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257 Sentences With "summarise"

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

But whether or not there are any plans to summarise trends is a different question.
A figure showing new metabolic pathways in a cell, for example, may summarise hundreds of experiments.
But let's not summarise any longer, let's get the microscope out and examine the fuck outta this.
Here we summarise the best ones in favour of Leave, to help voters who are wavering or undecided.
Let me summarise again what we are doing: All of this will create a new, better Deutsche Bank.
So it seems like a good idea to summarise some of the themes which have dominated this blog.
The downsides of MMTMMT's critics far outnumber its proponents, and their arguments are too numerous to summarise here.
But, for the sake of posterity, and to help illustrate some points later on, I'll summarise recent events.
HILLEL THE ELDER, a first-century religious leader, was asked to summarise the Torah while standing on one leg.
S. relations and am willing to work with President Trump to summarise the experience of the development of China-U.
"We summarise all interested matches and forward them to the client, asking who they would like to meet," says Kenyon.
But instead of transmitting back every last bit of image data, the satellite will summarise what the user requests as useful information.
Lauren: I would like to summarise my own by saying that I, personally, would pay Harry Styles to slap me in my face.
"Cautious is the right way to summarise the start we're seeing here in trading," said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets.
"We should summarise good experiences and practices in the pilot areas, and accelerate the expansion of replicable experiences to a wider scope," Chen said.
"Betting is the market's attempt to summarise the polls and adjust for all of their fragilities," said Insight Investment currency fund manager Paul Lambert.
Perhaps the best way to summarise the Singularity comes from the title of a book published in 2012: the Rapture of the Nerds (pictured).
Most are probably passing fads; a "word of the year" should ideally both summarise the feel of the 12 months and have a chance of surviving.
Vestager said the three experts, appointed for a year, would summarise their views on the future challenges of digitisation in a report by the end of March 2019.
Note that the science I summarise is about what is happening right now, rather than models or theories of complex adaptive systems which the reviewer would have preferred.
In a world characterised by steadily decreasing attention spans and rampantly increasing information onslaughts, the temptation to simplify and summarise just to keep on top of newsflow is immense.
Failure to reach such a consensus would produce what is called a "Chair's summary" of the meeting, a format that allows the host to summarise their view of the proceedings.
They are responsible for checking voters' identity cards, counting ballots and signing off on tally sheets that summarise the results, which are transmitted by machine to the supreme electoral tribunal (TSE).
It's the type of TV that lengthy, Reddit-based dissection was made for, in other words — and the sort of show that's very hard to summarise in just a few sentences.
"To summarise we have found two cases of small heads linked to Zika, the first cases in Thailand," Prasert Thongcharoen, an adviser to the Department of Disease Control, told reporters in Bangkok.
So to summarise: Instead of thousands and thousands of people, think of a great summer event with 1,1503 of the most interesting and useful people in the industry, including key investors and leading entrepreneurs.
Colbert went on the summarise Rowling's quote about the "sexual dimension" to Dumbledore and Grindelwald's relationship, before adding that it had fan's pumped for the sequel: Harry Potter and the Cauldron of Too Much Information.
"Everyday data sources such as email, messaging platforms, web applications and IoT devices generate vast amounts of data, most of which lacks structure and is difficult to aggregate and summarise," says Red Sift co-founder and CEO Rahul Powar.
So to summarise, Costa's argument is that all of their coffee cups have a gap left at the top for safety reasons (you can see the gap when the lid's taken off of the large cup in the video).
HB: I'd summarise it as "consequential companies that will have meaningful impact on society": we're unusual in that our funds don't come from wealthy family trusts – they're the retirement savings of 500,000 municipal workers – people who make Ontario society function.
Their sound lands somewhere between the energetic scrappiness of bands like Joyce Manor and the syrupy sweetness of 90s bands like Letters To Cleo, with a little math rock twist thrown in, but to summarise using the modern parlance: it bangs.
To summarise, he argues that an influential defence researcher named Bruce W Bennett who promotes the method of culturally undermining Kim Jong-Un saw the potential in Seth Rogen's film The Interview, and points out that Bennett is listed as an advisor on the film.
It feels like a waste of words to summarise the latest episode of Keeping Up With Kanye vs Taylor—a legendary and fluctuating feud dating back to the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards—because if you're reading this, you already know what went down.
"We argue that people are starting to self report incidents that they witness via social media quicker than people are phoning 999 in some cases, so in being able to cluster and summarise these self-reports we can augment traditional event detection methods so help the policing services," he said.
"To summarise the tone of the various comments so far from officials (anonymous or not), we would say that at least a degree of doubt as to the ECBs commitment to restarting the APP (Asset Purchase Programme) in September should be priced in," ING fixed income strategists wrote in a research note.
"To summarise the tone of the various comments so far from officials (anonymous or not), we would say that at least a degree of doubt as to the ECB's commitment to restarting the APP (Asset Purchase Programme) in September should be priced in," ING fixed income strategists wrote in a research note.
To summarise, a strong resurgence of Latvian national identity had started.
The below tables summarise the results by county as used by the Boundary Commission for England at the time of the last boundary review.
London: Routledge, 2000. In What's Wrong With the World, G. K. Chesterton used the phrase to summarise his own distributist opinions.G. K. Chesterton, What's Wrong With the World.
To summarise, there may be insufficient trials to suppress the effects of the initial choice, and especially for large (but finite) systems the convergence might be very slow.
To summarise, here are the pros and cons of silk and metal-nylon strings:The pros and cons of the two types of strings is relative to the players experience.
A key component of the podcast is asking the guest comedian to summarise the episode in question and also discuss whether the review would be considered 'punching down' on Rob Schneider.
Executive, the highest level. It meets once a year to summarise work of the past year and to establish the objectives for the coming year. The chairmanship of the committee changes annually.
It is also a vehicle for the President to summarise the accomplishments and plans of his/her programme of government both for a particular year and until the end of their term of office.
In most cases historians tend to summarise the issue by saying that the agreement assigned Vilnius to Lithuania and Polish attack violated it. However, Piotr Łossowski argued that such summaries are inadequate and misleading.
Goffredo becomes a tenor, Armida a contralto, the Herald and the Magician become basses. Dean and Knapp summarise the 1731 revisions as "a striking illustration of the seeming vandalism with which Handel could treat his works in revival".
Green along with Stephen G. Davies and Michael Mingos compiled a set of rules that summarise where nucleophilic additions will occur on pi ligands known as the Green–Davies–Mingos rules. His former doctoral students include Vernon C. Gibson.
The Central Intelligence Agency was created to collate, analyse and summarise the raw intelligence collected by the other departments. US agencies which focus on the collection of raw intelligence include the National Reconnaissance Office and the National Security Agency.
The ISEW and GPI summarise economic welfare by means of a single figure according to the same logic by which GDP summarises economic output into a single figure. Beside economic issues, social and environmental issues in monetary terms are included.
Michelena 1971, p. 53; none of the works consulted specifies what Urquijo’s mothertongue was Contemporary scholars summarise his work as discreet and modest but effective,Lizundia Askondo 2007, p. 108 possibly constrained by his excess self-criticism;Lizundia Askondo 2007, p.
Fan and Chen summarise four spiritual, cosmological, and moral concepts: Tian (), Heaven, the source of moral meaning; qi (), the breath or substance of which all things are made; the practice of jingzu (), the veneration of ancestors; bao ying (), moral reciprocity.
Optimist International sets out statements of mission, vision and purpose. These summarise its goals to aid and encourage youth development. In 1922, the Optimist Creed was adopted as the official creed of the organization. The Optimist Creed was developed by Christian D. Larson.
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2017, Issue 9. Art. No.: CD011479. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD011479.pub2. Whilst these reviews are robust, they are limited in their ability to summarise change because many of the studies are not measuring the same outcomes in the same way.
Systematic reviews and meta-analysis are essential to summarise evidence relating to efficacy and safety of healthcare interventions accurately and reliably. The clarity and transparency of these reports, however, are not optimal. Poor reporting of systematic reviews diminishes their value to clinicians, policy makers, and other users.
Houses in Djenné with Toucouleur-style façades. From a postcard by Edmond Fortier published in 1906. Lying south-east of the present town is the archaeological site of Djenné- Djeno or Djoboro. provide a brief history of Djenné up to the 19th century and summarise the available historical sources.
In this issue, we explore how science works and look at how statistics can help us summarise data, see whether our figures are significant and put our findings into context. We explore probability, significance and risk, and look at how statistics and numbers can be misreported and misrepresented.
" Structural reconstruction. Oxford (1982). However, this has been considered too neat an explanation for all the evidence. Anne and Gary Marshall summarise the situation: > "One of the main problems in Anglo-Saxon archaeology has been to account for > the apparent uniqueness of the English timber structures of the period.
Accident reports provide a very detailed analysis of one specific accident and recommendations to parties involved. Annual Safety digests summarise the type of accidents and lessons which can be learnt. This is now classified by vessel type. Safety flyers are issued if an investigation reveals an urgent general risk.
A fitness function is a particular type of objective function that is used to summarise, as a single figure of merit, how close a given design solution is to achieving the set aims. Fitness functions are used in genetic programming and genetic algorithms to guide simulations towards optimal design solutions.
As well as the collections from various periods of history, the museum also houses the results of the Durham City Survey. The Survey was undertaken by the University, in collaboration with English Heritage from 1988 to 1991 in order to summarise all known sites and finds within the greater Durham area.
A new National Counter Terrorism Centre (NCTC) was proposed to be set up by the then-Home Minister P. Chidambaram as an office to collect, collate, summarise, integrate, analyse, co-ordinate and report all information and inputs received from various intelligence agencies, state police departments, and other ministries and their departments.
Paper 1 accounts for half of the final grade. Paper 2 comprises one or two passages of continuous prose. Candidates are required to demonstrate their ability to comprehend, explain, infer, evaluate and summarise within a time-span of 90 minutes. The sections tested include short answer questions, summary and an application question.
The Final is a compilation album released in 1986 to summarise the career of British pop duo Wham!. The album was not initially released in North America, where Wham!'s third and final studio album Music from the Edge of Heaven was released instead. Six songs from that album appear on this compilation.
Since both and are between and , they must be equal. Therefore, the terms , , ..., when reduced modulo must be distinct. To summarise: when we reduce the numbers , , ..., modulo , we obtain distinct members of the sequence , , ..., . Since there are exactly of these, the only possibility is that the former are a rearrangement of the latter.
She is an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellow. She was awarded an Office of Naval Research young investigator award in 2012. In 2013 she was awarded a Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence (PAMI) Young Researcher Award. She is working on techniques to get computers to watch and summarise videos for easy viewing.
It can be argued that almost all methods require some kind of definition of the matching criteria. The difference is only whether you summarise over a local image region first and then compare the summarisation (such as feature based methods), or you compare each pixel first (such as squaring the difference) and then summarise over a local image region (block base motion and filter based motion). An emerging type of matching criteria summarises a local image region first for every pixel location (through some feature transform such as Laplacian transform), compares each summarised pixel and summarises over a local image region again.Rui Xu, David Taubman & Aous Thabit Naman, 'Motion Estimation Based on Mutual Information and Adaptive Multi-scale Thresholding', in Image Processing, IEEE Transactions on , vol.
Developments of his Protestant world chronology were endorsed in an influential preface of Philipp Melanchthon (published 1557). The theory was topical in the 1550s. Johann Sleidan in his De quatuor imperiis summis (1556) tried to summarise the status of the "four monarchies" as historical theory; he had already alluded to it in previous works.
Various reviews summarise the findings (Deco et al. 2011, 2013; Kringelbach et al. 2015) and highlight the impact of this new approach. Jirsa and his group have contributed to the conception and development of connectome-based modelling and developed a range of technical tools since the early 2000s (Jirsa & Kelso 2000; Jirsa et al.
This is a list of Christian denominational positions on homosexuality. The issue of homosexuality and Christianity is a subject of ongoing theological debate within and between Christian denominations and this list seeks to summarise the various official positions. Within denominations, many members may hold somewhat differing views on and even differing definitions of homosexuality.
The music, which has been preserved largely through a conducting score prepared by Telemann, reflects Handel's debt to Keiser and displays a variety of traditions: a French-style overture, German-influenced orchestration, and Italianate vocal writing. Dean and Knapp summarise the score as "very uneven in style, quality and technique, with abundant promise but intermittent fulfilment".
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > In the absence of King Knútr of Sjóland, King Ásmundr of Húnaland betroths > himself to Knút's daughter, Signý. Meanwhile another young king, the fleet- > of-foot Sigurðr of Valland, obtains the father's promise of Signý. During > the wedding feast Ásmundr disappears with Signý by means of trickery. > Subsequently both royal suitors duel.
Home energy performance rating charts Energy performance certificates (EPCs) are a rating scheme to summarise the energy efficiency of buildings in the European Union.Certificates and inspections, ec.europa.eu The building is given a rating between A (Very efficient) - G (Inefficient), the EPC will also include tips the most cost effective ways to improve your homes energy rating.
The Bathurst Post was first published on 15 August 1881 and printed by Glyndwr Whalan. It ceased publication on 15 March 1922, with issue number 486. The publication was distributed free of charge, supported by advertising, and was intended by the proprietors to summarise news and other matters of interest for both a local and potentially wider audience.
