For flat keys, again begin with the last flat and form a major triad with that note as the root. |
|
A Pythagorean triad is a set of numbers that would represent the sides of a right triangle. |
|
Rotman textually embodies mathematical practice by delineating a triad of subject-positions. |
|
In short, allocation of elements within the mobility triad is fragmented and stovepiped and needs a quick fix to achieve efficiency. |
|
Some patients never develop the full classical triad of hyperpigmentation, hypotension, and hyponatraemia. |
|
The initial laboratory results indicated a diagnostic triad of thrombocytopenia, hemolytic anemia, and acute renal failure. |
|
At a higher power, the presence of an interlobular bile duct identifies the structure as an abnormal triad. |
|
Even more fundamental to the old man-young man-woman triad is the connection between age and passion. |
|
This triad is the area within the psyche that is capable of self-consciousness and choice. |
|
The information assurance triad is composed of authentication, integrity and confidentiality. |
|
Another possible alternative is maximizing the use of another element of the strategic triad to reduce the airlift footprint. |
|
Reiter's syndrome is a type of reactive arthritis that specifically refers to the classic triad of arthritis, conjunctivitis and urethritis. |
|
For example, lithium, sodium, and potassium comprised a triad of soft, highly reactive metals. |
|
The new father was a former boss of a Chinese triad gang, and all his fellow gangsters were bound to show up. |
|
The joint operation had been aimed at a triad gang faction which was thought to be monopolising the illicit fuel trade. |
|
The upshot of all this was that he had come to the attention of one of the main triad gangs. |
|
The new gable roof, parallel to the existing nave and a Diocesan Center, composes a triad of related forms. |
|
The police arrested about 50 triad members for the crime of illegal assembly. |
|
This probably accounts for the tierce de Picardie, the practice of ending a composition in a minor mode upon a major triad. |
|
Hemolytic-uremic syndrome is characterized by the triad of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia and acute renal injury. |
|
|
It oversees the Army's prepositioned stocks and is a component of the strategic mobility triad of airlift, sealift, and global prepositioning. |
|
Musical literacy requires knowledge of major and minor scales, key signatures, intervals and triad spelling. |
|
Harmonically, the added notes are needed to provide a major or minor triad for each note of the diatonic scale. |
|
Anti-social behaviour, feral youth and weakening of communities form a triad of concerns that cuts across politics. |
|
In major keys, the supertonic triad is a minor triad, because the interval between the supertonic and the subdominant is a minor 3rd. |
|
First inversion of the submediant triad occurs primarily as a tonic chord with resolved or unresolved appoggiatura. |
|
As many people present atypically with coeliac disease as present with the more classical triad of steatorrhoea, diarrhoea, and weight loss. |
|
The active site of trypsin involves a catalytic triad consisting of the amino acids serine, histidine and aspartic acid. |
|
Occasionally the reader is treated to a rare triad of Welsh wisdom from the ancient and fragile Grey Book of Glynsabon. |
|
First, the submarine-launched ballistic system was recognized as the most survivable element in the triad of strategic nuclear deterrents. |
|
While they can all occur independently, the interrelationship between the three parts of the triad is such that one component will affect another. |
|
Whether the root be a perfect monosyllable, or a duad, or even triad, formed on the monosyllable, it is the same thing with respect to the origin of the root. |
|
So the Nyāya-Vaiśeṣikas need to give a rational justification for the perceptibility of a triad. |
|
Buddha triad is a group of Buddhas or a Buddha and Bodhisattvas. |
|
There are forty-nine non-excluded triad and tetrad forms, and ten of them have two names. |
|
Las Vegas Sands finally broke with Cheung in 2010 following a Reuters report, based on the work of the IRP, identifying his triad links. |
|
As early as 1992, a US Senate report named Cheung as a leader of the Wo Hop To triad based on intelligence from the FBI and Hong Kong police. |
|
This venture is based on the triad of a knowledge economy, full employment and renovation of the social state. |
|
It is this very triad that is at the basis of the major fields of study offered by the Department. |
|
I'd like to therefore address what I would refer to as an inextricable triad. |
|
|
India proposes the creation of a triad of forces on land, sea and in the air. |
|
Organised crime and triad involvement in large scale corruption of senior Government officials has been acknowledged to be serious. |
|
Civilization's interest in controlling waste function does not automatically produce a concomitant interest in the Freudian triad of cleanliness, order, and beauty. |
|
The difference is that Beethoven lifts the upper two notes of the triad, leaving the bass to follow belatedly, while Elgar jacks up the bass first, and the upper notes follow. |
|
This rare syndrome was classically diagnosed by a triad of findings. |
|
The presence of a split cord malformation in a patient with Currarino's triad suggests that the two disorders share a common embryogenetic pathway. |
|
It is still based on maintaining thousands of hydrogen bombs in a triad of missiles, subs, and bombers. |
|
Although a triad arrangement of images seems possible for images of this size, the iconographic basis he offers is highly unusual and the proposal seems forced. |
|
The second evil force refers to the triad organizations on mainland China. |
|
Articles focusing on specific configurations of behavior and disease, such as the female athlete triad, were excluded. |
|
Therefore, chorioamnionitis is frequently classified as 'possible', when the main sign is fever, and 'definite', when the classical triad of fever, left-shift in the WBC and lower uterine tenderness is present. |
|
We therefore welcome the clear language of the Luxembourg EU Council Presidency and its commitment to the triad of economic, environmental and social issues. |
|
But the impact of the NPR goes beyond these current reductions in stating that even greater reductions in nuclear weapons should be possible once the new triad is fully in place. |
|
