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"unitary" Definitions
  1. (specialist) (of a country or an organization) consisting of a number of areas or groups that are joined together and are controlled by one government or group
  2. (formal) single; forming one unit

208 Sentences With "unitary"

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

America became a unitary market more than 203 years ago.
How close to implosion is Iraq as a unitary state?
Individual: An organism is also discrete, with a unitary identity.
The sixth oval, like the first, is unitary, but black.
We share the unitary objective of bringing their loved ones back.
One problem with untrammeled power is that unitary executives make mistakes.
To the unitary, mythic Moon had been added an astronomical counterpart.
Shortly after the Dowell ruling, Missouri filed motions for unitary status.
Post-Soviet federalism has been emasculated, turning Russia into a unitary state.
And they both want Iraq to be preserved as a unitary state.
But that is anathema to commanders committed to defending a unitary state.
To interfere with the President's (non)prosecution power violates the Unitary Executive.
Debates over the "Unitary Executive" theory reach far back into US history.
Andrew: It will be a case study in the unitary executive theory.
The company will be a unitary one with MediaMonks as its core.
Scalia's Morrison dissent laid out the "unitary executive" theory of the presidency.
"Good public health practice would be to have a unitary market," he says.
So does it make sense to speak of populists as a unitary item?
" "He's made as strong a case for the unitary executive as I've ever seen.
Democracy is not a unitary state that can be achieved, but a continuous process.
Everyone realizes that they will have to compromise to yield the prize — unitary rules.
Those include how the BBC should be audited, and the new unitary board appointed.
Kavanaugh, for what it's worth, won't be a unitary figure on the Supreme Court.
Quantum computers use unitary transformations on the state of the qubits to perform calculations.
The CCP is committed to unitary rule, authoritarian values, and absolute control of information.
One of the main problems is that the Syrian rebels aren't a unitary group.
One other person who appeared to reject the unitary executive theory was James Madison.
The number of state and municipal unitary enterprises tripled just from 2013 to 2015.
Subjecting all of them to a unitary policy, like a moratorium, is a bad idea.
But Barr is simply wrong that the unitary executive theory "unquestionably" describes the framers' vision.
This, according to Kavanaugh, is unconstitutional because it violates the unitary nature of the executive branch.
It is not in U.S. interests to help anyone on either side create a unitary state.
Over an adventurous lifetime, he managed to transcend the constraints built into a unitary racial identity.
It's easy to imagine justice as a unitary thing—a single, imposing building, a Supreme Court.
Olson (1203), Justice Antonin Scalia published a lonely dissent articulating this theory of the unitary executive.
Barr, in his past writings, including a July 1989 memo, embraced a strong "unitary executive" view.
" In the speech, Barr also discussed what's known as the unitary executive theory, telling the audience to laughs, "Some of you may recall when I was up for confirmation all these Democratic senators saying how concerned they were about my adherence to the unitary executive fear.
"Look, the President of the United States, as we all know, is a unitary executive," he said.
After all, the system worked fine in the brief period of Democratic unitary government from 2009-2011.
Under the army, which sees itself as the guardian of a unitary state, regional autonomy seems unimaginable.
Without them he becomes what Josh Blackman has called a "solitary executive" rather than a unitary one.
But it is very likely to end in a victory for Scalia's vision of the unitary executive.
Without that, it will not be a unitary state able to prevent terrorists from exploiting its territory.
A Pentagon-approved DD-214 type of statement would be a unitary, standardized record for all reservists.
Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire each plan to abolish their county, district and city councils and form a "unitary" one.
People are not unitary beings; they are entire universes for the "microbiomes" that live on and within them.
The unitary charge features some inflation-linkage and is divided into portions that fluctuate with the corresponding costs.
Indeed, consciousness itself—the unitary Cartesian mind—is a megalomaniacal fantasy, misbegotten by the rise of bourgeois society.
It has a legal status of federal state unitary enterprise (FSUE), implying strong links with the Russian Federation.
The Swiss company also plans to hold an extraordinary shareholders meeting to establish a new unitary share class.
Specifically, the EU's role as a unitary political actor contributes to its status as a rival to Russia.
Of course, as we all now know, Trump's unitary, capricious attempts at diplomacy are a double-edged sword.