2, for example, indicates the second chapter of the third part. Given the book's fluid and changeable approach to plot and characters, a definitive, critically agreed-upon plot synopsis remains elusive (see Critical response and themes: Difficulties of plot summary below). Therefore, the following synopsis attempts to summarise events in the book, which find general, although inevitably not universal, consensus among critics.
It bears the inscription "Soli Deo gloria", one of the five solas propounded to summarise the Reformers' basic beliefs during the Protestant Reformation. The second bell sounds C and is the oldest, being a pre-Reformation cast, between 1500–1510, by the Seliok family and dedicated Sancti Antonii. The treble bell sounds D and was cast c. 1590 by Henry Dand of Nottingham.
The range and quantity of Ruskin's writing, and its complex, allusive and associative method of expression, cause certain difficulties. In 1898, John A. Hobson observed that in attempting to summarise Ruskin's thought, and by extracting passages from across his work, "the spell of his eloquence is broken".J. A. Hobson, John Ruskin: Social Reformer (J. Nisbet & Co., 1898), p. viii.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > Dámusti is a pious knight at the court of King Katalaktus of Grikkland. When > the king's daughter, Gratiana, marries King Jón of Smáland, Dámusti kills > Jón out of jealousy. Gratiana becomes fatally ill. The Virgin Mary appears > to the repentant Dámusti, tells him to arm himself and ride to the church > where Gratiana lies buried.
Most of the electorate live in urban Maidstone, which has some light industry but whose economy is increasingly dominated by the service sector (including care, hospitality and insurance). The south of the constituency is rural with significant orchards and market gardens. Many residents commute daily to London. To summarise this is an urban-rural seat in a prosperous part of Kent.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The saga recounts Bæring's efforts to avenge the death of his uncle, ruler > of Ertinborg, who had been killed by one of his own knights, Heinrekr. > Heinrekr proposes marriage to Bæring's widowed mother, sister of the > murdered ruler. Rejected, he vows to kill Bæringr. Mother and child flee to > England, where Bæringr eventually is knighted.
Plomley (1976) presents all the lexical data available to him in 1976. Crowley and Dixon (1981) summarise what little is known of Tasmanian phonology and grammar. Bowern (2012) teases apart the mixture of languages in many of the lists and attempts to classify them into language families. Little is known of the languages and no relationship to other languages is demonstrable.
The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., s.v. "Alembert, Jean le Rond d'" This led to a series of bitter exchanges between the men and contributed to the end of d'Alembert and Rameau's friendship. A long preliminary discourse d'Alembert wrote for the 1762 edition of his Elémens attempted to summarise the dispute and act as a final rebuttal.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > Composed in Iceland, presumably in the late fourteenth or early fifteenth > century. Ector, a descendant of King Priam of Troy, and six knights in his > service decide to separate for a year to seek adventure. The fates of the > several knights are related serially. All but one of the knights are > successful in their undertakings.
Marianne E. Kalinke and P. M. Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The saga tells of the three sons of King Flóres of Traktía and Princess > Elína of Kartagía. Flóres had abducted the princess who later bore him three > children. During Flóres' absence Elína and her children are fetched by her > father, but their ship disappears. They are assumed dead, and Flóres > remarries.
Journal of General Virology publishes primary research articles, Reviews, Short Communications, Personal Views, and Editorials. Since 2017 the journal has partnered with the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses to publish Open Access ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profiles which summarise chapters of the ICTV’s 10th Report on Virus Taxonomy. All ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profiles are published under a Creative Commons Attribution license (CC-BY) .
Denise Evans and Mary L. Onorato summarise the modern reception of On Liberty, stating: "[c]ritics regard his essay On Liberty as a seminal work in the development of British liberalism. Enhanced by his powerful, lucid, and accessible prose style, Mill's writings on government, economics, and logic suggest a model for society that remains compelling and relevant.""John Stuart Mill (1806–1873)." Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism.
New arguments ought to be introduced by the second speaker. The second speaker should spend about half of the speech rebutting the opposing team, and half advancing their own case. The third speaker's role is to refute the opposing team's case, and to conclude and summarise his or her own team's case. The third speaker cannot make 'new' arguments in favour of his or her position.
Still, there are some incredible glimpses of genius even if they take a couple of listens before they can be observed. But for this reviewer, the response is still very mixed." Louder Than The Music's Jono Davies said "to summarise, this is a very good album. Great creative songs, great voice and great expressions of praise to God (a few too many great's there maybe).
Clearly, the applications of SPI are diverse and scientifically robust when properly applied, but some practical problems limit its wider use. Keegan et al. (2001) summarise that SPI is “...not developed as a replacement for conventional benthic monitoring tools, but as a survey and reconnaissance technique to optimise the efficiency of benthic monitoring programs.” They further state: > “...SPI is only now getting the widespread recognition it deserves.
His use, however, is less innovative than that of de Pizan or d'Orléans. Froissart's envois are invariably addressed to the Prince and are used to summarise the content of the preceding stanzas. Since the 14th century, the envoi has been seen as an integral part of a number of traditional poetic forms, including, in addition to the ballade and chant royal, the virelai nouveau and the sestina.
Total benefits of ownership (TBO) is a calculation that tries to summarise the positive effects of the acquisition of a plan. It is an estimate of all the values that will affect a business. It is a financial estimate intended to help buyers and owners determine the direct and indirect benefits of a product or system. It is used to determine potential Return on Investment (ROI).
University of Leeds, Department of Theology and Religious Studies. p. 175. Traditionally, the different levels of ordination are distinguished by the specific number of vows taken, and by the ceremony in which they were received. In the NKT-IKBU, Kelsang Gyatso established a simplified tradition of ordination with ten vows that summarise the entire Vinaya,Bluck, R. (2006). British Buddhism: Teachings, practice and development.
In 1860 and 1861 the Company was able to declare dividends of 8%. Some time prior to 23 April 1858 the quarter-mile spur to the Kirkland Works, authorised in the original Act of Parliament, was opened.Thomas and Turnock summarise this sequence, but erroneously refer to the Leven Railway as the West Fife Railway on pages 76 to 79. There was an unconnected West Fife Mineral Railway.
Stepanos Asoghik (), also known as Stepanos Taronetsi (), was an Armenian historian of the 11th century. His dates are unknown but he came from Taron and earned the nickname Asoghik ("teller of stories"). He wrote a Universal History in three books. The first two books summarise the history of the world - with particular reference to Armenia - using the Bible, Eusebius of Caesarea, Moses of Khoren and others as sources.
At the end of the episode, Nikki was asked to summarise and reflect on her employment experiences, commenting: "I thought, when I got this series, that I would get nice jobs that would help me learn how to do a working day...but it's been ghastly.""E4 Princess Nikki: Something’s stinking…", Unreality.TV. URL last accessed on 2006-12-16. This episode had an overnight rating of 167,100 viewers .
In a park, the guys film a music video parodying The Lord of the Rings. The lyrics summarise the story from the first film and the end of the third film.Lyrics from Episode 11: "The Actor". Official HBO Website Greg acts as cameraman whilst Bret plays both Frodo and Legolas, Jemaine plays Sam and Gimli, Murray plays Gandalf, Mel plays Arwen, Eugene plays Saruman and Dave plays Aragorn.
Slowther A. et al: Development of clinical ethics committees. BMJ.2004;328(7445):950–952 This page is intended to summarise existing online resources aimed at assisting new and developing clinical ethics support services. Its goal is to make these resources more easily accessible. Listing in this page does not constitute endorsement of the various contents: users will still need to judge the value of these resources for themselves.
The Nazi Party took power in January 1933 and lost no time in transforming Germany into a one- party dictatorship. Sources differ in their attempts to evaluate and summarise Johannes Müller's attitude to the Nazi régime. Müller said and wrote a lot: quotations from him can be adduced in support of more than one set of conclusions. Until the early 1930s he was able simply to ignore the Nazis.
Nicol and Macfarlane-Dick summarise converging literature suggesting that internal feedback and student self-regulation are only possible with a good conception of the criteria.Nicol, D. J. & Macfarlane-Dick, D. (2006) Formative assessment and self-regulated learning: a model and seven principles of good feedback practice. Studies in Higher Education, 31(2), pp199-218. This has prompted learning developers to work centrally to explicate or negotiate assessment criteria.
The result is philosophy that is at once universally relevant and essentially African. Wiredu, in his work, has enlightened many people on the philosophy and religion of Africa. Not only does he summarise and outline their beliefs in many of his works but he also challenges outsiders predispositions to African beliefs. He wants to shed light and understanding to their belief systems and what they believe to be true and physical.
Commentaries on Plato refers to the great mass of literature produced, especially in the ancient and medieval world, to explain and clarify the works of Plato. Many Platonist philosophers in the centuries following Plato sought to clarify and summarise his thoughts, but it was during the Roman era, that the Neoplatonists, in particular, wrote many commentaries on individual dialogues of Plato, many of which survive to the present day.
In 2004 McMinn became the match summariser for BBC Radio Derby, working alongside Ross Fletcher.McMinn to summarise for BBC Radio Derby This is Derbyshire In his three years with the station he attended all Derby County's matches. McMinn contracted a mystery infection that led to most of his right foot being amputated. McMinn then opted to have more of his leg removed in a bid to gain more mobility and independence with a prosthetic limb.
The song was initially recorded in R&B; and funk styles before a friend of Scott suggested using synthesisers. He describes the genesis of "Pop Muzik": > I was looking to make a fusion of various styles which somehow would > summarise the last 25 years of pop music. It was a deliberate point I was > trying to make. Whereas rock and roll had created a generation gap, disco > was bringing people together on an enormous scale.
He uses yellow and orange in the two Sunflowers-versions, red in the vineyard, green in the ivy, blue in the orchard, and violet in the field. Thus, the full colour spectrum is manifested in this selection, which can consequently be read as a single entity, "a whole" (French: un tout). Earlier this year, Van Gogh had already expressed his wish before returning to the North to summarise his "impressions of Provence".
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > Earl Ámundi has four sons—Vigvarðr, Rögnvalldr, Markvarðr, Aðalvarðr—and a > daughter. Rögnvalldr incurs the anger of the emperor by defeating him in a > chess game. The emperor strikes Rögnvalldr, and Vigvarðr avenges the insult > by killing the emperor. The saga revolves around the clash between the > emperor's son Karl and the four brothers, abetted by their brother-in-law > Mágus who is capable of assuming various disguises.
The Jazz Piano Book is a method book written by Mark Levine. It was first published on January 1 1989. It aims to summarise the musical theory, including jazz harmony, required by an aspiring jazz pianist. Its target readership appears to be reading musicians who are new to jazz, implicitly classical musicians—there is very little discussion of physical pianistic technique, and only a very brief summary of musical intervals intended as a refresher.
Gamble ran a short-lived feature called "Ed's Film Pitches", whereby he would pitch pre-written film ideas to Peacock. These would generally be nonsensical in nature, but purport to deal with significant issues. One such pitch was Hangnail - a CGI film about hangnails. This led to a similar feature, currently running, in which Gamble attempts to summarise films that he either hasn't seen, or hasn't watched in a very long time.
The Peelian principles summarise the ideas that Sir Robert Peel developed to define an ethical police force. The approach expressed in these principles is commonly known as policing by consent in the United Kingdom and other countries such as Canada, Australia and New Zealand. In this model of policing, police officers are regarded as citizens in uniform. They exercise their powers to police their fellow citizens with the implicit consent of those fellow citizens.
He made observations with the GMRT of the emission and absorption of atomic hydrogen from objects in the early Universe. Along with S.K. Sirothia, he investigated deficiency of radio sources at 327 MHz towards the prominent cold spot of the cosmic microwave background radiation. To summarise, he made important contributions in areas such as solar radio emission, interplanetary scintillations, pulsars, radio galaxies, quasars and cosmology. He published over 125 research papers and edited 4 books.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > Composed in Iceland, presumably in the fourteenth century. Sigrgarðr, son of > King Valdimar of England, obtains a magic harp from the dwarf Gestr in > exchange for promising to give him his first-born son. He wins Florida, > daughter of King Ptolemeus, by defeating Valbrandr, another suitor, at arms > and at harp playing. Valbrandr takes revenge first by stabbing Sigrgarðr and > then by killing the king in battle.
The Plymouth Herald newspaper attempted to summarise the differing theories, but no firm conclusion was reached. Charles Causley referred to Guz in one of his poems, "Song of the Dying Gunner A.A.1", published in 1951. A "tiddy oggy" is naval slang for a Cornish Pasty and which was once the nickname for a sailor born and bred in Devonport.Jolly, Rick (1989), Jackspeak: A guide to British Naval slang & usage, Conway (Bloomsbury Publishing Plc) (p.
Sarle, Warren S. (1995), Why Statisticians Should Not FART This problem can be considered as a side effect of the respective mechanisms ensuring stable learning in both networks. More advanced ART networks such as TopoART and Hypersphere TopoART that summarise categories to clusters may solve this problem as the shapes of the clusters do not depend on the order of creation of the associated categories. (cf. Fig. 3(g, h) and Fig. 4 of Marko Tscherepanow.