My country views nuclear disarmament as part of a triad, together with the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons and the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. |
|
The executive committee triad also includes Keith Ekenseair and Greg Flesher. |
|
As with a couple, the key to making a triad work is communication. |
|
Since we require such an interval to be expressed as a major seventh and not as a minor ninth, a triad with a half step has only three inversions, and a tetrad with a half step has only twelve inversions. |
|
Where these communities did not offer some of the interventions or that there were very few clients who had participated in particular interventions because of limited demand, dyad or triad interviews were conducted. |
|
A transitive triad has all three participants connected, while an intransitive triad has an open link. |
|
Osteology of the coronoid process with clinical correlation to coronoid fractures in terrible triad injuries. |
|
|
It starts by leaping ever higher up the tonic triad, like a youngster trying to grab a prize just above his reach, only to tumble into a heap on the floor. |
|
Citing a lack of evidence, a Macau judge is reported to have dropped arrest warrants against the suspected head of the 14K triad and four of his associates. |
|
Scientific studies of the last several years have shown that weight is not necessarily the most important element of the lifestyle-weight-health triad. |
|
Effects of pesticide exposure, nutrient enrichment, and depositional sediment accumulation can be estimated using an integrated differential triad response method. |
|
The responsibility for day-to-day management is to be left to the triad, while departments are to continue to be responsible for operating their systems. |
|
India attaches great importance to the Disarmament Commission, which is the deliberative leg of the triad of the disarmament machinery put in place by consensus at the first special session on disarmament. |
|
This approach should be based on universal principles that reinforce peacebuilding, i.e. the triad of: respect for human rights, the fight against impunity and reparation for victims and their families. |
|
We will form a triad, if I may use the term, a legal and educational triad through which the French and the new Quebec civil codes can lead the way in the war against discrimination. |
|
They include the allegation that Las Vegas Sands paid what amounted to bribes intended to influence the Macau authorities and the government in Beijing and that the casino did business with a notorious triad leader. |
|
Web standards support specifying colour values in the full range that can be expressed as a triad of three numbers, ranging from 0 to 255 in decimal or 00 to FF in hex. |
|
An intermediate form, Hand-Shuller-Christian disease, is composed of the triad of calvarial lesions, diabetes insipidus, and exophthalmos. |
|
Thus, in terms of motion the Areopagite preserved the basic triad of mone, proodos, and epistrophe. |
|
In addition, Huntington's disease manifests clinically as a triad of choreic movements, cognitive decline, and psychiatric syndromes. |
|
Gronas draws primarily on cognitive poetics, cultural memory theory, and memetics, but memetics is the dominant member of this triad. |
|
The military authorities, however, regarded Polaris as but one part of a nuclear triad including ICBMs and bombers, each with its own function. |
|
The USAF, with two thirds of the nuclear triad, also had requirements for a more accurate and reliable navigation system. |
|
Harmonies range from the common triad to parallel fourths and fifths and dissonant harmonic progressions. |
|
As such, iron, cobalt, and nickel are sometimes grouped together as the iron triad. |
|
Three components were identified by the application of factor analysis and these followed the classic triad of HVS related complaints. |
|
The clinical triad of Horner's syndrome consists of miosis, ptosis, and anhydrosis. |
|
|
It is hard to believe he was once one of Taiwan's most feared triad leaders, or that he was incarcerated in a maximum-security American penitentiary for ten years on drug-trafficking charges. |
|
One could scarely imagine a more festive triad for the Christmas season. |
|
The classic triad of neurogenic shock includes hypotension, bradycardia and hypothermia. |
|
Her triad helps us understand what postmodernism is doing to us. |
|
Zinner syndrome is a triad of mesonephric duct abnormality comprising of unilateral renal agenesis, ipsilateral seminal vesicle cyst, and ejaculatory duct obstruction. |
|
If our polyamorous triad wishes to have children and to co-parent as three, a careful co-parenting agreement could attempt to protect the party who is not a biological parent. |
|
Clinical manifestations include pain, Horner syndrome, and cerebral or retinal ischemia, but the complete triad is seen in less than one-third of patients. |
|
And finally, in the 'outer' level of the triad narrative, Robert Walden is isolated at sea, apart from his sister, who is left formulaically at home. |
|
The first level, or Ursatz, unfolds the tonic triad contrapuntally in the top voice by stepwise descent and harmonically in the bass by a three-part triadic arpeggiation. |
|
The second feature missing in Alegant's account is the minor triad for P forms or major triad for I forms that occurs as the final trichord in Dallapiccola's row. |
|
Peripheral vascular disease and Virchow's triad for thrombogenesis. |
|
For example, the formal name for a thirty-second note in music, DEMISEMIQUAVER, is an Albuquerque word due to the appearance of the underlined triad EMI in two locations. |
|
Between 10 and 70 per cent of these diagnosed children present in DKA, a metabolic derangement characterised by the triad of hyperglycaemia, acidosis, and ketonuria. |
|
It stands between choice and action, making a reciprocative causal triad. |
|
For example, the formal name for a thirty-second note in music, DEMI SEMI QUAVER, is an Albuquerque word due to the appearance of the underlined triad EMI in two locations. |
|
And the triad is made complete by she who is violenced by him. |
|
Known as sequential vascular clamping, it consists of the placement of occlusive vascular clamps across the suprarenal cava, suprahepatic cava, and the portal triad. |
|
Other diagnoses associated with catecholamine-secreting tumors that do not appear to be inherited are the Carney triad, cholelithiasis, and renal artery stenosis. |
|