All objects have a wave function which represents the probability of locating that object at a particular point in space. |
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Just over an hour into the battle a strange alien-like object surfaced about thirty yards from the boat and bobbed on the waves. |
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Yes, all this red wine as emblem and object of worship may get a bit much, of course. |
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Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an effective furnace utilizing water gas as a fuel. |
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With the help of an uncultured druid, he must destroy an accursed object in order to avert disaster and save his own life. |
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The object is to take tricks containing aces, 10s, kings, queens and jacks. |
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He expends all his energies reacting to the incessant, queasy lurch of the metallic object confining his limbs. |
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An object in equilibrium will not experience acceleration, and will either remain at rest, or continue moving at a constant velocity. |
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But if that object were to have double the force applied to it, it would double its acceleration. |
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In 1947, an object which crashed near Roswell in the USA was a weather balloon according to the US Army Air Force. |
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His neighbour Eric Gilbert also saw the object and suggested it could be a weather balloon. |
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In cases of this type, the customer's failure to object to the respective entry is considered acquiescence in the charge so made. |
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Because of its weak interaction with atomic nuclei, the neutrino travels freely through any material object and is very difficult to observe. |
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However, there is growing suspicion that the jetliner, which was carrying 179 people, may have hit an object on the runaway before the crash. |
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A typical trick was to coat a gold object with a metal that could be dissolved by an acid. |
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I uttered a strangled yelp of sheer terror, as the unidentified floating object moved jerkily toward me. |
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If money were no longer an object I would have no qualms about leaving London and the south behind and moving up there permanently. |
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Sierra Leone was the object of similar plunder, leaving an acephalous state in rampant disorder only to be stabilised by British Tommies. |
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So when it came to choosing her object of desire, she wanted an attractive object with a practical side. |
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Your client, I should say, had the quickness of mind to object to it. |
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The sensory qualities of such an object are therefore no more than passing accidents, through which its essence is dimly and confusedly perceived. |
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The object of the exercise was to strike the quintain hard enough to knock it all the way over, beyond its projecting braces, onto its shield backs. |
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There seem to be good reasons for utilitarians to be in favor of it, and absolutists cannot object to it on the ground that it involves killing the innocent. |
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Any material object at a temperature above absolute zero radiates energy. |
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The discovery of Quaoar, a magnitude 18.5 object located in the constellation Ophiuchus, was announced on October 7, 2002, at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. |
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However, I do object to bacon as catchphrase, as fad, as arena for testosterone-fueled competition. |
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Dusty books, smoking pipes, tarot cards, and a Ouija board fill the antique furniture positioning any object as a clue. |
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How agenda-driven reporting turned a beekeeping Florida mother of four into an object of right-wing scorn. |
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On both occasions he places the accusative pronoun between the subject and the verb, advancing the object from its natural position and juxtaposing it with the subject. |
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In but a few minutes, we were introduced to the object of Justin's amorous display, the gorgeous and talented Linda Fairstein. |
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Hockney saw the object that would become the bane of office secretaries everywhere as bringing him closer to his art. |
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The scientists further found that the crumpled ball displayed a phenomenon known as hysteresis, in which the effect of forces acting upon an object lags behind its cause. |
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And Bernanke, who came into public life as a Bush appointee, has become a hate object among many on the right. |
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Unconventional warfighters like terrorists are by definition immune to the massive concentrations of power that are the traditional object of a mobilization. |
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Others object to this usage, arguing that this terminology obscures the universality of public worship as a religious phenomenon. |
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His object is to determine how much the business will cost to operate. |
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Those consumers who object to the acerbic taste of garlic can purchase de-odorized garlic or allicin extract. |
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The brightest object depicted is Jupiter which stands near the red giant star Aldebaran in Taurus. |
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It ought not to be our object to angelize, nor to brutalize, but to humanize man. |
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What had silenced her, however, was the enormous demonic object that had apparated in the air beyond the tunnel's exit. |
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The wing would have been a severe obstruction to apprehension of an object on the ground. |
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The aptonym has become nowadays the study object of the science called aptonymy. |
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We describe an associator neural network to localise a recognised object within the visual field. |