The Forty-two Articles were intended to summarise Anglican doctrine, as it now existed under the reign of Edward VI, who favoured a Protestant faith. Largely the work of Thomas Cranmer, they were to be short formularies that would demonstrate the faith revealed in Scripture and the existing ecumenical creeds. Completed in 1552, they were issued by Royal Mandate on 19 June 1553. The articles were claimed to have received the authority of a Convocation, although this is doubtful.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The foster-brothers Hermann (son of the king of Frakkland) and Jarlmann (son > of an earl) are of an age and have been educated together. Hermann sends > Jarlmann to Miklagarðr to sue for the hand of Ríkilát. She has previously > rejected many suitors, but Jarlmann wins her for Hermann by means of a magic > ring. She cannot return with Jarlmann, however, until the armed forces of > another suitor have been repelled.
The chapters of reference works are almost always listed in a table of contents. Novels sometimes use a table of contents, but not always. If chapters are used they are normally numbered sequentially; they may also have titles, and in a few cases an epigraph or prefatory quotation. In older novels it was a common practice to summarise the content of each chapter in the table of contents and/or in the beginning of the chapter.
In order to enter the challenge, children are encouraged to read books and summarise them in a series of five coloured 'passports', with their teachers checking the summaries. Each passport has ten pages, hence children read fifty books throughout the academic year. They then pass through a number of qualification stages at school, district, national and regional levels. The winning student was awarded a $100,000 bursary as well as a cash grant of $50,000 made to the student's family.
Ace Drummond was based on a comic strip by Captain Eddie Rickenbacker. Ace Drummond gained good publicity following a set visit by Amelia Earhart. The famous aviator had driven out to the San Fernando Valley, after hearing that the serial was being shot there on location, where she watched the filming of the chapter two cliffhanger. In the traditional foreword at the beginning of each chapter, Ace Drummond used comic strips to summarise the story so far.
The WFN scientific journals provides a medium for the publication of original articles in neurology and neuroscience from around the world. The journals places special emphasis on articles that: # provide guidance to clinicians around the world (Best Practices, Global Neurology); # report cutting-edge science related to neurology (Basic and Translational Sciences); # educate readers about relevant and practical clinical outcomes in neurology (Outcomes Research); and # summarise or editorialise the current state of the literature (Reviews, Commentaries, and Editorials).
Three key points can be identified, particularly from the works of EussnerA. Eussner, Commentariolum petitionis examinatum et emendatum (Würzburg, 1872) and Hendrickson,John L. Hendrickson, "On the Authenticity of the Commentariolum Petitionis of Quintus Cicero," The American Journal of Philology 13.2 13.2 (1892): 200-212 which summarise the linguistic arguments:David et al., 250. # The vocabulary of the Commentariolum is not what was generally being used at the time Cicero was running for the office of consul.
The Open content logo The Open Definition is a document published by the Open Knowledge Foundation (OKF) (previously Open Knowledge International) to define openness in relation to data and content. It specifies what licences for such material may and may not stipulate, in order to be considered open licences. The definition itself was derived from the Open Source Definition for software. OKI summarise the document as: The latest form of the document, published in November 2015, is version 2.1.
The book by Yablokov et al. is part of an attempt to summarise these new findings and include them to extend the findings of the Greenpeace report." The New York Academy of Sciences also published a severely critical review by M. I. Balonov from the Institute of Radiation Hygiene (St. Petersburg, Russia) which stated that "The value of [Consequences] is not zero, but negative, as its bias is obvious only to specialists, while inexperienced readers may well be put into deep error.
Bring me the Head of Roy Dommett, an on-line article, may be read here. In retirement he still occasionally performed on the accordion.. His work in the field was recognised by the award of the Jubilee Medal and then, in 2001, the Gold Badge of the English Folk Dance and Song Society. In the final years of his life, despite over ten years of very poor health, he made attempts to catalogue and summarise his extensive knowledge of morris.
BELGIANS CAN DO TOO! was a slogan written across the windshield of Padre of the Unit's (Padre Vander Goten) Jeep during the battles around the "Iron Triangle." Seeing the exhaustion of the troops, the Padre copied the motto of the US 15th Infantry Regiment ("Can Do") alongside whom the Belgians were serving at the time to try to raise morale. The phrase was made famous in Belgium and is thought to summarise the spirit and courage of the Belgian contingent.
Local Councils in Australia are the level of government that is most in touch with wishes and needs of the local community. A growing number of local councils have made commitments to divest their funds from fossil fuel companies and institutions. Commitments and Documentation The following tables summarise the divestment actions and commitments of Australian local councils. The table includes references to documents recording council investment & divestment policies and divestment motions that were put before the council, voted on and passed.
To summarise, Gray was European champion in 1948, 1949, 1950 and 1963. He led Britain in the Bermuda Bowl in 1950, and played in the World Pairs 1962, World Team Olympiad 1964 and the European Championships in 1958. He won the Gold Cup seven times, and many other national events. The first time, in 1937, was with the original Acol team; the last time in 1968 was with Tony Priday, Nico Gardener, Albert Rose and the Sharples brothers: also a star-studded team.
To summarise the SNAC committee resolution is advisory like most AGM resolutions. The SNAC committee is only able to put forward a resolution to be put at the AGM if its 5 member members have over 100 shareholder members or 5% of the Shares. Then that agreed resolution with text is put forward for all shareholders to decide upon which is the norm for all limited companies owned by shareholders. The text could be for the termination or appointment of a Director etc.
A set of problems for solution, which are designed to present the "intellectual challenge" that is an essential part of the Structural Communication methodology. These problems are interrelated and are open-ended to allow multiple responses and viewpoints. The purpose of the investigation section is for the learner to interact with the subject matter. To respond to a question, a student selects a number of items from the Response Array that, taken together, summarise what must be brought to bear on it.
The marriage of "Eithne, daughter of King Kjarval of Ireland" and Hlodvir Thorfinnsson, Earl of Orkney is reported in the Orkneyinga saga and Earl Sigurd the Stout, who was killed at the battle of Clontarf is called their son.Cerball's appearances in Icelandic materials are discussed by Ó Corrain, "Viking Ireland – Afterthoughts", at length. This and the following paragraphs summarise Ó Corrain's points. Some of these names are Irish: Kormlöð is the common name Gormflaith, Eithne too is clearly Irish as is Dufnial.
MacKenzie and Curran summarise the significance of Paul's campaign against his mother's legacy as demonstrating the dangers of autocracy in irresponsible hands, and the nobility realised that "autocratic power could destroy privileges as well as grant them". A "frivolous petty tyrant", suggest McGrew, while Duke argues that Paul's "anecdotal" brutality have caricatured him. Grey has argued that while his domestic policy may have been rational in intention, it was anything but in its execution. Professor Bernard Pares has called Paul "essentially a tyrant".
Discussion at each two-day conference begins with all members present, before participants divide into three sub-groups, each having its own chairman and rapporteur to summarise proceedings. Proceedings end with one more conference-wide session. Discussions are private and non-attributable, under the Chatham House Rule, but a full account is produced by the Director, and posted on the Foundations website. Sister organisations, American and Canadian Ditchley, help to shape the conference programme as well as select American and Canadian participants.
His expertise expanded to many fields including Hadith, Fiqh, Usul al-Fiqh, kalam (theology), logic, grammar, rhetoric, exact and natural sciences. His knowledge was vast and incisive through which he was able to summarise many important and difficult topics succinctly. He authored of a number of influential works in the Hanafi madhhab. His al-Tanqih (), along with his own commentary upon it entitled al-Tawdih (), is a work of usul al-fiqh that merges between 'the way of the jurists' (i.e.
Scriptures are recorded in Pāli, using either the modern Thai script or the older Khom and Tham scripts. Pāli is also used in religious liturgy, despite the fact that most Thais understand very little of this ancient language. The Pāli Tipiṭaka is the primary religious text of Thailand, though many local texts have been composed in order to summarise the vast number of teachings found in the Tipiṭaka. The monastic code (Pātimokkha) followed by Thai monks is taken from the Pāli Theravada Canon.
From the late 1990s, scientific understanding, precision and technology became characteristic of modern cuisine, in so-called "molecular gastronomy". On 10 December 2006 Blumenthal and Harold McGee published a "Statement on the 'New Cookery'" in the Observer to summarise the tenets of this cuisine. In it they emphasise that openness to novel techniques and ingredients can be used as a means to achieve excellent dishes, but they value tradition. Novel techniques and ingredients should only be used when they contribute to a dish.
James Morgan (29 December 1938–26 June 2002) was the BBC World Service's Economics Correspondent from 1974–1998. He was also a prominent national newspaper columnist, writing a personal column in the Financial Times from 1995–1999. He was known for his 'wise, incisive' reporting style and ability to summarise complex economic issues comprehensibly. He began his working life on The Far Eastern Economic Review, a Malaysia-based magazine devoted to financial affairs, before moving to the Centre for Economic Policy Research.
Radiography is a deeply diverse profession with many different modalities and specialities. It is not uncommon for radiographers to be specialised in more than one modality and even have expertise of interventional procedures themselves; however this depends on the country in which they operate. As a result of this the typical career pathway for a radiographer is hard to summarise. Upon qualifying it is common for radiographers to focus solely on plain film radiography before specialising in any one chosen modality.
Nobel Prize Site for Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1962. The results were based partly on fundamental studies done by Rosalind Franklin, Raymond Gosling and Wilkins. Crick was an important theoretical molecular biologist and played a crucial role in research related to revealing the helical structure of DNA. He is widely known for the use of the term "central dogma" to summarise the idea that once information is transferred from nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) to proteins, it cannot flow back to nucleic acids.
Sump Indices are available for each cave diving region (Somerset, Wales, Derbyshire & Northern) of Great Britain which summarise diving activities from Group members and non-members over many years. The newsletter is free to members and on sale to the public as are all the other publications. Members of the CDG are sometimes called upon to assist in cave rescue, particularly of cavers trapped by flood waters, such as the Alpazat cave rescue in Mexico in 2004 and the Tham Luang cave rescue in Thailand in 2019.
The following aircraft, bases and coverage summarise the activities of the Service: All aircraft flown out of the Newcastle/Hunter, New England/North West and Lismore/Northern Rivers will be replaced AgustaWestland AW139 starting with the Newcastle base on 1 March 2017. The Newcastle-based operations relocated from Broadmeadow to Lake Macquarie Airport, with maintenance and office space remaining on the Broadmeadow base. The Sydney and South Coast operation replaced the 2 MBB/Kawasaki BK 117 aircraft with 2 Eurocopter AS365 Dauphin in August 2020.
The 2019–20 season is the league's twelfth after the restructuring of professional club football in 2008 and the 29th season since establishing of professional club's competition independent from the Soviet Union. As of 2020, Shakhtar Donetsk is the reigning Ukrainian Premier League champion. To summarise, Tavriya Simferopol won the first championship, while all the subsequent titles have gone to either Dynamo Kyiv or Shakhtar Donetsk. Only 2 teams, Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk have participated in all previous 28 Ukrainian Top League competitions.
De Iniusta Vexacione Willelmi Episcopi Primi is a late 11th-century historical work detailing the trial of William de St-Calais, a medieval Norman Bishop of Durham from 1081 to 1096. It is the first surviving detailed account of an English trial before the king, and as such is an important source for historians. The work consists of three sections, an introduction, a central section that details the trial itself, and a conclusion. The introduction and conclusion summarise St-Calais' career before and after the trial.
James John Alexander Parfitt KC (23 December 1857 – 17 May 1926) was an English judge who was called to the bar in 1887, and served as a County Court judge from 1918 until his death eight years later. He did not approve of verbose counsel, and would often succinctly summarise their arguments. He was known as a compassionate but businesslike judge. Early in life, he played as an amateur cricketer, appearing in fourteen first-class cricket matches during a career that spanned from 1881 until 1885.
Yudkin's Pure, White, and Deadly (1972) was written for a lay readership. Its intention was to summarise the evidence that the consumption of sugar was leading to a greatly increased incidence of coronary thrombosis; that it was certainly involved in dental caries, probably involved in obesity, diabetes and liver disease, and possibly involved in gout, dyspepsia and some cancers. The book drew on studies from Yudkin's own department and other biochemical and epidemiological research in the UK and elsewhere. Pure, White and Deadly was extremely successful.
The outbreak of World War I prevented him from returning, however. As an expert on the East, the Foreign Office asked him to summarise the many different strategic ideas floating around in the ministry. The result was his Denkschrift betreffend die Revolutionierung der islamischen Gebiete unserer Feinde ("Memorandum on revolutionizing the Islamic territories of our enemies") of October 1914. The memo argued for enlisting the Sultan to call on the world's Muslims to engage in a Holy War against the colonial powers, France and Great Britain.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > Composed in Iceland, presumably in the fourteenth century. The saga relates > the strange adventures encountered by Jon, a young knight, in Flæmingialand. > He is welcomed by the king and witnesses mysterious events during a great > banquet and again the following morning, when a fierce wolf is captured. Jon > requests the wolf as a parting gift, and it turns out that the beast is in > reality Sigurðr, the king's son, upon whom his stepmother had placed a > spell.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > Presumably either a thirteenth-century translation from a lost version of > the French Partenopeus de Blois, or an Icelandic reworking of a lost > Norwegian translation. Partalopi, son of King Hlöðvir of Frakkland, is > transported to Miklagarð where he becomes the lover of Marmoria, a maiden > king, who remains invisible to Partalopi, while he remains invisible to her > courtiers. Marmoria warns Partalopi that any attempt to see her will result > in his death. Partalopi disobeys, but is saved by Marmoria's sister.