Unitary had previously raised pre-seed funding from Entrepreneur First, as an alumnus of the company builder program.
Yet, regardless of the arguments against the unitary executive, it is clear that Barr does not buy them.
The Framers realized a unitary and independent executive was necessary through the failures of the Articles of Confederation.
They see the United States as a unitary state no different in powers from Great Britain, France, or Russia.
In 1972, a referendum changed the country's federal structure to a unitary one, effectively swallowing the Anglophone region's autonomy.
CL: Then a shift happens, from individual, unitary works like these to the beginnings of the scroll-like works.
Under "unitary executive" theory, the president can simply seize whatever administrative authority Congress gives anyone in the executive branch.
As recently as 1988, the theory of the unitary executive was a fringe idea on the nation's highest court.
" In Parliament, Prime Minister Philippe merely reiterated the government's goal: "To build a single unitary retirement system in France.
The army has traditionally seen itself as the only institution preventing the country's disintegration and has favored a unitary state.
Instead of this unitary approach, however, the patchwork persists, and with it the likelihood of unco-ordinated national tax policies.
By its maturity the empire had evolved into a "mixed monarchy" that was neither feudal nor democratic, federal nor unitary.
Godin wanted his temple to have the ethos of communal unitary architecture and the grandeur of the Palace of Versailles.
The simple fact is that parties, especially American parties, are not unitary actors, even in an era of considerable polarization.
This notion, that everyone who exercises federal executive power must be responsible to the president is the "unitary executive" theory.
He also ruled out conceding to Russia's previously insistent demand that Ukraine become a federation instead of a unitary state.
The Constitution thus establishes a unitary executive, an office in which the executive power is entrusted to a single person.
Thus, according to Hamilton, key constitutional principles — such as energetic government and republican self-government — depend upon the unitary executive.
As the paper notes, experiments have shown that synaptic connections are not unitary and consist of multiple phases across multiple molecules.
To him, collapsing "armed and dangerous" into a unitary concept is permissible only when it comes to firearms, not other weapons.
Instead, the government proposes a unitary BBC board of 14 members, including nonexecutive members, responsible for budget, content and editorial decisions.
In general the work tends to grow more "sculptural" — in the sense of more concentrated, unitary, handmade — as time goes on.
Those people are unlikely to settle for more autonomy, but, under current circumstances, they cannot legally split from a unitary state.
The notion of an independent inspector general within the executive branch remains suspect by those who insist on a unitary executive.
Art Review PHILADELPHIA — People talk about Africa as if it were a unitary thing, one culture, one mind, which it's not.
No more can Britain boast about its streamlined, predictable "Westminster model," in which a strong executive presides over a unitary state.
The installations on the show's other floors don't achieve quite the same unitary effect, though there are some shrewd pairings throughout.
How does it fold together the events of these three minutes into the unitary experience of the passage of three minutes?
Thus far, the Roberts Court has taken incremental steps towards a unitary executive, but it's largely left Humphrey's Executor in place.
You run into the idea of the unitary executive [a theory that proposes the president can control the entire executive branch].
"To me, it was an invitation to be appointed with his support for the unitary executive and the all-powerful president."
He's proposing replacing the unitary form of government currently in place, where all power and is centered in the capital Manila.
They call it "the unitary power of the executive," that the executive as commander in chief can do anything they want.
"[I]nvoking the deep state implies a misleading view of the state as a monolithic, unitary actor," he argued Monday in Jacobin.
Take the "unitary executive," a constitutional theory of such sweeping effect that it receives something resembling (by "Vice's" standards) an academic symposium.
The unitary message, again and again, is that Trump is here for the little guy, the victim of Washington's business as usual.
Ingels seems to be attracted to the dialectical relationship between the unitary building and the multiplicities of urban space that surround it.
The unitary executive may not be the law of the land, yet, but it is the dominant viewpoint in conservative legal circles.
C. Circuit) and Joan Larsen (Sixth Circuit) who share Kavanaugh's belief in the "unitary executive theory," which confers nearly unlimited presidential power.
There isn't — and wasn't — a single, unitary Blue America facing off against the Red Team, with red and blue together reflecting diversity.
The BBC Trust, set up under the current charter, will be abolished, to be replaced by a unitary board with some political appointees.