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A balian may be consulted in order to determine the location of a lost object or the identity of a thief. |
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The gale force wind blew every blowable object to the north, including things I didn't even know were blowable, like the roof. |
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Still, while most Japanese may not care for the meat, many object to calls to stop whaling. |
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The sole object of his chattiness at table was to prevent a more intimate conversation between herself and her companion. |
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I debated childproofing my house, but decided against, on the basis that any scars or burns would serve as object lessons in restraint. |
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Natural pearls form when a small foreign object gets stuck between the mantle and shell. |
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The tool performs a descendency check to ensure the object is in fact a descendant before allowing the operation to proceed. |
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The diascope passes light through the two-dimensional object and uses a converging projection lens to form an enlarged image on a distant screen. |
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Why is its bring an object to be perpetually plucked and pinched with dubby fingers? |
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The empirical ego is an object in the world, and, insofar as it is experienced and known, it must be subject to worldly causality. |
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The Access object model contains many enums that you can use in your applications. |
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It has been argued that because an object is epistemologically dependent on an observer, it is also physically dependent on that observer. |
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I talk more about expandos in Chapter 10. This means that you can arbitrarily add new properties to an object whenever you want. |
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If an object is moving, it continues to move without turning or changing its speed. |
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Changes in motion must be imposed against the tendency of an object to retain its state of motion. |
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In the absence of net forces, a moving object tends to move along a straight line path indefinitely. |
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In other words, Galileo stated that, in the absence of a force, a moving object will continue moving. |
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This means that the Earth also accelerates towards the object until they collide. |
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In space an object maintains its orbit because of the force of gravity acting upon it. |
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Eventually, the falling object becomes so dim that it can no longer be seen. |
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Any object near the rotating mass will tend to start moving in the direction of rotation. |
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Additionally, there is some observational evidence that this object might possess an event horizon, a feature unique to black holes. |
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The absence of such a signal does, however, not exclude the possibility that the compact object is a neutron star. |
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However, it can be shown from arguments in general relativity that any such object will have a maximum mass. |
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Mabel was a bright, attractive girl who was ten years Bell's junior but became the object of his affection. |
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Cravens killed herself in 1912, after the pianist Walter Rummel, long the object of her affection, married someone else. |
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Though formaldehyde is used as a preservation means, over time, the object being preserved will soon wilt, flake, and wrinkle. |
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It was said to be the largest object ever made out of resin, taking eight attempts to produce due to the resin cracking. |
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Since an object is a different size to different observers, then size is not a quality of the object. |
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His works were the object of his profound and constant study, and supplied in fact the mould in which his whole philosophy was cast. |
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The only proof capable of being given that an object is visible, is that people actually see it. |
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The first case belongs to the metalanguage whereas the second is more likely to belong to the object language. |
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The service is not manifested in a physical object that is independent of the provider. |
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The survival of this object is all the more remarkable as it includes a statuette of the Virgin Mary. |
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Nests are made from seaweed, plants, earth and all types of object that float on the sea. |
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A note is a promise to redeem later for some other object of value, usually specie. |
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Minutes from the War Cabinet meeting were not sent to the King until 28 February, so that he did not have a prior chance to object to the plan. |
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When the clicking sounds hit an object in the water, like a fish or rock, they bounce off and come back to the dolphin as echoes. |
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As the object of interest is approached, the echo becomes booming, and the dolphins adjust by decreasing the intensity of the emitted sounds. |
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This has been a focus in major art institutions internationally and has become an object of academic study and research. |
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The object of tlachtli was to keep the rubber ball from touching the ground while trying to push it to the opponent's endline. |
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The convertible, once the object of his desire, was now the object of his hatred. |
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Each hour La learned new words, all nouns at first, that described each familiar object that appeared oftenest to their view. |
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The object of the onlook is taken to be more than physical, more than just sense-experience, therefore it is meta-physical. |
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Critics like the Humane Society object to the killing of the sea lions, claiming that hydroelectric dams pose a greater threat to the salmon. |
