It is a noble and powerful impulse, one not casually to be ridiculed or dismissed. |
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I understand the impulse to focus one's moral revulsion on the perpetrators. |
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The transgressive character of the prose poem emerges here as a natural expression of the Language poets' anti-establishment impulse. |
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One was the restorationist impulse, the impulse to order contemporary church life as closely as possible to the life of New Testament churches. |
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Every race carries in its mental constitution the laws of its destiny, and it is, perhaps, these laws that it obeys with a resistless impulse. |
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In any case, it is impossible to verify empirically whether an impulse is resistible. |
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Dancing is a universal instinct, a zoologic, a biologic impulse, found in animals as well as in man. |
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Every Hollywood marketing impulse screams for the movie to be zippily cartoonish. |
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It is a laudable impulse to try to increase your understanding of voters in other parts of the country. |
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I doubt I'm entitled to go too far in this discussion but I couldn't resist the impulse to reply to the last comment. |
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The progressive impulse brought down the original robber barons, and reined in corporate greed. |
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Our book's approach is literary and writerly, focusing on the form and acknowledging the literary impulse in nonfiction. |
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Kessler's play is less alchemical than Polke's, but the impulse to incorporate the elements into a painting is the same. |
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In life, the impulse toward a simple stripping down to some bare truth is either delusion, hubris, or the reductionist's dust. |
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I always reckon there should be at least one impulse buy when looking for plants. |
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Retailers can sell more bagels and bread with the spread at a convenient reach, creating an impulse purchase. |
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Also, order a good supply of ready-made frames and small gift items to accommodate last-minute and impulse gift purchases, advised these framers. |
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The current fear-mongering over Social Security springs from the same totalitarian impulse as motivated those who rattled sabers in the past. |
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As the sons and daughters of professional Army officers, our impulse was to close ranks and stand where we were told to stand. |
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Why had she adventured her life on a bold impulse to satisfy mere curiosity? |
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So financial experts are warning holiday impulse buying can end up throwing your carefully planned budget out of whack. |
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It is distressing to see the impulse for integration give way to calls for segregation. |
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Then, on impulse, she kissed him, finally giving way to the feelings she had hidden for so many months. |
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They were poised to throw their spears and javelins but I had a sudden impulse to stop them. |
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It had to be compact enough to fit in the tight shelf space reserved for impulse buys at the supermarket. |
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In a stunning affirmation of the artistic impulse, they made beauty out of abjection, and that, at least, is a triumph. |
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This project is a sculptural work that stemmed from my interest in sci-fi, technology, and the impulse for relaxation or solitary meditation. |
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Obeying a nameless impulse to look up, I detected the hair-thin outline of a square trapdoor in the high ceiling. |
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It may include feelings of guilt or profanation, at times engendering a twinge-or surge-of regret, an impulse to repent. |
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As the impulse travels down the bundles, the ventricles contract and the cycle repeats itself. |
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The number two person ran the lanyards, swayed the munitions, and installed impulse carts in all the loaded stations. |
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That research, involving vervet monkeys, linked abnormal serotonin activity to poor impulse control and aggression in the monkeys. |
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The mainboard has a two-phase impulse CPU and an impulse DDR DIMM voltage regulator. |
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The heart or other organs can be transplanted or kept going by mechanical methodry, but the brain without electrical impulse is useless. |
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If you're on top of your game and the best at what you do, the natural impulse is to let people know. |
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Figure 4 shows the digital and analog controller responses to a mechanical impulse on the shaft. |
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Unlike its electrical predecessor, an optical switch does not convert the signal to an electrical impulse before directing it. |
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Thermography in combination with impulse radar was used to locate structural penetrations and voids within the walls of this masonry structure. |
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He seeks to recast the voyeuristic impulse into terms of love rather than violation. |
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While Canada's nationalist impulse is in some ways understandable or even admirable, its articulation as a need for protection is misconceived. |
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At least 25 percent of knife sales are impulse buys, so concentrate on high-margin models in your premium space. |
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Despite the dry title, this was, believe it or not, another impulse buy at the bookstore. |
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A common impulse among those who are overweight is to go on a diet in an attempt to reduce caloric intake to the level of caloric use. |
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On impulse, she leaned over and placed a chaste kiss on his cheek and was smug to see a slight tinge of red creep over his cheeks. |
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Drug and alcohol abuse can also lower inhibitions, and some mental illnesses also negatively impact impulse control. |