While that holding exposes the weakness of President Trump's unitary executive argument, it also undermines his executive privilege argument attacking Mueller's subpoena authority.
But Mexico's militant union, the National Co-ordinator of Education Workers (CNTE), objects in particular to having a unitary test for all teachers.
Were the UK the unitary state still referred to in France as L'Angleterre, that deal -- however uncomfortable for May -- would now be done.
In Angry White Men, I did come up with a fairly uniform, unitary class background and it was downwardly-mobile lower middle class.
At Fox News — the outlet Mr. Ailes created, ran and drove like a bullet train for two decades — he was a unitary force.
This autonomy has prompted a legal challenge under a theory, endorsed by many constitutional scholars, that the agency violates the "unitary executive" principle.
In all of their work, you encounter divisions grinding together with tectonic pressure, never resolving into a unitary whole but never falling apart.
The perfunctory depth doesn't detract from the terrific aplomb of the figures, but it sabotages the unitary power to which the picture aspires.
Conservatives have also supported President Trump by employing the "unitary executive" theory, arguing that the President has broad powers over the executive branch.
Unitary executive theory generally holds that the president controls the entire executive branch of government and can wield that power with few limits.
This diversity in our housing landscape means that America's housing problems are better understood as two partially overlapping crises rather than a unitary problem.
"The fact is there is no longer a single, unitary internet, but rather two 'internets', China and the rest of the world," he said.
There might have been other technologies and protocols under the hood, so to speak, but the product presented itself as a titanic, unitary whole.
In a way, this looks like the same mismatch that has plagued the euro: a single currency without a unitary fiscal and political authority.
I hate to break the news to those critics, but they are wildly wrong both about Kavanaugh and the theory of the unitary executive.
Kavanaugh has long embraced the "unitary executive" theory, which argues it is unconstitutional for any executive branch officer to be insulated from presidential control.
In general, the idea of unitary "women's interests" makes the most sense when you avoid thinking too much about the gritty details of policy.
Diplomatic purists may bemoan this trend, running athwart as it does the ideal of a unitary state capable of speaking with "one voice" abroad.
Mr. Duterte, benefiting from an overwhelming majority in Congress, is proposing that the Philippines' unitary system be abandoned in favor of a federal government.
Given that a unitary state is by far the neater and more desirable alternative, Washington should continue to pursue it within the existing framework.
The argument that this very independence is inconsistent with a unitary executive becomes more persuasive when IGs act on behalf of the legislative branch.
And as long as it's on the agenda, progressives are going to push for what they've wanted all along: a unitary government-run system.
The taxpayer, under SFA, is the whole unitary business, including all evasion-motivated subsidiaries over which the parent corporations exercise legal and economic control.
Today, rather than celebrating the uniqueness of individual cultures, the C.C.P. increasingly promotes a unitary category called "zhonghua," a kind of pan-Chinese identity.
Third, the limits Congress creates for independent agencies still leave the president with broad discretion to remove officials, retaining the Constitution's basic unitary structure.
On the other, we hear that the president is a unitary executive who can constitutionally order an end to any investigation for whatever reason.
Third, and what has not been sufficiently highlighted, is that the issue is complex and the declines are not across the board and unitary.
But 11 years later, the country's first president, Ahmadou Ahidjo reneged on the federalist deal and imposed a unitary state, governed from French-speaking Yaounde.
During the transition, a prime minister supported by the opposition and technocrats would incrementally assume the powers necessary to transition from unitary, single-party rule.
Her ability to galvanize and focus on big picture goals for the greater good supersedes the current obsession over unitary litmus issues or party ideologies.
But he, too, emphasizes that Jewishness was never a simple or unitary identity, and he, too, mistrusts the Bible as a source of historical evidence.
Yet Gropius used the expression "cathedral of future freedom" interchangeably with his more prosaic phrase "unitary work of art" when promoting his total-artwork ideal.
Indeed, the Supreme Court will hear a case early next month that could make Scalia's theory of the unitary executive the law of the land.
And early presidents including George Washington exercised the executive power to direct federal prosecutors to drop suits — providing additional evidence for the "unitary executive" theory.