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Contamination may affect a person, a place, an animal, or an object such as clothing. |
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Jupiter's moon Io is the most volcanically active object in the solar system because of tidal interaction with Jupiter. |
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Any solid object produces a wake behind it, leading to fatigue failures, so the turbine is usually positioned upwind of its supporting tower. |
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In nature, pearl oysters produce pearls by covering a minute invasive object with nacre. |
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Over the years, the irritating object is covered with enough layers of nacre to become a pearl. |
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Upon striking an object in the water, the sound waves bounce back at the whale. |
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Unlike the nouns, pronouns have an additional object form, derived from the old dative form. |
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Chausey was for a long time an object of rivalry between England and France. |
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Like mechanical resonance, acoustic resonance can result in catastrophic failure of the object at resonance. |
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The major problem here is the approach of using the domain object directly as the parameter for the action method that allows a user to overpost. |
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The object of loose blockade is to lure the enemy into venturing out but to stay close enough to strike. |
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When these come into contact with an object they are usually reflected or scattered in many directions. |
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The extent to which an object reflects or scatters radio waves is called its radar cross section. |
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This leaves the radar with the problem of deciding where the target object is located. |
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Members of the Naming Committee could object to any name, and if at least a small number of objections were received, the name was refused. |
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Throughout life, this species is regularly curious about the potential of eating virtually any organism or object that they encounter. |
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I had felt that some palpable although invisible object had passed lightly by my person. |
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They will pretend to bury the object if they feel that they are being watched. |
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It does not recognise its prey as such but will try to consume any small, dark coloured, moving object it encounters at night. |
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Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only object in the Universe known to harbor life. |
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Deflection of an object due to the Coriolis force is called the Coriolis effect. |
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For an intuitive explanation of the origin of the Coriolis force, consider an object moving northward in the northern hemisphere. |
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An object that is moving without being dragged along with this rotation travels in a straight motion over the turning Earth. |
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It is described as possibly being the oldest art object yet found in the Americas and may yet provide hope for the Solutrean hypothesis. |
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The object has been claimed by some to represent a Muktaphala, an imaginary fruit bedecked with pearls. |
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After 1587, the sole object of their successors became plunder, on land and sea. |
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Whether it might not, in like manner, be proper to introduce the term percept for the object of perception, I shall not at present inquire. |
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He was the object of several lawsuits, notably related to match fixing at the football club. |
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Passive storage depended on the type of material that the object was made of, and could vary considerably. |
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Such bell pits may also mark the sites of ancient flint mines, where the prime object was to remove flint nodules for stone tool manufacture. |
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Painted totems, wood carving, and show programs often accumulate as a sacred object that passes from one group to the next. |
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Professional anthropological bodies often object to the use of anthropology for the benefit of the state. |
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Some of those who object to releasing fish do not object to killing fish for food. |
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The people came to object to his rule when he failed to recognize the rape of Lucretia, a patrician Roman, at the hands of his own son. |
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Research in several areas looked into the reasons for why one would perceive an object with meaning. |
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According to Kahneman, people evaluate objects they own with higher value than the same object if they do not own it. |
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Whenever there is a pronoun object element, it is next to the verb, as per Vendryes' Restriction. |
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Direct object personal pronouns are infixed between the preverb and the verbal stem. |
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The object is put in front of the verb, which happened in other verses that are not similar to the Greek. |
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I stared at the book. It was pink. I strongly object to the pinkification of all products aimed at women. |
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Passive instruments sense only radiation emitted by the object being viewed or reflected by the object from a source other than the instrument. |
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A planar projection of a three-dimensional object is its projection onto a plane. |
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A common legal substitute for those who conscientiously object to making sacred oaths is to give an affirmation instead. |
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In this phase, opposed states such as birth and death may be encompassed by a single act, object or phrase. |
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With object pooling, a specific instance of a poolable object can be used by multiple clients. |