Since dissenting, Establishment and Independent divines were in print, the constant movement of these works helped defuse any region's religious homogeneity and fostered emergent latitudinarianism. Periodicals were exceedingly popular, and the art of essay writing was at nearly its apex. Furthermore, the happenings of the Royal Society were published regularly, and they were digested and explained or celebrated in more popular presses. The latest books of scholarship had "keys", "indexes" and "digests" made of them that could popularise, summarise and explain them to a wide audience.
Dominican Church in Lviv with the Latin phrase "Soli Deo honor et gloria". "Soli Deo Gloria" inscripted in Norwegian cast-iron stove from the 19th century ''''' is a Latin term for Glory to God alone'. It has been used by artists like Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frideric Handel, and Christoph Graupner to signify that the work was produced for the sake of praising God. The phrase has become one of the five solae propounded to summarise the Reformers' basic beliefs during the Protestant Reformation.
After the tests and the evaluations have been completed, but before publication, details of the objective results are sent to the respective manufacturers and providers for verification and so that they can make their comments. Journalists then summarise the investigation results in a form which makes them easier to read and understand. Staff members who are specifically responsible for verification make sure the published reports and investigation results concur. Up until December 2011, Stiftung Warentest had already published information about 5,300 investigations covering about 100,000 products and 2,137 services.
In a note appended to his transcript, Knight explains that the original prompt-book that supported the stage performances had been lost, and that he had re-copied the author's "foul papers" into the existing manuscript.Halliday, p. 69. Knight, however, was unable to transcribe the entire play (he had to summarise the first two and a half scenes in Act V), because the set of foul papers from which he worked was itself incomplete – a useful demonstration of the difficulties in textual transmission that plagued English Renaissance theatre.Ioppolo, pp. 76–8.
Amis died in 1995, and his obituaries mention the novel at least in passing. Zachary Leader, in his 2006 book The Life of Kingsley Amis, did no more than summarise his own idea of the subject-matter. In 2009, Andrew Brown, writing in The Guardian, said, "The Anti Death League is a prolonged and furious attack on God and the necessity of suffering (which also contains some of his sweetest writing about love)". In 2011, Philip Hensher wrote several articles which mention the book; calling it "fascinating, unforgettable, flawed" and "magnificent".
On account of the numerous areas of the monastic life to be regulated, the discussions were not simple and they lasted for a long time, before the participants could summarise their decisions in thirty six canons and submit them to Louis for confirmation. These canons were published and made binding for the empire in a capitulary of 23 August 816. Various participants had already publicised partial results before this. The enforcement, or rather the monitoring of implementation was carried out over the following years by missi dominici and ecclesiastical representatives.
In justification of the coup, Prime Minister Ben Ali invoked Article 57 of the constitution, as he assumed power. He rapidly emerged, therefore, not merely as the constitutional president, but also as the commander in chief of the army. The journalists and Jean-Pierre Tuquoi summarise the circumstances under which the necessary medical opinion had been obtained: The next day the new president addressed the nation on Radio Tunis. He paid tribute to the huge sacrifices that his predecessor had made, supported by brave men, in his service to the liberation and development of Tunisia.
The Liberty Bell Temple in Los Angeles Rastas refer to the totality of their religion's ideas and beliefs as "Rastalogy". Edmonds described Rastafari as having "a fairly cohesive worldview"; however, the scholar Ernest Cashmore thought that its beliefs were "fluid and open to interpretation". Within the movement, attempts to summarise Rastafari belief have never been accorded the status of a catechism or creed. Rastas place great emphasis on the idea that personal experience and intuitive understanding should be used to determine the truth or validity of a particular belief or practice.
At Epsom on 4 June, Aboyeur, running in blinkers, was an unconsidered outsider, starting at odds of 100/1 while Craganour was made 6/4 favourite in a field of fifteen. The weather was fine and the record crowd, estimated at up to 500,000 included the King and Queen. Aboyeur was saddled separately, well away from the other horses, and did not take part in any parade before the start. Accounts of the race are often highly coloured and partisan: what follows is an attempt to summarise the evidence.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The saga relates in a leisurely, highly rhetorical manner the fortunes of > Laicus, King of Athena, and his son Kirialax. Laicus woos and, through > combat, wins the hand of Mathidia, daughter of King Dagnus of Syria. After > having reached maturity, their son Kirialax sets out to explore the world of > his day. The account of his adventures is an extended travelogue—based on > learned sources—that includes a visit to Troja and a pilgrimage to Akrsborg > to see the True Cross.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The saga blends motifs from the riddarasögur, the fornaldarsögur, and folk > tales. As a baby, Áli flekkr, the son of King Ríkarðr of England, is left > exposed in the woods but is rescued by peasants. After he marries Þorbjõrg, > a maiden king, a number of misfortunes befall him because he has rejected > the love of a female troll. He is temporarily turned into a wolf; in a dream > he is wounded and can be cured only by the rejected troll's brothers.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The crux of the tale is the prophecy that the offspring born to the king and > queen of Syria will rule the kingdom after the king's death. An evil duke > tries to secure the royal throne for his own progeny and turn the prophecy > of royal succession to his own advantage. The king is abducted and secreted > in the bed of the duke's daughter, while the duke sleeps with the queen. As > prophesied, offspring are born to both king and queen.
The list is maintained by Historic Environment Scotland, the successor the Historic Scotland. there are 40 battlefields on the inventory, the most recent addition being the Battle of Sark which was listed in 2016. The list of battlefields is intended to guide landowners, developers, local authorities and the Scottish Ministers in the future development of these areas to protect the historic significance and archaeological potential of these sites. The inventory entries summarise historic sources, archaeological evidence and finds, significance, and provide a map defining the extent of the battlefield.
Based on the Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion, the first conceptual developments on HPH started in 1988. A first model project "Health and Hospital", was initiated in 1989 at the Rudolfstiftung Hospital in Vienna, Austria, and successfully finished in 1996. 10 model documents (in German language) summarise the learnings from the pilot project and are available online to guide hospital projects related to health promotion. In 1990, the WHO International Network of Health Promoting Hospitals was founded as a multi-city action plan of the WHO Healthy Cities Network.
Front cover of alt= The influence of the Homeric texts can be difficult to summarise because of how greatly they have impacted the popular imagination and cultural values. The Odyssey and the Iliad formed the basis of education for members of ancient Mediterranean society. That curriculum was adopted by Western humanists, meaning the text was so much a part of the cultural fabric that it became irrelevant whether an individual had read it. As such, the influence of the Odyssey has reverberated through over a millennium of writing.
The employment health and safety approach is again helpful in understanding this complexity. To summarise so far, as a matter of fact found on the balance of probabilities, the child has suffered harm or been exposed to an unsafe environment. The person responsible for the child was in, at least, a negligent state of mind in failing to protect the child to safeguarding or promote his/her welfare. This is all based in the present and the final finding is as a fit and proper person to hold this responsibility into the future.
Mise en abyme can be easily confused with metalepsis and metareference. These terms describe related features, as mise en abyme can be a springboard to metalepsis if there is a paradoxical confusion of the levels involved. If the artificiality of the mirroring device or related issues are foregrounded or discussed, mise en abyme can also be conducive to metareference. To summarise, mise en abyme is a form of similarity, repetition and hence a variant of self- reference that is NOT necessarily discussed within its appearing medium, it only occurs.
It was not until 1941, however, that herpetologist Karl P. Schmidt made the first attempt to summarise the various species of amphibians in Belize. His studies were summarised in a series of papers by Neill and Allen during the late 1950s and 1960s. Similar reports were later published by R. W. Henderson during the 1970s, C. J. McCoy between 1966 and 1990, and Campbell and Vannini (1989), Meerman (1993), Strafford (1994), and Meyer and Farneti-Foster (1996). These contributed to an increased understanding and an updated checklist of the amphibian species occurring in the country.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The saga relates the fortunes of Jón, a young farmer, who has the gift not > only of interpreting dreams, but of divining the dreams of others before > they are told. Earl Heinrekr of Saxland, who also interprets dreams, envies > Jon's superior ability. By eating Jón's heart, the earl hopes to acquire > Jón's gift, so he commands his wife Ingibjǫrg to murder Jón in his sleep, > cut out his heart, and prepare it as food for a meal. Ingibjǫrg spares Jón, > however, and substitutes the heart of a dog.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > Composed in Iceland, presumably in the fourteenth century. After a duel > nearly to the death as a result of a chess game at the court of the Roman > emperor, Prince Sálus of Galicia and Duke Nikanor of Bár become blood > brothers and are involved in a series of tremendous battles in order to > obtain Potentiana, Nikanor's sister, as Sálus' bride. Nikanor ultimately > marries Luneta, daughter of King Benjamin of Akaia in Grikkland. There are > many classical and Biblical elements and allusions.
His books summarise the state of the affairs of physical questions, often in the form of compendia of a large number of facts assembled from the works of great physicists, such as Paul Dirac and Arthur Eddington. Barrow's approach to philosophical issues posed by physical cosmology made his books accessible to general readers. For example, Barrow introduced a memorable paradox, which he called "the Groucho Marx Effect" (see Russell-like paradoxes). Here, he quotes Groucho Marx: "I wouldn't want to belong to any club that would accept me as a member".
The "five solae" summarise basic theological differences in opposition to the Catholic Church. Protestantism began in Germany in 1517, when Martin Luther published his Ninety-five Theses as a reaction against abuses in the sale of indulgences by the Catholic Church, which purported to offer the remission of the temporal punishment of sins to their purchasers. The term, however, derives from the letter of protestation from German Lutheran princes in 1529 against an edict of the Diet of Speyer condemning the teachings of Martin Luther as heretical.Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (1974) art.
In February 2001, the Niles Report proposed an additional four modifications to the causeway project: to either replace the fishway, open the gates during peak fish migration, open the gates permanently, or replace the entire causeway with a bridge.New Brunswick Department of the Environment 2002, p. 3 An Environmental Impact Assessment study was commissioned in 2003 to develop and summarise these options, and on its completion in 2005, it announced the recognition of "Option 3" and "Option 4" as possible solutions. The first option had been ruled out following the evaluation of other fish passage models, which were deemed inapplicable to the river.
Book seven deals with the descendants of Ebhar mac Milidh, written or begun in 1649, comprising pages 599 to 689 (eight-five pages are blank). As Mac Fhirbhisigh intended to merely summarise material, he did not reproduce the original texts, which were extracts from Saltair Chaisil, written in Latin. Pages 640.5 to 645.5 feature the descendants of Brian Bóruma, such as the O'Briens, including the Anglo-Irish Plunkett family. This was a fabrication, based on the Plunkett's status in the late 16th century, claiming them as descended from King Donnchad mac Briain, who died in Rome in 1064.
Telò has published 6 books, 38 edited books and more than 200 scientific articles and book chapters. The book Liber amicorum was written by several scholars to summarise and analyse Telò's work. In the 1970s, Telò started comparative and historical research on European politics focusing on social-democracy (particularly in Sweden, Belgium, Germany and the UK), from the anti-crisis policies of the 1930s to critical developments and the interplay with the European integration process. His main hypothesis is that the crucial difference between the 1930s and the post-WWII decades address relevant theoretical and methodological implications.
The line itself, it > will be seen, does not pay the interest on the purchase money alone, and the > enormous outlay in converting it from a Horse to an Engine line is entirely > unproductive. Your Committee cannot sufficiently condemn this most > improvident bargain, and the unjustified extravagance in the subsequent > outlay. Elsewhere in the reports the Committee of Investigation summarise the costs (to date) for the Whitby branch: > To purchase of Whitby & Pickering (horse) Railway, 23½ miles (£80,000) and > reconstruct it for locomotives. Authorized share and loan capital £180,000. > Estimated expenditure to 30th June 1849: £468,000.
They also summarise the operating income and expenditure (in an extract from details covering the whole Y&NM;): > Total traffic for year 1848 > Whitby & Pickering £11,323 > Working charges including depreciation, duty & rates £8,172 > Net Receipts £3,151 The York and North Midland Railway was one of three railways that formed the North Eastern Railway in 1854. In 1923 The North Eastern Railway was absorbed into the London and North Eastern Railway as part of the grouping of the railways following the First World War. In 1948 all the major railway companies in Great Britain were nationalised forming British Railways.
Musical at Hong Kong Disneyland The Hong Kong Disneyland version of the show is presented as simplified version of the story of The Lion King, told through songs from the movie. The show is performed in the "Theater in the Wild" in Adventureland. Similar to the theater setting in Disney's Animal Kingdom, guests sit in four different sections themed to a specific animal, and accompanied by a parade-style float. The performance is mainly in English, but two actors dressed as monkeys summarise and translate some of the lines into Cantonese in order to accommodate Hongkongese guests.