The affected insurers are Belarusian Republican Unitary Insurance Company (Belgosstrakh), Belarusian National Reinsurance Organisation (Belarus Re), Export-Import Insurance Company of the Republic of Belarus (Eximgarant).
This defense is a natural outgrowth of the unitary executive theory, a legal doctrine advanced by apologists for the imperial presidency, including Attorney General William Barr.
And even the advocates of a stronger unitary executive recognize that the president's choices are bound by the explicit language of the law and the constitution.
Paul Biya became prime minister of Cameroon only three years after it became a unitary state in 1972 and succeeded Ahmadou Ahidjo as president in 1982.
Unitary, a startup that's developing AI to automate content moderation for "harmful content" so that humans don't have to, has picked up £1.35 million in funding.
Which, of course, is where Unitary wants to step in, with a stated mission to "make the internet a safer place" by automatically detecting harmful content.
A unitary state would no longer be Jewish if a majority Arab population controlled it, nor a democracy if a Jewish minority ruled an Arab majority.
Whether and how the two come together may determine whether this sample, one-ninth of a unitary work, has staying power beyond the class-reunion phase.
"The action by the defendants is treason with the aim to separate Papua province and West Papua province from the unitary state of Indonesia," said Permana.
Republicans now all seem to believe in the Unitary Executive theory, except they want to also grant him total control of the government, not just the executive.
But the flagging electricity, drainage and heating systems are all unitary and should really be replaced in one go; doing so piecemeal will drastically increase the costs.
Now, under President Donald Trump, Americans are seeing that unitary government also leads to crisis-wracked governance, with the Republican Congress unable to coalesce around an agenda.
If there is gridlock and chaos under both divided and unitary government, that suggests the problem is systemic rather than being caused by a particular partisan alignment.
Pharmaceutical companies, for their part, were expecting a "unitary patent system" for Europe by 2018, with an intellectual-property court in Britain specialising in drugs and chemicals.
At the very least, however, the CFPB's structure — with a single director who can't be removed by the president — is anathema to proponents of the unitary executive.
Since the 1980s, conservative scholars who call themselves originalists have pushed the argument for a "unitary executive," meaning that the president has all power over his subordinates.
Nixon was wrongly decided, and the president possesses unchallengeable unitary power to prevent critical evidence of potential crimes and impeachable offenses from being considered by Congress and courts.
Android phone prices, on the other hand, aren't controlled by a unitary body and therefore exhibit all the signs of the brutal price war we're all familiar with.
Advocates of the unitary executive theory assume that the president has a team of like-minded advisers and subordinates willing and able to carry out the president's wishes.
And in the case of the unitary executive — where literally or metaphorically, the leader controls all the voting shares — there can be a desire for excessive social cohesion.
In fact, the letter's absence of meaningful constitutional inquiry beyond baldfaced claims that Article II establishes a unitary executive gives the impression that these questions have gone unexamined.
It is seeking responses on a "unitary tax" that would be levied on a share of digital companies' global profits, divided up between the EU countries where they operate.
That is one reason (admittedly of several) why Mr Duterte has called for the constitution to be rewritten to turn the Philippines from a unitary state into a federation.
Grosvenor's structures are neither unitary nor separate entities, as the steel poles make evident; they establish a strange dialogue that invites viewers to tease out the relationship between them.
It collapsed the conjunctive conditions "armed and dangerous" into a unitary concept—"armed and therefore dangerous"—thus stripping "dangerous" of any independent meaning and rendering it a mere redundancy.
In addition, Fitch views RUB0003 billion of debt at public unitary enterprise Obldorsnab as direct risk as Belgorod subsidises the company for principal and interest payments on this loan.
The President's memo asked DOD and DHS to determine how to address transgender individuals currently serving based on military effectiveness and lethality, unitary cohesion, budgetary constraints and applicable law.
Because we are a republic, not a democracy; we have a federal system of government, not a unitary system; our president is chosen by the states, not by individuals.
In addition, Fitch views RUB0003 billion of debt at state unitary enterprise Obldorsnab as direct risk as Belgorod subsidises the company for principal and interest payments on this loan.
The liberal imagination reacts with discomfort to the Samuel Huntingtonian idea of a clash of civilizations, or anything that pits a unitary "West" against an Islamist or Islamic alternative.