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He declared that henceforth the moral reform of the Church would be the sole object of his life. |
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A line of position can refer to two different things, either a line on a chart or a line between the observer and an object in real life. |
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His object was to crush the rebels without mercy on the basis that every concession strengthens the opposition. |
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Our English nouns remain unchanged, whether they form the subject or the object of a proposition. |
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Later, in China, a style of decoration based on sinuous plant forms spreading across the object was perfected and most commonly used. |
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Noun phrases are phrases that function grammatically as nouns within sentences, for example as the subject or object of a verb. |
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If subject and object can be identified within a clause, the problem can arise that different orders prevail in different contexts. |
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They remain semantically transitive, typically assuming an object made prominent using a topic marker or mentioned in a previous sentence. |
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Also, if the object of a preposition was marked in the dative case, a preposition may conceivably be located anywhere in the sentence. |
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In Pingelapese, the meaning, use, or shape of an object can be expressed through the use of numerical classifiers. |
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There is a separate set of numerical classifiers that is used when the object is not specified. |
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In morphosyntactic alignment terms, both perform the accusative function, but the accusative object is telic, while the partitive is not. |
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According to traditional Finnish grammars, the accusative is the case of a total object, while the case of a partial object is the partitive. |
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The accusative is used in 51 places, but mainly to mark the object of a verb and to form adverbs and prepositions. |
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If the possessed object is plural, the clitic is e regardless of the gender. |
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In some languages, different possession verbs are used depending on whether the object is animate or inanimate. |
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An archiphoneme is an object sometimes used to represent an underspecified phoneme. |
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The functional motivation for the implementation of DSM and DOM is to avoid ambiguity as to what is subject and object in transitive clauses. |
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In some languages, the definiteness of the object affects the transitivity of the verb. |
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The participles of verbs agree in gender and number with the subject or object in some instances. |
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Difference is made between the case when there is a definite object and the case when the object is indefinite or there is no object at all. |
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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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One rule of thumb for English, however, is that an indirect object is not present unless a direct object is also present. |
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Despite the difficulties with the traditional nomenclature, the terms direct object and indirect object are widespread. |
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The term oblique object is also employed at times, although what exactly is meant varies from author to author. |
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The object of a transitive ergative verb is the subject of the corresponding intransitive ergative verb. |
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When the object of a particle verb is a definite pronoun, it can and usually does precede the particle. |
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The antipassive voice deletes or demotes the object of transitive verbs, and promotes the actor to an intransitive subject. |
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The grammatical role of the object remains unaltered, and thus transitivity may also be used. |
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The cause lies in the necessity to disambiguate the subject and the object by morphological means. |
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The object of a prepositional phrase is to function as an adjective or adverb. |
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A prepositional phrase should not be confused with a sequence formed by the particle and the direct object of a phrasal verb. |
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In this case, whom is used correctly according to the traditional rules, since it is now the object of the verb believe. |
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In English, dummy object pronouns tend to serve an ad hoc function, applying with less regularity than they do as subjects. |
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By 1566, Aldus Manutius the Younger was able to state that the main object of punctuation was the clarification of syntax. |
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It is presumed that at least two transmissions over three generations are required for a practice, belief or object to be seen as traditional. |
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Before going to court, citizens must usually first object to the decision with the administrative body who made it. |
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A train approached, and in the darkness an object protruding from one of the cars suddenly struck Tompkins knocking him to the ground. |
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The children watched in rapt attention as the magician produced object after object from his hat. |
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Wood can be dated by carbon dating and in some species by dendrochronology to make inferences about when a wooden object was created. |
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They work by destroying the object they hit and then dispersing into a relatively harmless powder. |
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The Red Rectangle is only one example of an infrared object that is detectable in the infrared because of grain emission. |
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The value of a reference variable is the memory address at which the data associated with the object is stored. |