The secondary literature, mostly in Turkish but also in German and English, is very extensive. See, for example, the report of a conference on his work, Oğuz Atay'a Armağan (2007), with some 150 contributions and a bibliography of over 500 items. This brief account does not attempt to summarise this material. Atay was of a generation deeply committed to the westernising, scientific, secular culture encouraged by the revolution of the 1920s; he had no nostalgia for the corruption of the late Ottoman Empire, though he knew its literature, and was in particular well versed in Divan poetry.
In 2010 Männerpartei (an Austrian Men's Rights collective) inaugurated International Men's Day in Austria after the liquidation of the 'Men's World Day' event in 2004 which left the country with no men's day celebration. Männerpartei used the occasion to hold a workshop on father friendly social policy in Austria and to summarise progress for men and boys in the last twelve months, particularly in the area of law reform. The group also celebrated the first Children's Planet Award Gala and its focus on the Convention on the Rights of the Child adopted on 20 November 1989.
The current knowledge of the molecular mechanisms for Mg2+ transport in plants is very limited, with only three publications reporting a molecular basis for Mg2+ transport in plants. However, the importance of Mg2+ to plants has been well described, and physiological and ecophysiological studies about the effects of Mg2+ are numerous. This section will summarise the knowledge of a gene family identified in plants that is distantly related to CorA. Another gene, a Mg2+/H+ exchanger (AtMHX), unrelated to this gene family and to CorA has also been identified, is localised to the vacuolar membrane, and will be described last.
As illustrated by the table of matches above, little is known of organised cricket to 1725 and equally little of clubs and teams, players and venues. There is a shortage of references from the latter part of the 17th century due to the Licensing of the Press Act 1662 which imposed stringent controls on the newspaper industry and sport, including cricket, was not reported. The few surviving references have been found in official records, such as court cases, or in private letters and diaries. The four bulleted lists below summarise the known participants to 1725 under each heading.
In contrast with static pictures, animations can show temporal change directly (rather than having to indicate it indirectly using auxiliary markings such as arrows and motion lines). Using animations instead of static graphics removes the need for these added markings so that displays can be not only simpler and less cluttered, but also more vivid, engaging, and more intuitively comprehended. In addition, the learner does not have to interpret the auxiliary markings and try to infer the changes that they summarise. Such interpretation and inference may demand a level of graphicacy skills that the learner does not possess.
In 1978, Mingos, Stephen G. Davies and Malcolm Green compiled a set of rules that summarise where nucleophilic additions will occur on pi ligands. Mingos' 1984 paper on the polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory develops Wade's electron counting rules for predicting the molecular geometry of cluster compounds. In 1990 he was appointed Reader in Inorganic Chemistry and for the academic year 1991/92 he served as Assessor. From 1992 until 1999 he worked at Imperial College London as Sir Edward Frankland British Petroleum Professor of Inorganic Chemistry (1992–99) and Dean of the Royal College of Science (1996–99).
Many Methodist bodies, such as the African Methodist Episcopal Church and the United Methodist Church, base their doctrinal standards on Wesley's Articles of Religion, an abridgment of the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England that excised its Calvinist features. Some Methodist denominations also publish catechisms, which concisely summarise Christian doctrine. Methodists generally accept the Apostles' Creed and the Nicene Creed as declarations of shared Christian faith. Methodism also affirms the traditional Christian belief in the triune Godhead: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, as well as the orthodox understanding of the consubstantial humanity and divinity of Jesus Christ.
In the concluding chapter of Comparing Media Systems Beyond the Western World, Hallin and Mancini summarise the discussions around various aspects of the media system theory they proposed in 2004, adapting their framework to apply to media systems beyond the Western world. With regards to political parallelism, Hallin and Mancini propose to split the concept into two, following Afonso de Albuquerque’s suggestion. They propose the terms "external pluralism", to refer to the tendency of different media outlets to express different partisan tendencies, and "political activity", the media’s tendency to intervene in political debate and influence events at all.
Friends and family can, in Bengt's view, nearly always reveal things that a person identifies with better than he himself. The psychologist Carl Jung used the term "shadow" to summarise the behavioural traits and patterns of a person that he cannot see in himself. A person who does not understand his own emotional needs will not know who he is or what he really wants from his life. He is forced to continue to live alone or to remain in a malfunctioning love relationship, he may not be enjoying his work and he accepts that people treat him badly.
Rather, it emerged when different social groups of medieval India sought to legitimise their newly acquired political power by claiming Kshatriya status. These groups started identifying as Rajput at different times, in different ways. Thus, modern scholars summarise that Rajputs were a "group of open status" since the eighth century, mostly illiterate warriors who claimed to be reincarnates of ancient Indian Kshatriyas – a claim that had no historical basis. Moreover, this unfounded Kshatriya status claim showed a sharp contrast to the classical varna of Kshatriyas as depicted in Hindu literature in which Kshatriyas are depicted as an educated and urbanite clan.
He compared this feature to the serous and mucous structures of embryos of higher animals. When at last he got a grant from the Royal Society for the printing of plates, Huxley was able to summarise this work in The Oceanic Hydrozoa, published by the Ray Society in 1859. Australian woman: Pencil drawing by Huxley The value of Huxley's work was recognised and, on returning to England in 1850, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In the following year, at the age of twenty-six, he not only received the Royal Society Medal but was also elected to the Council.
It is certainly the case that "until the 1870s, it was the most southerly limit of the Whorestone [Farm] Estate." To summarise: > North Parade was one of the earliest developments on St. John's leasehold > land, soon after 1855, and was so called from the start ... South Parade was > known by that name at least as early as 1859. We do not know which got its > name first, but when either was named there would have seemed no need to > consider the existence of the other. One was in Oxford, the other in a > village out in the County.
His successful partnerships with both anchors helped make Eyewitness News the leading nightly news bulletin in Melbourne throughout the 1980s. David stayed in this role until returning to the Seven Network in 1996 to become the weekday anchor of Seven Nightly News in Melbourne. He presented this bulletin solo from 1996 until mid-1999, when he became a co-anchor with Anne Fulwood. Johnston became a relief anchor a year later but returned full-time in 2003 to anchor a national news bulletin, titled "Target Iraq", at 4.30 pm each weekday afternoon to cover the major story, and to summarise Australian news from Sydney.
Although the court makes fun of all the players, Starveling is mocked the most by Hippolyta, who is very vocal in her opinion that his attempt to be moonshine is a ridiculous failure, although very humorous. He is also the only mechanical to be cut off in his monologue as opposed to being mocked afterwards, causing him to fluster and summarise his lines rather than giving them. This summary is usually played angrily or irritably, but has also been performed as the climax of Starveling's potential stage fright. Starveling is the member of the group that seems to be afraid of just about anything.
Huxley coined the phrase Progress without a goal to summarise his case in Evolution the modern synthesis that evolutionary progress was "a raising of the upper level of biological efficiency, this being defined as increased control over and independence of the environment."Huxley, 1942. Chapter 10 "Evolutionary progress." In Evolution in action he wrote that > Natural selection plus time produces biological improvement… 'Improvement' > is not yet a recognised technical term in biology … however, living things > are improved during evolution… Darwin was not afraid to use the word for the > results of natural selection in general… I believe that improvement can > become one of the key concepts in evolutionary biology.
Gerard Steenson was given five life sentences for the deaths of the same five individuals that Kirkpatrick himself had been convicted of, these included Ulster Defence Regiment soldier Colin Quinn, shot in Belfast in December 1980. Holland and McDonald summarise the impact the supergrass trials had on the INLA: > The impact on the INLA had been devastating. Though many of its most active > volunteers were incarcerated for several years, this proved not to be the > most serious impact the supergrass trials and their aftermath had on the > organisation. For more important was the suspicion and bitterness within the > organisation that was planted during those years.
The start of the Ornithological Dictionary's article on the cirl bunting The entire body of the book is arranged as a dictionary from Aberdevine ('Vide Siskin'.) on page 58 (the pages are however not numbered in the original) to Yelper ('Vide Avoset'.) on page 687. Since the book does not have a continuous narrative to summarise, the account here will use one species as a running example to illustrate the book's approach. The cirl bunting is chosen because it was discovered by Montagu and is associated in Britain with his home town of Kingsbridge, Devon. He also chose the species for the colour frontispiece of the book.
Prior to becoming a leading figure in the Christian countercult movement, Hanegraaff was closely affiliated with the ministry of D. James Kennedy of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Florida. During his association with Kennedy in the 1980s, he applied memory-based techniques (such as acrostic mnemonics) to summarise strategies, methods and techniques in Christian evangelism. His work bears resemblances to memory dynamics techniques developed in speed-reading courses and in memory training programs used in some executive business courses. During the late 1980s, Hanegraaff became associated with Walter Martin at the Christian Research Institute (CRI), the conservative Protestant countercult and apologetic ministry which Martin founded in 1960.
The only other candidate was Andrew Campbell of the Labour Party, who was a stranger to the constituency and had a weak local organisation. Jarvis was elected with nearly 75% of the votes, and was made a Deputy Lieutenant of Surrey in 1936. He was re-elected in 1945, and held the seat until he stood down from the House of Commons at the 1950 general election. In November 1943 he wrote to The Times newspaper to summarise his experiences in Jarrow, asserting that it was better to bring work to people in depressed areas than to encourage them to move in search of work.
To summarise, our advice simply is it is better not to proceed with the transaction. We note however that you wish to assist your family, and you have done so in the full knowledge that the transaction is a financial risk to you and you may suffer financially in the event the Company being unable to complete the resale of the house for you. We note we have strongly recommended you consult an independent Solicitor in respect of the matter but you have declined to so. Yours faithfully'' FROST & SUTCLIFFE At trial, the Tuiara's denied they had ever received this letter, but the court disagreed with them on this.
In the mid-1890s, during the height of Alfonsine liberal democracy, de Mella gained reputation of its most outspoken opponent. Though the conservatives intended to tame him by offering ministerial jobs, de Mella remained convinced that the system should be dismantled rather than stabilised and rejected Conservative proposals, Andrés Martín 2000, p. 31 but advocated political alliances with established parties,some scholars summarise it as "utilización de los métodos y reglas del sistema democtático para dinamitarlo desde dentro", Javier Real Cuesta, El Carlismo Vasco 1876-1900, Madrid 1985, , p. 308 enthusiastically took part in electoral gamefirst time running and losing in 1891, Andrés Martín 2000, p.
It is > well known how the propaganda put about by the Franks and the papacy > glorified the victory that took place on the road between Tours and > Poitiers...Cardini, 2001, p. 9. In their introduction to The Reader's Companion to Military History Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker summarise this side of the modern view of the Battle of Tours by saying: > The study of military history has undergone drastic changes in recent years. > The old drums-and-bugles approach will no longer do. Factors such as > economics, logistics, intelligence, and technology receive the attention > once accorded solely to battles and campaigns and casualty counts.
The human capital factors summarise the availability of a skilled workforce, the flexibility of the labour market, the quality of the business education and the skill-set of the workforce, and quality of life. The business environment factors aggregate and value the regulation, tax rates, levels of corruption, economic freedom and how difficult in general it is to do business. To measure regulation an online questionnaire has been used. The financial sector development factors assess the volume and value of trading in capital markets and other financial markets, the cluster effect of the number of different financial service companies at the location, and employment and economic output indicators.
Cover of the Tigerfibel tank manual published during WWII in Germany The Tigerfibel and Pantherfibel were crew instruction manuals for the German tanks of World War II, the Panzer VI Tiger heavy tank and the Panzer V Panther medium tank. Like other manuals designated as Fibel (basic primer), they were apparently intended to summarise what the crew needed to know for day-to-day use of the tank, and to capture their interest. It is well illustrated in comic-style and much of the text is written as poetry in a humorous manner. The Fibel is remarkably different from the typical tedious style of a German tank manual of that period.
To summarise his legacy and the timeline of his achievements in the Wesleyan movement in West Africa: Thomas Birch Freeman dedicated the first chapel at Cape Coast on Sunday 10 June 1838. In 1839, he outlined the first educational curriculum for the training of teachers and local preachers and brought formal education from the castle schools to the native people. He nursed two young Fante Christians William De- Graft and John Martin, who played instrumental roles in the growth of the Wesleyan movement in Ghana. He recommended William De- Graft as the first native Methodist candidate into the ordained ministry in the year 1838.
He had a cold and his words were badly delivered, but they appeared in newspapers across the country as its most prestigious man of science dismissing the book. For the rest of the week attacks on Vestiges continued. In the geology section, Roderick Murchison used his lecture to clear up the confusion between competing views, and say that "every piece of geological evidence sustained the belief that that each species was perfect in its kind when first called into being by the Creator". Sedgwick set aside his differences with Murchison to summarise his forthcoming Edinburgh review and agree in opposing the evolutionary ideas and the "desolating pantheism" of the book.
Ken is then rushed the hospital, and the residents all summarise that he suffered a major stroke, having collapsed from one in October 2016. However, the Barlows are all called to the hospital, where DS MacKinnon (Sandra Huggett) and DC Hough (Philip Hill- Pearson) inform the family that Ken's accident was actually a result of an attempted murder, after a lesion was found on the back of Ken's head, indicating that he was struck by a blunt instrument which caused him to fall down the stairs. They then reveal that they are opening an investigation into Ken's attack, panicking Peter, Tracy, Daniel, Adam, Amy and Sinead.