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Radio Frequency labels provide well ticketed products that stimulate impulse buying and can increase sales dramatically. |
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He didn't do it but sure took pride in congratulating himself for triumphing over the impulse. |
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I came very close to picking the thick tome up the other day, but some stubborn impulse in me resisted. |
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I managed to master the impulse as I watched my drama friends do awesome in the first half of the first act. |
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Is it merely a matter of impulse control, the same as a married person resisting the daily barrage of sexual imagery in everyday life? |
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I remembered my own impulse to screenshot a page from a set of ephemeral Google results, which can change at any time. |
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His burning impulse is to exit in sound and fury, screaming outright the profane secrets he merely hinted at in his earlier comments. |
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His moods swings were cyclical and he was familiar with the impulse to suicide, as this verse attests. |
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A blind and irresistible impulse urges you to make a commitment in a personal relationship and take a quantum leap into unknown territory. |
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He then felt a strong impulse coming from his stomach and he then bolted for the nearest bathroom, however he couldn't remember where one was. |
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On an impulse you strip off all your clothes, swim into the centre of the lake and turn onto your back. |
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An orthodromic impulse runs along an axon in its normal direction, away from the soma. |
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Gilds were connected with the impulse to found chantries to send up soul-prayers in the mass, the highest form of approach to God. |
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The changes are not only in brain regions controlling attention, but also in regions that subserve impulse control. |
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As an artist, my normal impulse is to write things that people don't care about and, ideally, can't even understand. |
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In the past, it was mainly chequebooks that people would use for impulse buys but now credit cards have completely taken over. |
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Most of the beautiful traditional songs might be museum pieces now, but the impulse to stamp your own identity on play is still there. |
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I have no doubt that all of us were responding to an atavistic impulse to clasp someone when we felt threatened. |
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To understand causes of compulsive gambling or pathological gambling, it is useful to explore causes of impulse control disorders. |
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I heard an ice cream truck drive by the other day and of course, I had this instant impulse to run for my change purse. |
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Another alternative might be to become more aware of the impulse to lard your speech and writing with adjectives. |
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Brain regions previously implicated in the regulation of attention and impulse control contributed to these interactions. |
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They may fall prey to a nihilistic impulse and a counterproductive collectivistic ideology. |
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I had a sudden impulse to tell the woman pouring the wine that I loved her. |
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Often, persons with low frustration tolerance experience a strong impulse to escape from, or avoid frustrating situations. |
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Learn to save money on everyday purchases by shopping around, and avoid impulse buying. |
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For a moment he had an impulse to confess, if for no other reason than to hear the detective tell him he'd done nothing wrong. |
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His skin was almost translucent, and for a moment I longed to reach up and touch it, but I quickly pushed the impulse aside. |
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My first impulse was to get away from him as quickly as possible, but sometimes that is not easy to do. |
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He nodded, successfully resisting the sudden impulse to reach for her hand. |
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They're not complying with international law and at the very moment in which we are trying to give a new impulse to the peace process. |
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Evidence points to the common existence of narcissistic personality characteristics and impulse control problems in pathologic gamblers. |
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It is no exaggeration to say that the territorial imperative has been the main impulse driving the aggressive behavior of nation-states. |
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The alpha and beta pathways typically allow for directed impulse conduction through the AV node. |
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The inner ear then contains hair cells that respond to the fluid movement and then generate an electrical impulse that goes to the brain. |
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In the early days of the market system, he argues, a Protestant ethic kept the unrestrained economic impulse of capitalism in check. |
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The process of minimizing an impact force can be approached from the definition of the impulse of force. |
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The impulse had a value of 1, and the highest peak in the response is less than 0.25, falling rapidly to tiny values. |
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Specific impulse equals thrust multiplied by the time over which the thrust acts. |
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He had health worries and was short of money but had acted on impulse to provide the children with something he had promised them. |
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Purely on impulse I leaned forward, my eyes closing of their own accord as Winter tilted her head up just a fraction. |
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It's imperative that you don't act on impulse during this period, and that you think through the consequences of your actions. |
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By asking her I was avoiding the risk of inspecting rails of clothes and making an impulse buy. |