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The referer portion of a logfile line contains the full URL of the page or object visited before the current one. |
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The object of collective bargaining is for the employer and the union to come to an agreement over wages, benefits, and working conditions. |
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The object of education is the cultivation of benevolence, otherwise known as Ren. |
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Their ideal vacation experience made the rester the focus of care, the object of medical, cultural, and culinary attention. |
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If she still wishes to marry him at the end of the summer, they agree that they will not object to the marriage. |
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On investigation, the object moved away and the farmer reported the incident to the police. |
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The height of the stack was exaggerated by early writers, and it was also regularly described as an ancient object of veneration. |
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Gaze is almost never straight ahead but varies between downgaze, sidegaze, and upgaze. Correct fixation of an object does not take place. |
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Neverthless, you sons of motherless goats, the object of the game is to move your game piece around the board, and be the first to finish. |
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An alternative way to stellify the planet may be to not collapse Jupiter, but instead to introduce a collapsed object into its core. |
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Your failure to object to the request resulted in you tacitly approving the change. |
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The telespectator has no material object to watch or possess, only the experience of watching fleeting images on the screen. |
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For an object to be throwable, it must be directly or indirectly derived from the Throwable class. |
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While many companies object to the process of trademark erosion, there is little that can be done to prevent it. |
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The object of scorn in the films are not transpersons, but the bigoted transphobes who are made to look like fools. |
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The first parameter is the object that you want to tween, and the second parameter is the amount of time you want it to take in seconds. |
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The result of the advise method is an advise object called objAdviseTextbox1 that you can use later if you need to unadvise for the event. |
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I write to-night lest my delay appear tedious to the dear and deserving object of my most undissembled love. |
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It is in the unusableness of the object that we come to see the object in its isolation. |
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The urning loves and deifies the male object of his affections, just as a man idealizes the woman he loves. |
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The appetible object moves the appetitive power to have an intention toward the object. |
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On Friday, the NASA space probe Dawn entered orbit around Ceres, the largest object in the asteroid belt. |
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But the military soon backtracked and claimed the object they had retrieved was a weather balloon that had crashed on a nearby ranch. |
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Bhatt has not only deepened our understanding of responsibility but also provided an object lesson to the world on the power of Ahimsa. |
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John Wylam, vicar at Thockrington Church, close to the Northside Farm site, wrote to the council to object to the anemometers. |
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The path of an animated object can also be extracted as a spline object for use in other animations. |
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In addition, they say it is the only object ever observed to have a predominantly quadrupole magnetic field. |
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The topics include basic object commands, modifying objects, linear and angular dimensioning, dynamic blocks, and annotative objects. |
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Where are the doctors who object to the way antiabortion lawmakers are interfering with the practice of medicine? |
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In a spherically symmetric case, matter cannot fall onto a central object when the radiation pressure exceeds the gravity. |
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Indeed, what makes an antique an antique is not merely how old it is, as if antiqueness were a property or quality of the object itself. |
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The journal bearing is a fundamental mechanical component that supports and positions an object while allowing that object to rotate. |
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The transfer of heat from a hot object by means of upward hot air currents from the object, is due to free convection. |
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The object of the snood swivels, in which the gangings are so easily adjustable, is to save time in removing the fish and in baiting the hooks. |
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The grammatical cases nominative and accusative are used for subject resp. direct object in many languages, including Latin. |
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The subject constituent precedes the verb and the object constituent follows it. |
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Securing the same succession in Scotland became the primary object of English strategic thinking towards Scotland. |
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There is no simple way to define precisely a complex arrangement of parts, however homely the object may appear to be. |
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Under Charlemagne, the Saxon Wars had as their chief object the conversion and integration of the Saxons into the Frankish empire. |
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All aspects of Aristotle's philosophy continue to be the object of active academic study today. |
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The object of the vision is successively sexualized, incestualized, made into an originary source and presence, and lost. |
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In September 1494 Charles invaded Italy with 25,000 men, and attained his object by 22 February 1495, virtually unopposed. |
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James's Jesuit confessor, Edward Petre, was a particular object of Protestant ire. |