Selden was educated at the free grammar school at Chichester, The Prebendal School, and in 1600 he went on to Hart Hall, Oxford. In 1603 he was admitted to Clifford's Inn, London; in 1604 he moved to the Inner Temple; and in 1612 he was called to the bar. His earliest patron was Sir Robert Bruce Cotton, the antiquary, who seems to have employed him to copy and summarise some of the parliamentary records then held at the Tower of London. For some reason, Selden very rarely practised in court, but his practice in chambers as a conveyancer and consulting counsel was large and apparently lucrative.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > The saga relates the adventures of the foster-brothers Viktor, son of the > king of France, and Blávus, a foreign prince who possesses a flying carpet. > After introductory adventures involving vikings and berserks, Viktor sets > off for India to sue for the hand of Fulgida, a maiden king. After Viktor > has been repeatedly humiliated, Blavus travels to India disguised as a monk, > cures Fulgida of a skin disease, and exchanges shapes with her so that she > can travel to France without interference from her knights. Fulgida (Blávus) > agrees to marry Soldán of Serkland on the condition that Rósida, Soldán's > daughter, be bridesmaid.
The term "Rhodesiana" may be used to describe the theme of a museum or collection, or to summarise the character of goods for sale. Indeed, a London-based dealer of African memorabilia, David Saffery, reported in 2002 that Rhodesiana was one of his best-selling lines, with the majority of customers being expatriates, "most of whom still describe themselves as Rhodesians". Particularly popular items included civil and military flags, banknotes of the Rhodesian pound and dollar, stamps, documents and medals. Since 1980, Zimbabwean embassies and high commissions around the world have at various times raised money by selling off obsolete Rhodesian passports, documents, tableware, furniture and various curios.
E.G.D. Cohen, a student of Uhlenbeck's, described his teacher: > ... [Uhlenbeck] often admonished me that rather than trying to be original, > it was much more important to be clear and correct and to summarise > critically the present status of a field in the Ehrenfest tradition. He > wisely observed that what is often of lasting value is not the first > original contribution to a problem, but rather the final clearly and > critically written survey. That is certainly what he did in this Brownian > motion paper! Describing Uhlenbeck's work, Cohen writes: > Uhlenbeck's papers are all relatively short and stand out by their > conciseness, precision, and clarity, finely honed to a deeper understanding > of a basic problem in statistical physics.
She also comments that the fight scenes "although cheesy at times" "are all entertainingly well written". The Seattle Times's Nisi Shawl comments that "the book's intense images and dreamlike simplicity give it an anime air". Jason Thompson of Otaku USA criticises The Seven Magi for trying to summarise "116 volumes and still going" novel series into a few volumes, which "means a lot of backstory that isn't explained for the casual American reader". Later, writing for the appendix to Manga: The Complete Guide, he found the English dialogue in the series "captures the retro pulp fantasy style almost to the point of self-parody", describing the art as "macho and grotesque", although finding the background art "flat".
More specifically, the norms and practices of Western culture isolate objects from their environmental context to analytically think about the individual item. This differs from the norms and practice of East Asian culture, which involve the relationship or interdependence between an object and its environmental context. As a result of this culture, East Asians would likely focus on the interdependent nature of an object and its surroundings while Westerners would tend to center their attention on the object and how it relates to them. To summarise, East Asians would focus on the interrelatedness between a stimulus and its context, but Westerners would focus on the independence of the object and its relationship to themselves.
For the Melodrama World Tour, however, she employed a drum pad sampler, and xylophone onstage on select dates. Shortly after finishing her tour, Lorde revealed via her newsletter subscription that she started learning how to play the piano. Vice noted that her songs incorporated the mixolydian mode, a melodic structure used in "blues-based and alternative rock" music, which set her songs apart from those in pop music for not fitting a common major or minor chord. Regarding her songwriting process, Lorde explained that the foundation to her songs began with the lyrics, which could sometimes stem from a singular word meant to summarise a specific idea she had tried to identify.
His introduction to the second edition (1855) characterises The Seven Lamps of Architecture not as a "complete exponent" of his matured views but "rather as an introduction to the more considered and careful statements of those views given in The Stones of Venice, and in my Lectures delivered at Edinburgh." To an extent, they codified some of the contemporary thinking behind the Gothic Revival. At the time of its publication, A. W. N. Pugin and others had already advanced the ideas of the Revival and it was well under way in practice. Ruskin offered little new to the debate, but the book helped to capture and summarise the thoughts of the movement.
Coauthored by Reed and Harvard lecturer Paul G. Stoltz, Put Your Mindset to Work was published by Portfolio Penguin in May 2011. The book offers research data underlining the importance of employee mindset, citing that 97% of employers would put mindset ahead of skill set when recruiting. The book goes on to identify three elements of a competitive employment mindset, namely Global, Good and Grit, which the authors summarise as "the 3G's". Global is said to measure an employee's ability to set their actions and decisions in a global context; Good refers to an employee's interpersonal sensitivity and a desire to do good for others; Grit references an employee's tenacity and intensity in the workplace.
In the 1970s, the exuberance and the radicalism of the 1960s ebbed. Instead a mounting series of economic crises, including many trade union strikes, pushed the British economy further and further behind European and world growth. The result was a major political crisis, and a Winter of Discontent in the winter of 1978–79, when widespread strikes by public sector trade unions seriously inconvenienced and angered the public. Historians Alan Sked and Chris Cook summarise the general consensus of historians regarding Labour in power in the 1970s: Bright spots included large deposits of oil that were found in the North Sea, allowing Britain to become a major oil exporter to Europe in the era of the 1970s energy crisis.
In March 2001 Tapio Schneider published his regularized expectation–maximization (RegEM) technique for analysis of incomplete climate data. The original MBH98 and MBH99 papers avoided undue representation of large numbers of tree ring proxies by using a principal component analysis step to summarise these proxy networks, but from 2001 Mann stopped using this method and introduced a multivariate Climate Field Reconstruction (CFR) technique based on the RegEM method which did not require this PCA step. In May 2002 Mann and Scott Rutherford published a paper on testing methods of climate reconstruction which discussed this technique. By adding artificial noise to actual temperature records or to model simulations they produced synthetic datasets which they called "pseudoproxies".
Asada was staying at the Ryugetsu Ryokan in Asakusa, Tokyo and he used it as a meeting place for progressive scholars, architects and artists. He often invited people from other professions to give talks and one of these was the atomic physicist, Mitsuo Taketani. Taketani was a scholar who was also interested in Marxist theory and he brought this along with his scientific theories to the group. Taketani's three stage methodology for scientific research influenced Kikutake's own three stage theory: ka (the general system), kata (the abstract image) and katachi (the solution as built), which he used to summarise his own design process from a broad vision to a concrete architectural form.
To summarise his scientific highlights, Hans Clevers identified the crucial downstream component of the Wnt signaling cascade, TCF, and the mechanism by which Wnt signals activate specific TCF target genes. With these insights and in a collaboration with Bert Vogelstein, he proposed that in APC-deficient colon cancer, it is the inappropriate activation of the Wnt pathway that transforms cells. He was the first to link Wnt signaling with adult stem cell biology, when he showed that TCF4 gene disruption leads to the abolition of crypt stem cell compartments of the gut. He went on to show that the Tcf4-driven target gene program in colorectal cancer cells is the malignant counterpart of a physiological crypt stem cell program.
At the end of the book, she tried to summarise what she found wrong in the American character: > A single word indicative of doubt, that any thing, or every thing, in that > country is not the very best in the world, produces an effect which must be > seen and felt to be understood. If the citizens of the United States were > indeed the devoted patriots they call themselves, they would surely not thus > encrust themselves in the hard, dry, stubborn persuasion, that they are the > first and best of the human race, that nothing is to be learnt, but what > they are able to teach, and that nothing is worth having, which they do not > possess.
To make a text available representative of the earliest copies of the Vulgate and summarise the most common variants between the various manuscripts, Anglican scholars at the University of Oxford began to edit the New Testament in 1878 (completed in 1954), while the Benedictines of Rome began an edition of the Old Testament in 1907 (completed in 1995). Their findings were condensed into an edition of both the Old and New Testaments, first published at Stuttgart in 1969, created with the participation of members from both projects. These books are the standard editions of the Vulgate used by scholars. From the original Oxford Vulgate, the editors of these critical editions adopted two major critical principles.
In mathematics, Lie group decompositions are used to analyse the structure of Lie groups and associated objects, by showing how they are built up out of subgroups. They are essential technical tools in the representation theory of Lie groups and Lie algebras; they can also be used to study the algebraic topology of such groups and associated homogeneous spaces. Since the use of Lie group methods became one of the standard techniques in twentieth century mathematics, many phenomena can now be referred back to decompositions. The same ideas are often applied to Lie groups, Lie algebras, algebraic groups and p-adic number analogues, making it harder to summarise the facts into a unified theory.
Dynamic websites are generated on the fly and use server-side technology to generate webpages. They typically extract their content from one or more back-end databases: some are database queries across a relational database to query a catalogue or to summarise numeric information, others may use a document database such as MongoDB or NoSQL to store larger units of content, such as blog posts or wiki articles. In the design process, dynamic pages are often mocked-up or wireframed using static pages. The skillset needed to develop dynamic web pages is much broader than for a static pages, involving server-side and database coding as well as client-side interface design.
"Bad" Painting signals a further and final dissolution to this project, an end rather than a beginning. To briefly summarise the development - the use of cartoons and banal illustrations in the work of Pop Art pioneers, such as Andy Warhol (1928–1987) and Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997), soon prompted painting from other kinds of cartoon and illustration and other qualities of painting with which to highlight such sources. The Hairy Who, for example, broadens the project, arriving at more stylised or abstracted cartoon captions and characters, although their inspiration is as much naïve and outsider art as the graphics of Pop Art. However, their wider acceptance with shows between 1966 and -68 surely reflects a momentum created by the success of Pop Art.
He goes on to summarise other points of view. Tsuyoshi Hasegawa's research has led him to conclude that the atomic bombings were not the principal reason for Japan's capitulation. He argues that Japan's leaders were impacted more by the swift and devastating Soviet victories on the mainland in the week after Joseph Stalin's August 8 declaration of war because the Japanese strategy to protect the home islands was designed to fend off an Allied invasion from the south and left virtually no spare troops to counter a Soviet threat from the north. Furthermore, the Japanese could no longer hope to achieve a negotiated peace with the Allies by using the Soviet Union as a mediator with the Soviet declaration of war.
The Office of the Clerk also fully funds a political reporting service, providing written, audio and video summaries from the debating chamber and committee rooms of the House of Representatives completely independently from Radio New Zealand. It is the country's only consistent source of regular reports of parliamentary proceedings, with live reports of debates and decisions in the chamber from independent press gallery journalists Tom Frewen and Rheesh Lyon. Clerk of the House David McGee established the service in 1994, hoping to replicate the success BBC Radio 4 show Today in Parliament has had since 1945. Parliament Today programmes summarise the most significant events and highlights from Question Time, debates and select committees, utilising audio from the AM Network for rebroadcast on other stations.
Schorr's doctoral dissertation, entitled Organizacja Żydów w Polsce ("The Organisation of Jews in Poland"), was first published in Lwów's historical quarterly, Kwartalnik historyczny in 1899, and was later translated into Russian and published in Voskhod. In 1903 Schorr was awarded the Wawelberg Prize (provided by the famous Polish-Russian banker and philanthropist) for his work Żydzi w Przemyślu do roku 1772 ("Jews in Przemyśl until 1772"). It was republished in 1991 in Jerusalem with an introduction by Jakub Goldberg and an epilogue by his last surviving son, Joshua Otton Schorr. The Organisation of Jews in Poland is a serious attempt to summarise the data about the Qahal organisation of the central institutions of Jewish self- administration—the vaads and the brotherhoods of Jewish craftsmen.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > With his foster-brother Róðbert (the son of an earl), Konráðr (son of the > emperor of Saxland) who is outstanding in every respect except that he has > not learned foreign languages, journeys to Miklagarðr to woo Mathilda, > daughter of the king of Grikkland. Róðbert, who is skilled in foreign > languages, is to speak for Konráðr, but impersonates him and sues for > Mathilda's hand. Konráðr learns of the betrayal and with the advice of > Mathilda—who has vowed to marry only the son of the emperor of Saxland—he > embarks upon a series of dangerous exploits designed to convince the king of > Grikkland of his identity. Finally, he succeeds in obtaining Mathilda as his > bride.
Resolution 771 then called on Member States and international organisations to collect information concerning violations of humanitarian law and the Geneva Conventions and to make it available to the Council. It asked the Secretary- General Boutros Boutros-Ghali to collate and summarise the information into a report that would also make recommendations that might be an appropriate response to the information. Finally, acting under Chapter VII, thus making it legally enforceable, the Council demanded all parties and military forces present in the former Yugoslavia and Bosnia and Herzegovina comply with the terms under the current resolution, otherwise the Council would consider further measures it could take. A commission of experts was established in Resolution 780 to assess the information gathered.