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In the, impulse areas near the register, where grocery stores put chewing gum, place items for gun-related impulse buys. |
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So urgency cannot be construed as a strictly necessary condition for the status of an impulse or desire as addictive. |
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I read this article that said the typical symptoms of stress are eating too much, impulse buying, and driving too fast. |
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He explained that the new system allowed shops to have packaged CDs on display which helped encourage impulse buying. |
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He then fast-forwards to the present when a new poetics reclaims the impulse of the earlier avant-garde. |
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This is the shadow side of desire, manifested in the impulse to negate, deny, and reject that which is unpleasant or unwelcome. |
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High risk clients were likely to attend the clinic on impulse but were unlikely to comply with a request for a repeat test. |
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A subsurface impulse radar system on board a cutter was used to measure brash ice thickness in the Great Lakes. |
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Most cardiac arrhythmias result from disorders of impulse formation, impulse conduction or a combination of both. |
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This could make for clearer conversation and remove the instinctive impulse to shout into a phone when the line is very noisy. |
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There was thus no interception of an electrical impulse or signal passing through the public telecommunication system. |
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As a result, their main impulse is to conserve wilderness from destruction by humans. |
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With the rise of Brazilian modernism, the constructivist impulse was reborn and re-imagined in a more aestheticized, less overtly political form. |
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His impulse is to flee, however his intuition is to stay with his child's waking memory. |
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Its most important action is its ability to block the initiation or conduction of the nerve impulse following local application. |
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These classically trained ballet dancers transitioned entirely into flamenco catching the style, impulse and eclat of the genre. |
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After an action potential has swept along a single nerve fibre, a second nerve impulse cannot be initiated immediately. |
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The crowning moment of my skirmishes with style was when I went out in a maroon sweatshirt on impulse and wasn't laughed at in the street. |
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Cadbury needs to move away from relying on impulse purchases at corner shops and into mainstream supermarket distribution. |
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The frontal cortex is important in planning, impulse control, and attention. |
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His exposure to cosmopolitan learning and popular Western culture has only left him with an impulse towards imitation. |
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This ion flow triggers a cellular response, such as continuation of a nerve impulse to another neuron or the contraction of a muscle cell. |
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This separation triggers other mechanisms to send a nerve impulse to the brain. |
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First, there is a nerve impulse to the hypothalamus, an endocrine gland located near the brain. |
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They also relied more on impulse than exact precision, which meant they were highly adaptive. |
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It was a generous and humane impulse that has brought huge benefits to this country. |
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Because in the face of all this death and deathlike cynicism, love is the one impulse in our repertoire that says the world is unfinished. |
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Larson is a talented writer with a gift for surprising language, and an admirable impulse to show and not tell. |
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As the brain senses a decrease in oxygen, a nerve impulse briefly rouses you from sleep. |
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The whole process is under voluntary control, set in motion when a nerve impulse from the brain tells the muscle to tighten or relax. |
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When a hair is touched, receptors near the hair fire, triggering a nerve impulse that signals that the hair has been moved. |
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You know it's quite difficult to contain the impulse to break Godwin's Law when I read things like this. |
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Along the way we see some occasional impulse in him to live a good life, a fulfilling life. |
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Stimulation of any of these receptors results in the initiation of a nerve impulse that travels to the central nervous system. |
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The same juvenile impulse that once inspired liberals to dress down as slobs now inspires them to assume the role of high school snobs. |
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On an impulse that she hardly understood, she crouched in a shadowed groin of the red-tiled roof, and peeked down into the forbidden area. |
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Even more paradoxical is the acceptance that this revolutionary impulse has emanated from an elementally American art form. |
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The apparent relativity of the moral impulse is an illusion which is created by the mind for the mind's own purposes. |
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These vibrations then stimulate the cilia, which transmit a nerve impulse to the brain informing the shark of the location of the source. |
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That never-ending task of discarding the detritus netted by too many impulse buys had me going through a pile of books today. |
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This type is appropriate for printed circuit boards and impulse disconnection in control applications. |
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An ambition to succeed and surpass one's predecessors is the driving force behind the emulative impulse of repetition as paragone. |
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Whereas a legislator must check his impulse to enact his religious precepts into law, an executive official faces a somewhat different problem. |
