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"defectiveness" Definitions
  1. the condition of having a fault or faults; the condition of not being perfect or complete

21 Sentences With "defectiveness"

How to use defectiveness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "defectiveness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "defectiveness". Mastering all the usages of "defectiveness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The split of the color spectrum directly depends on the defectiveness of the glass.
She sourced the cloth from thrift stores where only about 15% of what is donated ever sees a rack, the rest being thrown away for defectiveness or a simple lack of space.
Occasionally, for Antin is a true wit, these can be somewhat whimsical — in "Warhol: The Silver Tenement," for example, Antin's major summary is that in order for Warhol's beautiful creations to succeed, they must necessarily develop "scuffs," transforming his paintings, films, novels, soap operas, and even his planned "silver tenement" into a kind of "precisely pinpointed defectiveness," a kind of tawdry version of glamour — but by and large, no matter what his own position about the quality or purposefulness of the various art and poetic endeavors upon which he focuses, Antin asks serious questions, challenges set notions, and makes us rethink our assumptions.
Defectiveness is a cline: the Semitic abjads do not indicate all vowels, but there are also alphabets which mark vowels but not tone (e.g. many African languages), or vowel quality but not vowel length (e.g. Latin). Even if English orthography were regularized, the English alphabet would still be incapable of unambiguously conveying intonation, though since this is not expected of scripts, it is not normally counted as defectiveness.
The probability value quantifies the degree of BRCA1/BRCA2 defectiveness. A cut-off probability value should be chosen while maintaining a high sensitivity. These scores can be utilized to guide therapy.
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. They can be distinguished from other verbs by their defectiveness (they do not have participle or infinitive forms) and by their neutralizationQuirk, Randolph, Sidney Greenbaum, Jan Svartvik, & Geoffrey Leech. 1985. A comprehensive grammar of the English language. London: Longman.
The possessor may claim for reimbursement against the third party, who has excited or provoked the animal, or against the possessor of another animal which has caused the excitement or provocation. The injury, which is caused by a building or other work on privately owned land, shall be compensated by the owner of such building or work, unless there is no defective construction or insufficient maintenance in such building or work, or the injury was not caused by the defectiveness or insufficiency, or the owner has exercised reasonable care to prevent such injury. In the case of the preceding sentence, if there is another person who shall be responsible for the injury, the owner making compensation may make a claim for reimbursement against such person. The manufacturer is liable for the injury to another arising from the common use or consumption of his merchandise, unless there is no defectiveness in the production, manufacture, process, or design of the merchandise, or the injury is not caused by the defectiveness, or the manufacturer has exercised reasonable care to prevent the injury.
He was stubborn, self-righteous, inflexible, intolerant—especially of > the French—and quite humourless ... Indeed, one powerful legacy of Haig's > performance is the conviction among the imaginative and intelligent today of > the unredeemable defectiveness of all civil and military leaders. Haig could > be said to have established the paradigm.Paul Fussell. 1975. "The Great War > and Modern Memory".
Though he had no intention of ever learning Sanskrit, reacting to the defectiveness of the available translations, he became motivated to do so. By 1786, Jones' Sanskrit was good enough to decide between conflicting opinions of his pandits by reading the appropriate translation of the appropriate text. He was able to discern whose interpretation of the law was correct. Jones believed there was a fixed body of laws and codes that had been objects of corruption over time.
Defective democracies is a concept that was proposed by the political scientists Wolfgang Merkel, Hans-Jürgen Puhle and Aurel S. Croissant at the beginning of the 21st century to subtilize the distinctions between totalitarian, authoritarian, and democratic political systems. It is based on the concept of embedded democracy. There are four forms of defective democracy, how each nation reaches the point of defectiveness varies. One recurring theme is the geographical location of the nation, which includes the effects of the influence of surrounding nations in the region.
As a young child Tiemessen had a general interest in Science and was planning to become a geologist. However, the concept of mutation in micro-organisms, as taught to her in Grade 11, awoke her interest in biological sciences. While interested in medicine, her fear of needles precluded that avenue of study. Tiemessen went on to do a BSc at the University of the Witwatersrand and she completed her PhD in Virology there in 1992 with a thesis, presented to the Faculty of Medicine, entitled "The Defectiveness of the Subgroup F Adenoviruses in vitro".
Mehr News Agency, 31 October 2008. The address by President Putin also included these comments: > We now clearly see the defectiveness of the monopoly in world finance and > the policy of economic selfishness. To solve the current problem Russia will > take part in changing the global financial structure so that it will be able > to guarantee stability and prosperity in the world and to ensure progress. > The world is seeing the emergence of a qualitatively different geo- > political situation, with the emergence of new centers of economic growth > and political influence.
Murphy supported selective breeding and the compulsory sterilization of those individuals who were considered mentally deficient. She believed that the mentally and socially inferior reproduced more than the "human thoroughbreds" and appealed to the Alberta Legislative Assembly for forced sterilization. In a petition, she wrote that mentally defective children were "a menace to society and an enormous cost to the state ... science is proving that mental defectiveness is a transmittable hereditary condition". She wrote to Minister of Agriculture and Health, George Hoadley that two female "feeble-minded" mental patients had already bred several offspring.