" To summarise, IGN stated it was "well written, well acted and stylish". Slant Magazine, despite giving a positive review, mentioned that Hannah's "frequent voiceovers and direct-camera addresses turn the awkwardly named show into a how-to guide for prospective prostitutes". Concerns such as Slant Magazine's and whether the programme glamorises prostitution have been echoed throughout various publications. Entertainment Weeklys reviewer Aubry D'Arminio stated Hannah's unwillingness to emotional engage herself with others was one of her favourite aspects of the programme, saying "Hannah doesn't want to connect with people at all.... Not allowing herself to "get close" or be "the real me" isn't a call girl's rule for Hannah (like it was for Julia [Roberts] in Pretty Woman), it's a twisted compulsion.
The doctrine of the Reformed Churches of New Zealand is expressed in the four confessions of faith to which it subscribes. These are the Heidelberg Catechism (1563), Belgic Confession (1566), Canons of Dort (1619) (known collectively as the Three Forms of Unity), and the Westminster Confession of Faith (1646). Also recognised are the Apostles' Creed, Nicene Creed and Athanasian Creed, all of which summarise the churches' doctrines. The Reformed Churches of New Zealand are one of the few Reformed churches internationally to subscribe to both the Three Forms of Unity (common among Reformed churches with origins in the European continent, especially the Netherlands) and the Westminster Confession of Faith (common among Reformed or Presbyterian churches with origins in the British Isles).
The club's new committee also decided on appointing a new coach Craig Lewis who gained a lot of respect as a player at Strikers some years ago, accepted the challenge. Little did he know what would face him at those early training sessions very few players from either the firsts or the reserve squads from 2014 came back and in some desperation began to seek new players from contacts that he had. Players came from many areas and yes by the first game they had two teams. To summarise the season Craig established some stability in the club, again it would not be a really good season however the first eleven finished mid table which with everything that had occurred throughout the season was an excellent result.
Respect to Mehmetçik Monument (Anzac soldier injured in the arms of Turkish troops) Historians are divided about how they summarise the campaign's result. Broadbent describes the campaign as "a close-fought affair" that was a defeat for the Allies, while Carlyon views the overall result as a stalemate. Peter Hart disagrees, arguing that the Ottoman forces "held the Allies back from their real objectives with relative ease", while Haythornthwaite calls it a "disaster for the Allies". The campaign did cause "enormous damage to ... [Ottoman] national resources", and at that stage of the war the Allies were in a better position to replace their losses than the Ottomans, but ultimately the Allied attempt at securing a passage through the Dardanelles proved unsuccessful.
When The Shock of the New was proposed to the BBC, television programmers were sceptical that a journalist could properly follow the aristocratic tone of Kenneth Clark, whose Civilisation had been so successful. The Shock of the New proved to be a popular and critical success: it has been assessed "much the best synoptic introduction to modern art ever written", taking as its premise the vitality gained by modern art when it ceded the need to replicate nature in favour of a more direct expression of human experience and emotion. Hughes's explanations of modern art benefited from the coherence of his judgments, and were marked by his ability to summarise the essential qualities of his subject. Whether positive or negative, his judgments were enthusiastic.
As a consequence, for most practical purposes, the difference between the total and seawater scales is very small. The following three equations summarise the three scales of pH: :pHF = − log [H+]F :pHT = − log ( [H+]F \+ [HSO] ) = − log [H+]T :pHSWS = − log ( [H+]F \+ [HSO] + [HF] ) = − log [H+]SWS In practical terms, the three seawater pH scales differ in their values by up to 0.12 pH units, differences that are much larger than the accuracy of pH measurements typically required, in particular, in relation to the ocean's carbonate system. Since it omits consideration of sulfate and fluoride ions, the free scale is significantly different from both the total and seawater scales. Because of the relative unimportance of the fluoride ion, the total and seawater scales differ only very slightly.
The youngest of the five finalists in the 2018 Arab Reading Challenge was the winner: 9 year-old Mariam Lehsen Amjoun from Morocco took home the Dhs 500,000 prize money. The Ekhlas School from Kuwait beat 52,000 participating schools to take the Dhs1 million prize for having the best reading initiatives in the region and Aisha Tuwergy from Saudi Arabia took home Dh300,000 for being the faculty member who had done most to encourage reading in her school. The Challenge was formally opened up to a wider international audience for the first time and a new award was introduced for a student from a non-Arab country, won by Tasneem Aidi from France. The entrants from non-Arab countries compete for an award of Dhs100,000 and are only required to summarise 25 books to enter.
The commemorative stelae of Nahr el-Kalb are a group of over 20 inscriptions and rock reliefs carved into the limestone rocks around the estuary of the Nahr al-Kalb (Dog River) in Lebanon, just north of Beirut. The inscriptions include three Egyptian hieroglyphic stelae from Pharaohs including Ramesses II, six Cuneiform inscriptions from Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian kings including Esarhaddon and Nebuchadnezzar II, Roman and Greek inscriptions, Arabic inscriptions from the Egyptian Mamluk sultan BarquqBritannica Al Kalb River and the Druze prince Fakhr-al-Din II, a memorial to Napoleon III's 1860 intervention in LebanonCommemorative stela of Nahr el-Kalb at Livius.org and a dedication to the 1943 independence of Lebanon from France. As such, the site has been said to summarise all of Lebanon's history in one place.
A number of trials took place at the US Department of Energy Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) during December 2010 as described previously. The overall objective for these trials was to demonstrate that a newly developed technology could be used to locate, quantify and characterise the radiological hazards within two separate Hot Cells (B and C). For Hot Cell B, the primary objective of demonstrating that the technology could be used to locate, quantify and characterise 3 radiological sources has been met with 100% success. Despite more challenging conditions in Hot Cell C, two sources were detected and accurately located. To summarise, the technology performed extremely well with regards to detecting and locating radiation sources and, despite the challenging conditions, moderately well when assessing the relative energy and intensity of those sources.
Pantomime or dumb-show Dumbshow, also dumb show or dumb-show, is defined by the Oxford Dictionary of English as "gestures used to convey a meaning or message without speech; mime." In the theatre the word refers to a piece of dramatic mime in general, or more particularly a piece of action given in mime within a play "to summarise, supplement, or comment on the main action"."dumbshow", The Oxford Dictionary of English, ed. Stevenson, Angus, Oxford University Press, 2010, retrieved 29 November 2015 In the Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, Michael Dobson writes that the dumbshow was originally "an allegorical survival from the morality play". It came into fashion in 16th- century English drama in interludes featuring "personifications of abstract virtues and vices who contend in ways which foreshadow and moralize the fortunes of the play's characters".
Michael Lynch, FRHistS, FRSE, FSA Scot (born 15 June 1946) is a retired Scottish historian and a leading expert in the history of the Scottish Reformation and pre-modern urbanisation in the Scottish kingdom. In 2010, five years after his retirement, he was described by one reviewer as 'one of the most influential historians in Scotland of the last thirty years', whose work has been characterised by an 'ability to bring ecclesiastical, cultural and urban perspectives to traditional Scottish political and governmental histories', as well as the ability 'to clarify a difficult theory within a deceptively simple phrase'.English Historical Review (2010) CXXV (515): 982-984 Lynch was born in Aberdeen.Biographical details in this paragraph summarise Lynch's entry in Frost's Scottish Who's Who He was educated at Aberdeen Grammar School before taking degrees at the University of Aberdeen and the University of London.
Javanese syncretistic religiousness has a strong popular base, outnumbering the santri and the support for Islamic political parties. Choy relates this to a Javanese apparent openness to new religions, but filtering out only those elements which fit into the Javanese culture. Choy mentions several reasons for this nominal Islamic identity: # The Islamic scholars in Java have been trained in curricula which were geared for social conditions of two or three centuries ago, lacking the ability to impart the spirit and sense of Islam; # The inability to summarise the principles of Islam in understandable basic points which can be applied to daily life; # Kebatinan can be learned and understood without the need to learn Arabic. In the early 20th century, several groups became formalised, developing systemetised teachings and rituals, thus offering a 'high' form of abangan religiosity, as an alternative to the 'high' Islam.
Birks was educated at Chislehurst and Sidcup Grammar School, went up to Trinity College, Oxford and subsequently obtained a master of laws from University College London.Contract Law, Neil Andrews, Cambridge University Press, 2011, pg 676 Birks was also the first general editor of English Private Law, a book which sought to summarise and rationalise the entire scope of English private law, in accordance with Birks' own passionate belief for order and charactersiation within a discipline (law) which he regarded as too eclectic and inconsistent. He also wrote An Introduction to the Law of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment, and wrote some 142 contributions to legal reviews. In Woolwich Building Society v Inland Revenue Commissioners the House of Lords substantially adopted the reasoning set out in an academic essay by Birks, described in the judgment of Lord Goff as "powerful".
Critical reception to "Kiss" has been generally positive upon release. Robin Murray of Clash described the song as "a bright, buoyant summertime melter, blessed with a softest but more accurate of punches" and wrote that it's "[p]erfect for those rainy British summertime days, it's got a heart of gold but a melancholic after-taste". Samantha Maine of NME called the track an "instant pop banger that sees the band build on their ability to craft catchy choruses". Readdork dubbed the single a "banger" in their review of the track, stating "it shimmers in the sparkle of Pale Waves' 80s pop glitter ball" going on the summarise, "With a timeless quality, it's packing a chorus straight out of the Big Book Of Anthems, it's dark heart juxtaposed by a playful desire to lark about in the fast lanes".
Lorusso and Bacchini argue that self-identified race is of greater use in medicine as it correlates strongly with risk-related exposomes that are potentially heritable when they become embodied in the epigenome. They summarise evidence of the link between racial discrimination and health outcomes due to poorer food quality, access to healthcare, housing conditions, education, access to information, exposure to infectious agents and toxic substances, and material scarcity. They also cite evidence that this process can work positively – for example, the psychological advantage of perceiving oneself at the top of a social hierarchy is linked to improved health. However they caution that the effects of discrimination do not offer a complete explanation for differential rates of disease and risk factors between racial groups, and the employment of self- identified race has the potential to reinforce racial inequalities.
Plunkett was not tried or sentenced in connection with the robberies. In 1845, Charles Miner reported the claim that the Colonel William Plunket who commanded one of the two earliest battalions of the Northumberland Militia in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, in 1775 was the same person as MacLaine's former accomplice. Miner quotes from The Gentleman's Magazine for September 1750 to summarise the association of Plunkett with MacLaine in the attack on Lord Eglintoun on Hounslow Heath. Miner then adds a transcript of a manuscript note found (before 1845) in a bound copy of The Gentleman's Magazine in the Athenaeum Library in London, at this point in the text, stating that Plunkett became a magistrate in Pennsylvania, that he acknowledged he had been the associate of MacLaine, and that persons in America who had known Plunkett in England had recognised him.
Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus: > According to the introduction, the tale was told in German at the wedding of > the daughter of King Hákon the Old of Norway to Hermann, son of the Emperor > Friðrekr. The saga relates how two brothers, Etgarðr and Áki, sons of Duke > Áki of Fricilia, become separated while hunting in the forest one day, when > a flying dragon abducts Etgarðr. They are reunited many adventures later > when they ride against each other in disguise on a plain called > Blomstrvellir, the setting of daily jousts for the sake of love and riches. > The saga concludes with a mass wedding that unites the various male and > female principals from Blomstrvellir.Marianne E. Kalinke and P. M. Mitchell, > Bibliography of Old Norse–Icelandic Romances, Islandica, 44 (Ithaca: Cornell > University Press, 1985), p. 28.
However, research analysing social capital from a gendered perspective is rare, and the notable exceptions are very critical.Molyneux, Maxine (2002) Gender and the Silences of Social Capital: Lessons from Latin America Development and Change 33 (2):167-188Maclean, Kate (2010) 'Capitalising on Women's Social Capital? Women-targeted Microfinance in Bolivia' Development and Change 41 (3) pp 495-515Rankin, K (2002) Social Capital, Microfinance and the Politics of development Feminist Economics 8 (1) pp 1-24 To summarise the debate, it is argued that communitarian theories of social capital naturalise the labour that women put into maintaining social networks and take advantage of rather than valorise their work in the community and family. Communitarian theories of social capital are the most prominent in development literature (mostly inspired by Putnam's 1994 work) and it is assumed that an increase in social capital is inherently good and can support political participation and market efficiency.
The first five of the eight precepts are similar to the five precepts, that is, to refrain from killing living beings, stealing, damaging speech and to abstain from intoxicating drink or drugs, but the third precept is abstinence of all sexual activity instead of refraining from sexual offenses. The final three precepts are to abstain from eating at the wrong time (after midday); to abstain from entertainment such as dancing, singing, music, watching shows, as well as to abstain from wearing garlands, perfumes, cosmetics, and personal adornments; and to abstain from luxurious seats and beds. To summarise, following anthropologist Barend Jan Terwiel's translation from Pāli language used in Thai ceremonies: In Thailand, when the eight precepts are taken, it is believed that if one of them is broken, they are all broken. In the Pāli tradition, the precepts are described in the Dhammika Sutta, part of the Sutta-Nipāta.