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Other impairments include single frequency intermodulation distortion, impulse noise, co-channel interference and ghosting. |
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The picture seems driven, at least partly, by an impulse to contradict the more epicene tendencies of this country's art-house filmmaking. |
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Dogs, just like humans, forget, get distracted, make mistakes, get into mischief and act on impulse. |
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It is the most excitable part of the neuron and the site at which the nerve impulse is initiated. |
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Well I think it's the natural impulse of scientists to seek the simplest, easiest explanation for a phenomenon. |
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The carrier pitched the service as a way of bringing on-the-move impulse purchasing to the digital download market. |
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This applies to a variety of impulse items, although, again, you need to avoid items normally carried by your local mega-mart. |
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And he accepted without censure that its impulse to slaughter the babies of other animals was entirely natural. |
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In some ways, of course, the return of tap signaled a kind of exhaustion in the choreographic impulse on Broadway. |
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In first degree block there is a delay in conduction of the atrial impulse to the ventricles, usually at the level of the atrioventricular node. |
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Indulging your atavistic selfish-gene impulse to replicate is neither rational nor moral. |
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While it's true that people can be lucky and do win on hunches, too many passive players consistently let impulse rule their responses. |
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We will panic about being unable to afford to replace the boiler and then, on impulse, book a weekend in Ibiza that costs the equivalent amount. |
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We see indications of this tendency in the perennial impulse to bureaucratize and routinize business practices. |
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If you're Assad, what impulse on earth makes you want to go to the negotiating table? |
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Readers and other members of the public, sensing a clear impulse to beat down an unfavourable report, must have suspected some truth was giving offence. |
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Or will an uneasy impulse to politesse, and fear of unknown consequences, restrain them? |
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This means that even brute action is a form of contemplation, for even the most vulgar or base act has, at its base and as its cause, the impulse to contemplate the greater. |
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The natural American impulse is to search for solutions, for policies that can prevail against these upheavals. |
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Any tendency toward suicidal impulse must be carefully evaluated as well. |
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The immediate impulse for Eurotunnel seeking action to close down Sangatte was the extension by Labour in 1998 of the Carrier Liability Act from airlines to road hauliers. |
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My initial impulse, surprisingly, was to agree with the right-wingers. |
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This is not mere opportunism, but a malignant metastasis that not only finds white supremacism an acceptable impulse but one fully consonant with its drive to power. |
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I am persuaded a more powerful impulse to polytheism arises from the co-action of two natural principles in the absence of a knowledge of God in Christ. |
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The authors would first like to thank Richard Swedberg, who provided the impulse to the present work, and continued to be a great source of inspiration on Schumpeter. |
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I felt an impulse on the racket as a force reflected off the strings. |
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Big savings can be made by curtailing impulse buying and tracking every expense and interest rate charge, creating a budget plan and sticking to it. |
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Our natural impulse is to soothe, to comfort, to relieve suffering. |
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Instead, any impulse for transparent dialogue is ritually displaced into domestic disputes about matters such as fidelity to the nation state during times of conflict. |
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If you've got the time to troll for sounds, then take your unusual impulse file and convolve it against a large number of target files using the program's batch processor. |
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The use of pointe work is not required, and the fusion styles of contemporary works may be incorporated, along with other theatrical devices, as the creative impulse dictates. |
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He felt the impulse to shout. His lips began to form the words. |
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It is a secular impulse for a secular society and it is, frankly, boring. |
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Following another incubation, and after filtration through nylon gauze, the highly fluorescent nuclei were analyzed with an impulse cytophotometer. |
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We need to temper the Promethean impulse referenced in Shelley's subtitle. |
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Besides, why may not motion have been propagated by impulse through all eternity, and the same stock of it, or nearly the same, be still upheld in the universe? |
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Two types of nerve processes extend from the soma, axons, which conduct the nerve impulse away from the soma, and dendrites, which conduct nerve impulses toward it. |
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I cannot tell you upon what impulse I acted, but lifting my rifle I brought it down till it was trained just short of the rim of his white puggaree, and fired. |
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Just in case a passing tourist might suddenly decide to impulse buy a poker-worked Alpenstock, a set of cowbells in diminishing sizes, or a Heidi doll in dirndl and plaits. |
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In the first stage, the innate, initial impulse of a living organism, plant, or animal is self-love and not pleasure, as the rival Epicureans contend. |
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For all his flinty wit and occasional impulse to antagonize, Ed Koch was, in the end, almost impossible to dislike. |