In June, the Supreme Court will tell us whether "l'état" is that established by the Constitution or is the "l'état c'est moi" – the "unitary executive" – claimed by Donald Trump.
If you want to understand Barr's approach to his job — and his disregard for longstanding norms of prosecutorial independence — you have to understand the theory of the unitary executive.
Kahn comes to approach the idea of a self resistant to categories, a selfhood which trumps the division of labor by emptying her poems of anything like a unitary speaker.
The principles also include a prohibition on unitary scoring — to prevent governments from using AI to score their citizens and residents — a subtle jab at China's controversial social credit system.
David Clementi, who completed a report on the governance and regulation of the BBC last March, will be the first chair of the corporation under a new unitary board structure.
Circling the wagons, the county's seven Tory MPs have strongly backed the report, and its recommendation that two new unitary authorities should be set up to replace the county council.
Federalist Society graduates crafted new constitutional interpretations — on originalism, the unitary theory of the executive, the Second Amendment, campaign contributions as protected speech — and some endorsed them from the bench.
A hundred years later, Adam Hampshire, Roger Highfield, Adrian Owen, and Beth Parkin wrote an article for the journal Neuron debunking the notion that a unitary, measurable "intelligence" even exists.
While Zappa's protean catalogue can be idealized as an awesome, unitary composition, individual works, for all their raucous energy, can pale in comparison to those of the modernist icons he revered.
"Some of you may recall when I was up for confirmation, all these Democratic senators saying how concerned they were about my adherence to the unitary executive theory," Mr. Barr said.
The powers of the executive are now being cited, through media forms that did not then exist, to once again justify the unitary executive, even in the absence of congressional action.
Today Mr. Trump's unaccountable style of governing reflects his Attorney General William Barr's doctrine of unitary executive power, oblivious to the checks and balances and separation of powers in the Constitution.
"That focus on digital, (a) faster, better and cheaper (market) and having a unitary structure are pretty key in the environment we're going into in the next couple of years," he said.
LSE CEO Xavier Rolet, speaking to reporters on a conference call, promoted the potential tie-up as a true 'merger of equals', with a British-based holding company and a unitary board.
The argument for partition or loose confederation rests on the idea that there's no better alternative: that it would take diplomatic alchemy to achieve a unitary Syria with a power-sharing government.
The way this would work is that most states, instead of being split into one or two or three or four or eleven House districts would just operate as a unitary electoral zone.
Others challenges have claimed that prosecution was not always conducted by the "executive," implying either that prosecution was not an executive function, the president's power was not unitary over executive functions, or both.
Scalia's idea of a unitary executive lost out in 1988 — he couldn't even convince a single one of his colleagues to join his jeremiad against agency officials who act independently from the president.
In addition, the idea of proposing the wholesale use of these drugs for any and all mental disorders and thereby construing mental illness as a unitary continuum of conditions is simplistic and misleading.
It was further reinforced by the expansive economic and social programmes of the New Deal, so that by the 1950s it was unclear whether America was still a federation or effectively a unitary republic.
So, those three things, focus on digital, faster, better, cheaper, and that last, unitary structure, I think are pretty key in the environment that we're going in to, over the next couple of years.
While the artist is clearly preoccupied with the grid, what she did not swallow hook, line, and sinker was formalism's emphasis on the unitary, on dissolving differences in the name of essentiality or style.
It's rooted in an age of partisan polarization, as well as the dream of the likes of Paul Ryan of having a unitary government that could fulfill long-deferred goals of the conservative movement.
In those cases, the Supreme Court rejected the view that the president had the unitary power as the commander in chief to seize private property absent some congressional or constitutional power to do so.
In the end, Waldron concludes that there is no "small polished unitary soul-like substance" that makes us equal; there's only a patchwork of arguments for our deep equality, collectively compelling but individually limited.
The notion that a mental illness could be carried across generations by unitary, indivisible factors—corpuscles of information threading through families—would have struck most of Bleuler's contemporaries as mad in its own right.
Because when you look at the specific constitutional objections he's making, they relate to the legislative veto, the unitary executive (meaning the president's ability to control subordinates in the executive branch), and recognition power.