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Whittle met with Cripps to object personally to the nationalisation efforts and how they were being handled, but to no avail. |
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The landowning citizens of the county will object to the increased property tax, but those who rent won't care. |
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The packers and consumers object to the short, thick animals because of their excess lardiness and to the rangy ones because of their large cuts. |
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I think that is what we principally object to, a continuous layerization of authorities. |
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While newcomers to the QL cult won't mind, Leapers know their show and will surely object to the alterations. |
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Vertical takeoffs and landings are riskier because of threats such as foreign object damage. |
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To this day, Turing machines are a central object of study in theory of computation. |
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For example, Jehovah's Witnesses object to blood transfusions due to their belief that blood is sacred. |
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Starting from knowing how an object is accelerating, we use calculus to derive its path. |
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Another tenderer, Veolia, announced they will object to the decision of the province. |
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Whichever object the child shows most interest in is said to reveal the child's path and fortunes in adulthood. |
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The position of a noun in a German sentence has no bearing on its being a subject, an object or another argument. |
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It soon became the one absorbing object of Henry's desires to secure an annulment. |
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Ancestor veneration leads many to object to the archaeological excavation of human remains and their subsequent display in museums. |
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Some schools, parents and political parties object to the new legal framework. |
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Petersburg and the Western Stone in the Western Wall as the heaviest object moved by humans without powered machinery. |
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But as the French Republic became Napoleon's Empire, Napoleon became not the inspiration for nationalism, but the object of its struggle. |
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This was especially so in their application to the book, which was a new type of object for both traditions, as well as to metalwork. |
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Michelangelo, in neither his painting nor his sculpture demonstrates any interest in the observation of any natural object except the human body. |
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Wyatt's professed object was to experiment with the English tongue, to civilise it, to raise its powers to those of its neighbours. |
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Primary qualities are essential for the object in question to be what it is. |
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Therefore, its primary qualities dictate what the object essentially is, while its secondary qualities define its attributes. |
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But, the habit once formed, nothing is easier than to transfer it from one object to another. |
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A mathom is an object you don't want but can't stand to give away or throw away. Do you have a mathom? Most of us do. |
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For example, an afflicted person may look at a larger object such as a basketball and perceive it as if it were the size of a golf ball. |
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Some transitions between reels were hidden by having a dark object fill the entire screen for a moment. |
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The Museum has also argued that the British Museum Act of 1963 legally prevents any object from leaving its collection once it has entered it. |
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The object of the game is to score by getting the ball into the opposing goal. |
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I do not see why Dr. Hensley should object to the internal administration of Variolinum any more than to that of lachesis, mephitis, etc. |
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The object of the game is to play the ball in such a way that the opponent is not able to play a valid return. |
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The objective of the game is to score more points than one's opponent by potting object balls in the correct order. |
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In all, players shoot a cue ball so that it makes contact with the opponent's cue ball as well as the object ball. |
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But in every instance the commonplace thing is transformed by metaphor, the figure that moves the object toward the metaquotidian. |
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The object was for players to throw sticks at the head in order to break the pipe. |
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The marriages were even performed using African customs, which Europeans did not object to, seeing how important the connections were. |
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Monikers are often composed from other monikers to allow object hierarchies to be navigated based on a textual description of a path. |
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An object continues to do whatever it happens to be doing unless a force is exerted upon it. |
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The objects found in these researches are in the museum, the most notable being a great basalt bull, probably once an object of cult in the Serapeum. |
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When we see a dice, we see an object which has six sides, some of which can be seen from where we are, others can be seen if we twist it or move around it. |
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The atlases can be used to reconstruct, or deformably register, the surface model of an object from just two to four 2D x-ray projections of the object. |
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It's hard to tell the difference between a 5-gigayear, 8-gigayear, and 10-gigayear cluster for such a sparse object as this unless you've got very high-quality photometry. |
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If the object is moving either toward or away from the transmitter, there is a slight equivalent change in the frequency of the radio waves, caused by the Doppler effect. |
