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dichotomise การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Each lobe contains a central collumella, analogous to the sporangia of hornworts; however, the sporangia of hornworts do not dichotomise.
  • The sepals are 14-22 long and 3 7 mm wide, narrowly oblong and acute; the 15 veins are dichotomising and reticulate distally, with midrib prominent; their glands linear.
  • In its mix of formalist sophistication and openness to experiment, Quinn's work confounds perceptions of Irish poetry as rigidly dichotomised between formal conservatism and 1930s-derived innovation, a distinctiveness confirmed by the editorial decision to award him the single largest share of the 2004 Bloodaxe anthology " The New Irish Poets ".
  • From 1871 on, Le Bon was an avowed opponent of protectionists, who he believed were halting France's martial development and stifling her industrial growth; stating in 1913 : " Only people with lots of cannons have the right to be pacifists . " He also warned his countrymen of the deleterious effects of political rivalries in the face of German military might and rapid industrialisation, and therefore was uninvolved in the Dreyfus Affair which dichotomised France.
  • Waltraud Ernst, professor of the history of medicine at Oxford Brookes University, commenting on Vankevitch's observations, agrees that attempts to police the " medical cyber-market with a view to preventing fraudulent and potentially harmful practices may well be justified . " She commends " Barrett's concern for unsubstantiated promotion and hype, " and states that " Barrett's concern for fraudulent and potentially dangerous medical practices is important, " but she sees Barrett's use of " an antiquarian term such as'quack'" as part of a " dichotomising discourse that aims to discredit the "'old-fashioned','traditional','folksy'and heterodox by contrasting it with the'modern','scientific'and orthodox . " Ernst also interprets Barrett's attempt to " reject and label as'quackery'each and every approach that is not part of science-based medicine " as one which minimizes the patient's role in the healing process and is inimical to medical pluralism.