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This egalitarian impulse was in part driven by people returning from WW II and Korea, many of whom benefited from the GI Bill. |
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Because we have all felt that little tug, tickle, or impulse to be antiseptically and impersonally naughty? |
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And did they bequeath to the military the task of rescuing the democratic impulse stifled by a pharaoh with an Islamist face? |
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But Bushnell had a lingering curiosity about the earliest stages of that impulse, which she sees as taking root 15 years prior. |
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The impulse slows across the ER Bridge, light brought to law by zero in the absolute and we may leave by any ship to hit the islands of the open ocean. |
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Herrera's portmanteau style and ludic impulse constitute a form of visual jabberwocky, in which the familiar is confidently manipulated and destabilized. |
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And to give way to this impulse is to experience a peculiar pleasure. |
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As a nerve impulse, or action potential, reaches the end of a presynaptic axon, molecules of neurotransmitter are released into the synaptic space. |
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Any sign of an impulse toward moderation or conciliation will only hurt Pawlenty with this crowd. |
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A wallet gets picked from inside a kimono sleeve in a momentary impulse. |
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The impulse would have done nothing to deflect a bullet, which would likely have torn through his arm and into him. |
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Jones is a master of the reductive impulse, a maker of rigorously crafted geometric abstractions that function as emblems of energy, generators of metaphor. |
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That same impulse brought the entire Canadian labor movement out in force. |
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The question is not whether they are right or wrong but why they feel an impulse to dispense their advice in the first place. |
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Now history reveals that looking yearningly to America for inspiration in moments of crisis has in fact been a recurrent impulse within Britain's leading groups. |
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Viewers fascinated by his activity in the genres of figure and landscape often ignore the parallel journey of discovery he has made, compelled by the impulse to experiment. |
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As Wheeler and Kahn have noted, this shared impulse gestures to a primal desire to repress the mother's crucial role as a powerful agent in the birth of the male self. |
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The analogical structure and poetical impulse that runs through all of the paired images are even found in the artist's single images such as his Giglio. |
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Nor was it one they tended to trace back to some residual force of upbringing, like that upwardly mobile impulse so often attributed to immigrant families. |
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It gives a particular direction to every sentiment and action, and carries a man forward, as by a kind of resistless impulse, or insuperable destiny. |
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The most powerful impulse of the time can be summed up as neoclassicism, a reversion to the purist attempts of the Renaissance to reproduce classical models. |
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Are low-priced, impulse products all that should surround a checkout? |
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Mary Queen of Scots was recorded as very tall and beautiful but with a fiery temperament that often caused her to act on impulse and brought forth criticisms of tactlessness. |
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It is this message alone more than any geopolitical impulse or statecraft that has the Russian government scrambling. |
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The impulse to interpret seems to me what makes personal essay writing compelling. |
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As to whether the MRAP was an impulse buy, Ms. Kroemer assured me it was not. |
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The other day when I was standing in the line, waiting to buy a scratchie, I saw a sign for the Powerball draw and, on impulse, I bought a lottery ticket! |
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These tend to arrive when Shuler tempers his impulse to insert himself into the action. |
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Hot-bar and impulse welding processes are commonly used in the packaging industry to seal plastic bags and join thermoplastic films of 0.5 mm or less. |
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Out of its own impulse and initiative of the Spirit, a process of involutions occurred for some limited purpose, the precise nature of which is beyond human comprehension. |
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The concept of impulse control comes from a better understanding of the brain mechanisms that underlie self-restraint. |
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We found that the human Schwann cells formed relatively extensive myelin and that previously obstructed nerve impulse conduction improved. |
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Should you receive a letter from an HMO deselecting you, let me suggest that you resist the impulse to call your attorney immediately. |
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What follows naturally, unstoppably, is the impulse to praise and record that thing of beauty, which is decidedly not a joy forever. |
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Crown attorney Ami Kotler told the court on Monday it would be highly irregular to say that Bear's actions were done out of impulse. |
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The new flavor is being offered as a take-home item in quart containers, as well as an impulse purchase single serving cone. |
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Since the chocolates are mainly an impulse purchase, and when placed next to register, the forecast for profitability is high. |
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For example, men's and women's watches, other accessories and shoes are situated near the escalators since they can be impulse purchase items. |
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The RL10B-2 is a unique cryogenic upper-stage engine that provides 465 seconds of specific impulse and 24,750 pounds of thrust. |
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A GDM engine, Emrich said, would have a specific impulse of around 100,000 seconds. |