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I sprang back, giving utterance to a cry, which brought Watkins to me, and the two of us stared at the grewsome object and then about into the wavering shadows. |
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Use of who here is normal, and to replace it with whom would be grammatically incorrect, since the pronoun is the subject of was, not the object of say. |
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Passive radar depends upon the object sending a signal to the receiver. |
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Speed is the change in distance to an object with respect to time. |
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Not only is the power deflected safely to the other side, but there is virtually no change to the object caused by the radiation pressure, unlike a mirror or an absorber. |
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According to the bill whosever makes any sound or gesture, utters any word, exhibits any object or demands sexual favour from women at workplace would face the punishment. |
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Consequently, according to Aristotle, if it is not the case that some universal can be predicated to an object that exists at some period of time, then it does not exist. |
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Moreover, this need often manifests itself in the young child's selection of a cuddly or huggable doll or stuffed animal, called a transitional object by child psychologists. |
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I cannot now say whether the anemia of that background figure, its apparitional hyalescence, as it were, belongs to the faded memory or to the remembered object itself. |
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All technology uses energy to transform the material into a desirable object or uses some form of mechanics combined with another form to make something better. |
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The click rate increases when approaching an object of interest. |
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A phrase is deemed to be a word or a combination of words that appears in a set syntactic position, for instance in subject position or object position. |
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That is, the syntactic functions that they fulfill are those of the arguments of the main clause predicate, particularly those of subject, object and predicative expression. |
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We have no specific concept of the noumenon, but think of it merely as whatever the object may be apart from the manner in which our knowledge exhibits it. |
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Playboy had recently become an object of mainstream popularity, a nudie magazine with literary content that smart men and women could peruse without embarrassment. |
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In all cases, the object of firing is to permanently harden the wares and the firing regime must be appropriate to the materials used to make them. |
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It then sends a message to the table updation object to create a new entry in the track table using the relevant information extracted from the flight plan table. |
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Mary Jane had been the object of Peter's affection for years. |
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In Miss Jemima's eyes an autograph letter of her sister, Miss Pinkerton, was an object of as deep veneration as would have been a letter from a sovereign. |
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Traditional theories of sentence structure divide the simple sentence into a subject and a predicate, whereby the object is taken to be part of the predicate. |
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Some organizations, such as the Humane Society of the United States and World Animal Protection, object to keeping pinnipeds and other marine mammals in captivity. |
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Rather, Grinnell is an uncompromising aggrandizer of the object and the product, almost like a nincteenth-century dandy in his embrace of surface and cosmetic finery. |
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A prepositional object is one that is introduced by a preposition. |
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For instance, McMullen et al, documented cases in which neurological patients had intact face recognition but found to have non-face object agnosia. |
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In the OO world, the word is to hide the structure of the data, and expose only functionality. OO designers expose an object to the world in terms of the services it provides. |
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Free and independent electresses might object to be set in the forefront of the battle to shield their husbands and brothers from consabulary buckshot. |
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This object we accomplish by the use of the mechanism illustrated in the annexed drawings, in which Figure l is a perspective view of the wheelbench and the tank. |
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According to these second and third ways, the Devil or man can incite to sin either by offering an appetible object to the senses or by persuading the reason. |
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The postposition manzi 'from inside' follows its object Tayri. |
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The object of the preposition will often have more than one modifier. |
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His foxly object was attained. The attention of the hunters was diverted. |
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Because of the Angevin control of England in 1154, it was pointless to object to the superiority of the overall Angevin forces over the Capetian ones. |
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The liturgy is almost always performed in front of an object or objects of veneration and accompanied by offerings of light, incense, water and food. |
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Object resumptive pronouns corresponding to arguments must always occur...irregardless of the presence and position of the full coindexed object nps. |
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General Baird was directed to scour this grove and dislodge the enemy, but on his advancing with this object on the night of the 5th, he found the tope unoccupied. |
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She was a special object of attack by the inventors of the Popish Plot. |
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In the 19th century the European nobility discovered among others the red deer antlers as perfect object for fashioning their manors and hunting castles. |
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The main object of the journey was to paint Ruskin's portrait. |
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Neither of these has been the object of a solemn definition. |
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