In Arabic, the term 'awrah or 'awrat () derives from the root ‘-w-r which means "defectiveness", "imperfection", "blemish" or "weakness". However, the most common English translation is "nakedness".Wehr Arabic-English Dictionary pg 131 In Persian and Kurdish as well as Urdu, the word 'awrat () derived from the Arabic 'awrah, had been used widely to mean "woman". Consulting Mohammad Moin's dictionary of Persian, 'awrah leads to two significations: # Nakedness # Young womanMoin Dictionary, 1994 Other derivatives range in meaning from blind in one eye, false or artificial, among others.
They, therefore, championed legislation aimed against alcoholism, "mental defectiveness," and prostitution. McClung voiced her views in her 1915 book, In Times Like These: > to bring children into the world, suffering from the handicaps caused by > ignorance, poverty, or criminality of the parents, is an appalling crime > against the innocent and hopeless, and yet one about which practically > nothing is said. Marriage, homemaking, and the rearing of children are left > entirely to chance, and so it is no wonder that humanity produces so many > specimens who, if they were silk stockings or boots, would be marked > "seconds". McClung and others believed the sterilization procedures would prevent further problems.
Early maladaptive schemata are described by Young as broad and pervasive themes or patterns made up of memories, feelings, sensations, and thoughts regarding oneself and one's relationships with others. They are considered to develop during childhood or adolescence, and to be dysfunctional in that they lead to self-defeating behavior. Examples include schemata of abandonment/instability, mistrust/abuse, emotional deprivation, and defectiveness/shame. Schema therapy blends CBT with elements of Gestalt therapy, object relations, constructivist and psychoanalytic therapies in order to treat the characterological difficulties which both constitute personality disorders and which underlie many of the chronic depressive or anxiety-involving symptoms which present in the clinic.
See also , and Leyland & Anthony, "Illegality I", pp. 255–256. a case involving a Muslim schoolgirl who brought legal proceedings against Denbigh High School for disallowing her to wear a jilbāb to school, claiming among other things that her right to manifest her religion protected by Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights had been infringed. Lord Bingham of Cornhill, who delivered the lead judgment in the case, noted that the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights did not focus on the defectiveness of the decision-making process, but only on whether the decision itself violated Convention rights.SB, pp. 115–116, para. 29.
There are two independent classifications for group-testing problems; every group-testing problem is either adaptive or non-adaptive, and either probabilistic or combinatorial. In probabilistic models, the defective items are assumed to follow some probability distribution and the aim is to minimise the expected number of tests needed to identify the defectiveness of every item. On the other hand, with combinatorial group testing, the goal is to minimise the number of tests needed in a 'worst-case scenario' – that is, create a minmax algorithm – and no knowledge of the distribution of defectives is assumed. The other classification, adaptivity, concerns what information can be used when choosing which items to group into a test.
The concept of group testing was first introduced by Robert Dorfman in 1943 in a short report published in the Notes section of Annals of Mathematical Statistics. Dorfman's report – as with all the early work on group testing – focused on the probabilistic problem, and aimed to use the novel idea of group testing to reduce the expected number of tests needed to weed out all syphilitic men in a given pool of soldiers. The method was simple: put the soldiers into groups of a given size, and use individual testing (testing items in groups of size one) on the positive groups to find which were infected. Dorfman tabulated the optimum group sizes for this strategy against the prevalence rate of defectiveness in the population.
In R v Bowen [1996] 2 Cr. App. R. 157, the Court of Appeal held person with a low IQ, short of mental impairment or mental defectiveness, was not necessarily less courageous or less able to withstand threats and pressure than an ordinary person. The relevant test (laid down in R v Graham 1982 1 AER 801) had two elements: > Stuart-Smith LJ gave comprehensive guidance as to which characteristics > might be relevant in the jury's consideration: age, sex, physical disability > or recognised mental illness might limit a person's ability to act in self- > defence, but the fact that the defendant was more vulnerable, timid or > susceptible to threats than a normal person were not characteristics of the > reasonable person. Also excluded would be self-induced incapacity due to > drunkenness or drug-taking (R v Flatt 1996 Crim LR 576).
An example of disability art by a non-disabled person: Alison Lapper Pregnant, 2005, Marc Quinn is disability art because of its context as he reveals the concept of the work was to make "the ultimate statement about disability" An example of disability art by a disabled person: effective, defective, creative, 2000, Yinka Shonibare, shows photos of foetuses from women deemed to be at risk of delivering a defective baby, therefore looking at the relationship of defectiveness and disability. An example of art made by a disabled person that is not disability art: Dorothea, 1995, Chuck Close; relates to his "strict adherence to the self-imposed rules that have guided his art" and "formal analysis and methodological reconfiguration of the human face" therefore conceptually has nothing to do with disability therefore is not disability art. Themes in disability art incorporate with the individual past, and present of how they look at their disadvantages. These disadvantages can be resulted in creating work to better understand them to those who do not.

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