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The RL10B-2 is a cryogenic upper-stage engine that provides 465 seconds of specific impulse and 24,750 pounds of thrust. |
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For example, when you hear a stranger sneeze on public transport, you have to suppress your normal impulse to reply, Gesundheit. |
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Nine out of 10 people admitted they made an impulse purchase they regretted during 2007, according to insurer swiftcover. |
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For instance, an overspender might go back to a childhood memory where they stole some sweets on impulse. |
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Our first impulse is often to smell a flower Carol Klein enjoying the scent of Cimicifuga racemo? |
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It functions to carry the electrical impulse from the atria to the ventricle. |
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Humanity is continuing to follow the impulse to explore, moving beyond Earth. |
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Who could say where the fleshly impulse ceased, or the psychical impulse began? |
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These goods are purchased without any prior planning, just on the basis of the impulse. |
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Whereas retribution focuses on the offender's wrong, retaliation focuses on the impulse of the victim to strike back at the offender. |
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Nor shalt thou give me room to doubt whether it be necessity or love, that inspires this condescending impulse. |
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Obey the spur of the moment. These accumulated it is that make the impulse and the impetus of the life of genius. |
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The deepest impulse of philosophy is the naturalizing of the supernatural, and the highest function of religion is supernaturalizing the natural. |
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The same impulse is afoot in less trendy parts of the country. |
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It was impulse, not intention, one of those great unzippings of the superego that lets the id shine through. |
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Rapid mechanical and thermal changes in the garfish olfactory nerve associated with a propagated impulse. |
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What drives the human impulse to ascribe divine meaning to tragic events? |
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He writes from a classicising impulse, treating Chaucer as the renaissance humanists treated the classical writers. |
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Each pathway is described according to the direction of the nerve impulse rather than by the embryologic outgrowth of the nerve. |
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When a nerve impulse reaches the end of the motor neuron, ACh is released from the presynaptic nerve ending into the synaptic cleft. |
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Under these conditions, blading becomes strictly a reaction type design with the base of the blade solely impulse. |
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Steam turbines were traditionally more impulse but continue to move towards reaction designs similar to those used in gas turbines. |
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In people with normal nerve-muscle interaction, every nerve impulse elicits a muscle response. |
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Turbines with multiple stages may utilize either reaction or impulse blading at high pressure. |
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Wind turbines also gain some energy from the impulse of the wind, by deflecting it at an angle. |
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Wondering if he would ever rebuild his practice, Cobb said yes on impulse. |
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Waxman was inspired to devote his life to studying nerve impulse conduction in normal, demyelinated, and regenerating nerve fibers. |
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In practice, modern turbine designs use both reaction and impulse concepts to varying degrees whenever possible. |
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The resulting impulse spins the turbine and leaves the fluid flow with diminished kinetic energy. |
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The moral impulse of utilitarianism is constant, but our decisions under it are contingent on our knowledge and scientific understanding. |
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Whether it should also be our second impulse is a rather knottier question. |
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The impulse reaches the atrioventricular node, where it's momentarily delayed before it spreads throughout the walls of the ventricles. |
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This relation between impulse and momentum is closer to Newton's wording of the second law. |
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This alters the electrical potential across the membrane, which ultimately leads to transmission of the nerve impulse. |
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According to one hypothesis, they become trapped at synapses, inhibiting nerve impulse signals. |
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Memorized information binds reversible microprocess within impulse with irreversible information macroprocess. |
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It is the one device that is always with you and music is largely an impulse buy. |
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For most of the rest of the twentieth century, it was generally agreed that Elgar's creative impulse ceased after his wife's death. |
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As a new American devotee, this was a profoundly patriotic impulse. |
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The card, an impulse buy from a beachfront shop, showed an enticing view of the Santa Monica Bay. |
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The increase is partly due to an increasing consumer preference for impulse and convenience foods. |
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When traders act on impulse, they can forget to consider crucial risk management strategies such as their stop loss orders. |
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That said, the secessionist impulse was and remains a political loser. |
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As mentioned above, when traders act on impulse, they can forget to consider crucial risk management tools such as their stop loss orders. |
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When it picks up a noise or sound, it uses an electrical impulse to stimulate the cochlea to hear it. |
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He was the first to use the unit impulse function now usually known as the Dirac delta function. |
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At its ultimate degree, this impulse becomes a kind of estheticized death wish. |