As the effects continue to proliferate—devastating governments, businesses, and individual lives—so too does the range of potential causes, rendering any investigation into origins, especially into a unitary origin, fraught if not ultimately futile.
It wants to abolish regional governments and parliaments (including the one in Andalusia in which it now has 12 out of 109 seats) and make Spain a centralised unitary state, as it was under Franco.
For the pixel, as a unitary notation of any digital image, symbolizes not only the utopian representation of individuals in a democratic society, but also an ever-increasing flattening relationship between technological devices and politics.
All of this, along with the solid-state Force Touch trackpad, expresses Apple's modernized laptop design, whose signature change is the frenzied push of USB-C as the unitary replacement for all the world's ports.
But the 'unitary executive' theory that Judge Kavanaugh has so often embraced is difficult to reconcile with even a somewhat-independent prosecutor within the executive branch who doesn't serve at the pleasure of the President.
But it is also thematically compatible with the idea of a "unitary executive" -- a theory that grants expansive powers to the presidency and is advanced by some conservative lawyers -- including current Attorney General William Barr.
Her plans to have workers represented on company boards have already been watered down, however, with business minister Greg Clark saying on Tuesday the government would not "overturn" Britain's successful system of having unitary boards.
Mr. Barr is known as an executive power maximalist and a believer in the unitary executive theory, which posits that the Constitution imbues the presidency with broad powers that are subject to relatively little oversight.
Many of Hamilton's intellectual admirers today endorse the theory of the unitary executive, which holds that the Constitution grants the president all of the remaining executive powers that existed at the time of the founding.
After their victory in 1714 in the War of the Spanish Succession, in which most of the Catalan elite had ended up backing the losing Austrian side, the victorious Bourbons imposed an absolute and unitary monarchy.
What Christianity and secular humanism share is more important than their differences: No other religious tradition—Jewish, Greek, Indian, Chinese—envisions history as linear rather than cyclical or conceives of humanity as a unitary collective subject.
And in our industry, going back to what we're trying to do at S4Capital, as I said before, the third point, in addition to digital, in addition to faster, better, cheaper, we're focusing on a unitary structure.
The result turbo-charged the most dangerous idea to which a democracy can fall victim: the fallacy that "the will of the people" forms a single, unitary intelligence, issuing instructions to which all must bend the knee.
"Look at the situation with consideration for the Unitary State of Indonesia, not for the hatred toward a group, religion or certain people," said Hironimus Rupa, a 36-year-old Catholic priest who had joined Purnama's supporters.
Modern trade doesn't consist of unitary economies buying and selling finished products (if it ever did), it consists of products being created along a value chain across several economies, with each adding value to a finished product.
The unitary executive's more recent popularity is a testament to Scalia's power to shape conservative opinion, and of the power the Federalist Society has to popularize ideas that were once viewed as well outside the legal mainstream.
We know that Attorney General Barr has taken a position in a detailed, 19-page memo that the president can essentially never be guilty of obstruction of justice, because of the unitary executive theory of the Constitution.
School districts were allowed to apply for unitary status that released them from court oversight as long as they could prove they had done everything practicable to desegregate, even if the schools were still, in fact, segregated.
To push this metaphor even further, we tend to think about our relationships with robots as this unitary thing, but there's a dynamic ecology that's starting to grow, and for different types of robots we have different relationships.
This includes continuing the ultra-violent war on drugs, controversial tax reforms, and changing the country's form of government from unitary to federal — which critics warn could accelerate the president's slide toward a more authoritarian style of leadership.
Mr. Johnson, free of mayoral duties, said that Mr. Cameron had failed to bring home significant overhauls of the European Union, which is "ratchet-hauling us ever further into a federal structure" that is more centralized and unitary.
And instead of recognizing populism as a motley coalition united primarily by opposition to liberalism's rule, liberals want to believe they're facing a unitary enemy — a revanchist patriarchal white supremacy, infecting every branch and tributary of the right.
Mr. Barr's view on executive power is a misreading of the unitary executive theory, said Charles Fried, a Checks & Balances member and Harvard Law professor who endorsed the theory while he was solicitor general during the Reagan administration.
Under the "unitary executive" view of presidential power, as former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy wrote last month in the National Review, Justice Department officials are mere instruments of the president's constitutional authority as head of the executive branch.

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