The term sudden death is used imprecisely and includes death that is almost instantaneous as well as death in which rapidly deteriorating disease processes may occupy as much as two or three days. |
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The separation of powers, often imprecisely and metonymically used interchangeably with the trias politica principle, is a model for the governance of a state. |
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