In The Winds of Time by Chad Oliver, Oliver not only addressed the issue of there being language barrier but also described a method similar to those a linguist might employ when trying to document an unfamiliar language. The alien even goes on to look for minimal pairs and with his findings, builds an alien equivalent of the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The alien also learns human languages other than English, the majority language of where his ship landed. Oliver, however, glossed over the morphology (linguistics) and syntax part of learning a language and chose to summarise the entire process instead. Overall, Meyers praised this book as having “[set] a high standard of excellence for the use of linguistics”. The minority of its kind, Story of Your Life by Ted Chiang actually has a linguist attempt communication with an alien species that entered the Earth’s atmosphere.
Andrew Frankel of Motor Sport magazine in describing the book as "the better candidates for the most disappointing book I have ever reviewed"; criticised the content of the book as "doesn't read like Clarkson at all" and "bewilderingly lacking in his trademark style and humour" whilst praising the book's bind quality and "comprehensive history of almost all Ferrari's road cars". To summarise it, they described the book as "at best, an overpriced and entirely missed opportunity. At worst, it is a cynical exploitation of two famous names that fails to come within a light year of doing justice to either." They criticised many of the photographs in the book as "seem to be little more than snaps; some, staggeringly, are not even truly in focus while others appear to be poor quality duplicates blown up far beyond their modest capabilities" in addition as too many of them as "just plain boring".
UK 2018 cover US 2018 cover The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle (published in United States as The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle) is a novel by Stuart Turton which won the Best First Novel prize in the 2018 Costa Book Awards and reached number one on The Saturday Times Bestseller list and number five on The Sunday Times Bestseller list. It was published in the UK by Raven Books on 8 February 2018 () and in the US by Sourcebooks Landmark on 28 September 2018 () It has been translated into 28 languages, sold over 200,000 copies in the UK, and television rights have been optioned. The Guardian's review said "With time loops, body swaps and a psychopathic footman, this is a dazzling take on the murder mystery", while The Times said "The plot of this complex, fascinating and bewildering murder-mystery is impossible to summarise" and called it "an astonishingly polished debut".
Portions of the mission are illustrated by animated graphics depicting the parts of the Apollo spacecraft as line drawings, the designs of which are based on the cel- animated graphics in Theo Kamecke's 1971 documentary Moonwalk One. In addition, three wordless biographical sequences summarise the lives of Edwin Aldrin, Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins up to 1969 by means of family photographs and archive footage. In May 2017, cooperation between Miller's production team, NASA, and the National Archives and Records Administration resulted in the discovery of unreleased 70 mm footage from the preparation, launch, mission control operations, recovery and post flight activities of Apollo 11. The large-format footage includes scenes from Launch Complex 39, spectators present for the launch, the launch of the Saturn V rocket, the recovery of astronauts Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong, and Michael Collins and the Apollo 11 command module Columbia, and post-mission efforts aboard the USS Hornet.
Mann continued his interest in improving methodology to find patterns in high-resolution paleoclimate reconstructions: he was lead author with Bradley and Hughes on a study of long term variability in the El Niño southern oscillations and related teleconnections, published in 2000. His areas of research have included climate signal detection, attribution of climate change and coupled ocean-atmosphere modeling, developing and assessing methods of statistical and time series analysis and comparing the results of modelling against data. The original MBH98 and MBH99 papers avoided undue representation of large numbers of tree ring proxies by using a principal component analysis step to summarise these proxy networks, but from 2001 Mann stopped using this method and introduced a multivariate Climate Field Reconstruction (CFR) technique using a regularized expectation–maximization (RegEM) method which did not require this PCA step. In May 2002 Mann and Scott Rutherford published a paper on testing methods of climate reconstruction which discussed this technique.
His 1874 obituary writers summarise his record thus... 'As a jockey Chris Green was one of the best and boldest horsemen of any time' and 'As a cross-country jockey he had few equals, for to the most indomitable pluck he added rare judgment, never being taken aback in a difficulty; he had a firm and at the same time elegant seat, and the finest hands. It mattered not what kind of horse he was put on, for he was equally at home on the puller as on the slug.' Praise for him as a trainer was slightly more muted, but, after the 1871 Grand National victory with The Lamb, a correspondent did comment on him in the following terms: 'Chris Green has not had charge of Lord Poulett's horses more than a twelvemonth, and it is something in the trainer's favour that he was able to win a Grand National on the first time of asking'.
Zooey Deschanel in 2008 In 2008 fashion consultant Gok Wan cited a broderie anglaise top worn by Nadine Coyle of the group Girls Aloud as evidence that "the folk/boho look is so hot for summer",Sky Mag, June 2008 while Marks & Spencer employed the headline "Bohemian Rhapsody" to summarise its summer range, which owed much to the colours and patterns of the early 1970s.Your M&S;, May/June 2008. "Bohemian Rhapsody" was the title of 1975 hit record by the British rock group Queen. At the beginning of June that year fashion writer Carrie Gorman announced that "this week, shopping is about going bright and bold with a boho feel", citing, among other trends, multi- coloured tank tops ("or dress, according to your height") by Harlow, said to be the favorite label of American actress Rachel Bilson.thelondonpaper, 1 June 2008 Bilson has cited Kate Moss and actress Diane Keaton as among her stylistic influences; striped multi-colored panties with brodierie edging were a feature of her photographic shoot for Stuff magazine in 2004.
Schedule 5 of the Act makes clear that certain matters are reserved, among others "honours and dignities or the functions of the Lord Lyon King of Arms so far as relating to the granting of arms"; but that is not the case for "Lord Lyon King of Arms in his judicial capacity", which is therefore subject to the powers of the Scottish Parliament. However, passed in the year 2000, The Abolition of Feudal Tenure Act of 2000 (2000 asp 5) explicitly states (sec. 62) that "Nothing in this Act shall be taken to supersede or impair the jurisdiction or prerogative of the Lord Lyon King of Arms," which suggests that the legal authority of the Lyon Court remains intact in all matters heraldic. To summarise, it is protocol and a preference for any Scottish clan to have their chief recognised by the Lord Lyon and therefore have legal status for the clan as a whole in Scotland and beyond, allowing their head to take their rightful place in the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs.
Troon concluded in his 'Final Report' that, "To summarise the immediate family of Dr Ouko, I am not satisfied that they have told me everything they know. There appears to be a shroud of fear surrounding the whole family which prevents them fully disclosing what I believe some of them must know". Troon also received testimony from Mrs Ouko and Dr Ouko's mistress Herine Violas Ogembo (see below) that shortly before Dr Ouko was murdered threatening phone calls had been made to Mrs Ouko from a woman claiming to be Dr Ouko's "second wife", and also to Miss Ogembo saying that Mrs Ouko knew of the relationship and wanted to kill her and her daughter. Dr Ouko's relationship with Violas Ogembo, whom he had met in 1982 and who had a daughter by him in 1983, "was apparently open and many of his close friends and colleagues knew of their association" and "at times he would take Miss Ogembo on official visits abroad or arrange her travel to meet him at selected venues".
Another reason given for the refusal by the Metropolitan Police to review the case was that the Kenyan Parliamentary Select Committee was investigating the death of Dr Robert Ouko and that it was 'open to Mr Biwott to make any representations he wishes to that Inquiry'. The Select Committee's proceedings, however, were abruptly terminated as Nicholas Biwott began to give his testimony. To date, the allegation that Biwott was involved in the murder of Dr Robert Ouko has never been factually substantiated. In a recent broadcast (March 2017) Episode Six "Lingering Doubts and Further Investigations" it is explained why the allegations against Nicholas Biwott were false, and summarise "It may be a hard truth for many Kenyans to swallow, but Nicholas Biwott clearly had no involvement in the murder of Robert Ouko." In 2000, a Nairobi court awarded Mr Biwott record damages of Sh30 million arising from a case in which he sued a British journalist, Chester Stern, and others for linking him to the Ouko murder in a book entitled 'Dr Iain West's Casebook'.
Post-match, Carter said, "You have to take your hat off to [Wilson]. I did not think he could play that good," noting that despite Wilson's low ranking of 32 "[he] has to be the favorite to win it now, the way he has been playing." The 2019 Masters champion, Judd Trump, played 15th seed Stephen Maguire. Having won six straight frames to conclude his second-round match against Ding Junhui, Trump won another six consecutive frames at the start of this match, scoring breaks of 131, 67, 106, 78 and 101, to lead 7–1 after the first session. He looked set to win the match in the second session without needing to play the third, extending his lead to 9–1. However, Maguire won four of the remaining frames, to trail 5–11 by the end of the session. Trump won the match 13–6, after just three frames of the final session. Maguire was fined £250 for swearing in a post-match press conference when he was asked to summarise his performance in the match.
In The UN Record on Peacekeeping Operations, Michael Doyle and Nicolas Sambanis summarise Boutros Boutros’ report as preventative diplomacy, confidence-building measures such as fact-finding missions, observer mandates, and the potential deployment of UN mandated forces as a preventative measure in order to diminish the potential for violence or the danger of violence occurring and thus increasing the prospect for lasting peace. Their definitions are as follows: # Peace- enforcement, meant to act with or without the consent of the belligerents in order to ensure any treaty or cease-fire mandated by the United Nations Security Council is maintained. This is done primarily under the auspices of Chapter VII of the UN Charter and the forces are generally heavily armed as opposed to the unarmed, or lightly-armed personnel frequently deployed as observers. # Peace-making, meant to compel belligerents to seek a peaceful settlement for their differences via mediation and other forms of negotiation provided by the UN under the auspices of Chapter VI of the UN Charter.
By 1849, A. W. N. Pugin and others had already advanced the ideas of the Gothic Revival and its popularity was secured.The competition to rebuild the Houses of Parliament had been won in 1836 by Gothic designs of Charles Barry assisted in every detail by Pugin; Pugin's masterpiece, the interior of the House of Lords, was completed in 1847 Ruskin offered little new to the debate, but the book helped to capture and summarise the thoughts of the movement, proved a great popular success, and received the approval of The ecclesiologists, the influential newsletter of architectural criticism published by the Cambridge Camden Society. Effects such as the polychromy of High Victorian Gothic architecture may be traced to him, in a genre of "Ruskinian Gothic" that was practised in Britain and colonies like New Zealand and Canada, and in Anglophile strata of the United States.Eve Blau, Ruskinian Gothic (Princeton University Press) 1982; an American Ruskinian is discussed in Sarah Bradford Landau, P.B. Wight: Architect, Contractor, and Critic 1838–1925, (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago) 1981.
In 1924, Whorf wrote a science fiction novel called The Ruler of the Universe, which remained unpublished. It narrated the destruction of Earth by a horrific chain reaction caused by the military's research on atomic fission. According to Peter C. Rollins, it was during the writing of this work that Whorf began to consider the relation between Language and Thought, resulting in the principle of linguistic relativity. As summarise by Meyers, A character in Roger Zelazny’s This Moment of the Storm proceeded to explore this further: This came to suggest that language influenced the naming of places (similar to gender assignments seen in Spanish nouns), an example of language constraining our perception of reality. In ‘’Science and Linguistics’’, Whorf stated that: Whorf’s principle of linguistic relativity was very much used as material for science fiction novels. For example, it appeared in Philip José Farmer’s Prometheus, in which the protagonist, at one point, suggested teaching different groups of aliens different languages, to test the Whorf hypothesis. As pointed out by Meyers, This is explored in George Orwell’s work, Nineteen Eighty-four.
Together with his father, the draper John Wight, he published seven editions of William Bourne's book A Regiment for the Sea,The Beginnings of Maritime Publishing in England, 1528–1640, Thomas R. Adams, The Library: Transactions of the Biblioraphic Society, s6-14: 207–220, 1992.A Regiment for the sea., William Bourne, Imprinted at London: By T. Est, for Thomas Wight, 1592 (log for ships speed, cross-staff, astrolabe.) the first purely English navigational text. By time Wight published Bourne's book, he was primarily a publisher, and became part of a monopoly for printing law books in 1599. He published many of the first printed English law books, including Fulbeck (1600), discussing study methods for law students, techniques for arguing a case, and suggestions for further reading. Pulton (1600), also published by Wight the same year, was the first book to attempt to summarise English criminal law. Fulbecke (1602) was one of the first books on international law. Saint German (1604) was first published in Latin in 1523, and attempts to describe English law through a dialogue between a churchman and a student of English common law.
In 2010, Black addressed the Fit for Work Europe organisation, of which she is a co-president (the organisation focuses on the consequences of musculoskeletal disorders when they affect people of working age). In her address, she said that the government had appointed her to her national director role because "...we had far too many people leaving the workforce with relatively mild musculoskeletal conditions, stress, anxiety, depression...and many of those people received no immediate help to keep them in the workplace...they were leaving the workplace to go into the benefits system". She also said: "If I had to summarise what we have been trying to do in the United Kingdom, it would be to say: get rid of the old system of the paper sick-note, put it in red because it's dangerous, it's not good advocacy for your patient". The key assumption underpinning Black's thinking is that because people are living longer they will have to work longer - hence the need for more effective intervention when working people fall ill, so that they can remain in the workforce instead of retiring on medical grounds or going onto benefits.

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