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Propellant consumption in jet engines is measured by Specific Fuel Consumption, Specific impulse or Effective exhaust velocity. |
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The total impulse from the impact will depend on the kinetic energy of the bullet. |
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The best way to limit the collective eliminatory impulse is to refuse to participate. |
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When I saw the new dictionary, I couldn't resist the impulse to browse through it. |
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Pardon me, for yielding to a temporary impulse of this character, at the hazard of seeming to funeralize, rather than compliment my congregation. |
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Workplace mobbing is the collective expression of the eliminative impulse in formal organizations. |
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Neither is the atom by any extrinsical impulse diverted from its natural course. |
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I'm headed back down the elevator, having suppressed the impulse to buy an Eiffel Tower table lamp or pencil sharpener. |
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A bad man, being under the drift of any passion, will follow the impulse of it till something interpose. |
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The demand for gender reassignment surgery is the logical culmination of the disidentificatory impulse. |
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In the conflict theory, there is an impulse or a motive, and an opposing counterimpulse or countermotive. |
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The Chabad movement's messianist impulse is very strong, for better and for worse. |
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The impulse to buy is hedonically complex and may stimulate emotional conflict. |
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I toyed briefly with the impulse to exercise my authority and order up, in a loud and captainlike tone, my dinner. |
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The SideKick transmitter comes with an LCD screen that shows electrical impulse intensity settings on nine levels. |
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The beats were pioneers with no destination, changing the world one impulse at a time. |
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To a large extent, says Allen, this antivaccination impulse is fueled by an ignorance of the past. |
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And I was wondering how you combat that impulse to reject the young? |
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The source of the impulse was an owl monkey at Duke University 600 miles away. |
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Newton's second law describes the transfer of energy for impulse turbines. |
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The present authors' research indicates that the nondestructive acoustic methods of impulse response and ultrasonic tomography when used integratively, complement each other. |
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Modern steam turbines frequently employ both reaction and impulse in the same unit, typically varying the degree of reaction and impulse from the blade root to its periphery. |
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Christmas lights, the most purchased indoor decoration last year, didn't make the top of the planned purchase list, suggesting that lights are an impulse item. |
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The change of momentum of a body is proportional to the impulse impressed on the body, and happens along the straight line on which that impulse is impressed. |
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Japan's growth slowed for a second straight quarter in July-September, as the initial impulse of Abe's reflationary policies, dubbed Abenomics, started to fade. |
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With every new indignity served upon the United States by the fanatical Fidel Castro comes an immediate, and lasting, impulse to declare that enough is enough. |
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This impulse, pitted against the insouciant acute observational approach informed by Tibillus makes for a knottily pleasurable prosody in the main. |
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This edition demonstrates that in spite of increased professional regulation, Gestalt therapy still remains close to the impulse to question consensus realities. |
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Ciabattas and baguettes sell well and everything else is down to impulse. |
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Most modern public museums and art education programs for children in schools can be traced back to this impulse to have art available to everyone. |
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The initial impulse behind these dispersed maritime empires and those that followed was trade, driven by the new ideas and the capitalism that grew out of the Renaissance. |
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He added that Gillette scored highly as an impulse buy at Christmas. |
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Between the rectangular impulse circuit and the time sweepage circuit of the oscillograph, the synchronizing circuit formed by the grid circuit of the tube Bi is inserted. |
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However, you can remain believable as your character if you fill your catch breath with a reinforcement of the impulse that initially inspired the phrase. |
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But I feel an impulse to scribble wordly words, to stand in a silk hat beside the statue of Liberty and gaze out upon the Atlantic with a Carlylian pensiveness. |
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On 6 May 1783, on an impulse, he took the stagecoach to London and spent eight or nine months as a clerk in the employ of a Mr Holland at Gray's Inn. |
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He allows himself a positively romantic impulse with the use of old glass plates, complete with air pockets, to somewhat counter the tendency to be all too picture-perfect. |
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The test campaign will experimentally investigate the propulsive performance of the system in terms of specific impulse, minimum impulse bit and thrust modulation. |
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Near the end of this phase, the sinoatrial node emits an electric impulse. |
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Digital camera people are staying up late at night trying to figure out how they can beat this movement but the camphone is an impulse image device. |
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It is not really a debate about privacy and personal safety versus politics, so much as an impulse towards pride and a rejection of internalized transphobia. |
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