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intermittence การใช้

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  • Is there planned intermittence ? talk ) 06 : 40, 20 April 2008 ( UTC)
  • Thus the novel embodies and manifests the principle of intermittence : to live means to perceive different and often conflicting aspects of reality.
  • The "'Fontes Tamarici "', in Roman conquest of Cantabria, it has the peculiarity that water emanating from the earth, and its intermittence was considered omen at this time.
  • David Cunningham, a Glass scholar, writes that the intermittence of Glass's " Knee Plays " amongst the opera's four acts, serves as a " constant motif in the whole work ".
  • In common with the simpler counterparts, complex systems exhibit rest phases, smooth or creeping flows, turbulence, and chaotic phases; they alternate in storminess and placidity, as well as in their intermittence and changeability.
  • The concept of minimising the intermittence is also first implied in one of al-Jazari's saqiya devices, which was to maximise the efficiency of the saqiya . and were in everyday use throughout the medieval Islamic world.
  • In April 2013, at the International Symposium " Les intermittences du sujet : 閏ritures de soi et discontinu ( 1913-2013 ) ", the University of Upper Alsace welcomed Philippe Vilain for a day of study on his work.
  • Stephen and the Polish king Casimir IV Jagiellon were previously informed of the future attack by the Khan of the Crimean Khanate, Me駆i I Giray ( 1466-1515, with intermittence ), who was an occasional ally of Stephen the Great, and had a clear stance against the Golden Horde.
  • Shattuck, drawing on an impressive degree of erudition, shows some of the sources of Proust's deliberation on these deep flaws in human nature, and he links those flaws to another concept, which Proust called " intermittence, " the inability of people to be all of themselves at any given time.
  • It has been claimed that this rotation, if it reached the ideal speed, caused the same illusion of animation as the later zoetrope, but because there was no shutter ( the slits in a zoetrope ) or other provision for intermittence, the effect was in fact simply a series of horizontally drifting figures, with no true animation.
  • The second mechanism is the balancing of power generation, which is coordinated by the TSO . Depending on the energy lacks and surplus ( e . g . due to power plant failures or to intermittence in the case of wind power installations ), the TSO determines the penalties that will be paid by IPPs who missed in their obligations.
  • Two years later, in late 2009, she organized an exhibition at the National Union of Cuban Writers and Artists ( UNEAC ), entitled " Las Intermitencias del Color ", a title inspired by Roland Petit's ballet " Proust, or Intermittences of the Heart " based on the eponymous work of Marcel Proust, with fifteen new large-format paintings.
  • Those on view show how Proust had crossed out the original title of his multivolume novel, " Les Intermittences du Coeur " ( " Changing Heart Beats ) " _ of which " Swann's Way " was the first part _ and replaced it with " A la Recherche du Temps Perdu " ( " Remembrance of Things Past " ).
  • Up to 5 GW of such diesel generation is used in France for similar purposes, but these technologies seem to be relatively unknown There is no reason they should not be massively increased in scope [ https : / / web . archive . org / web / 20100217164416 / http : / / www . claverton-energy . com / download / 131 / to cope with even the intermittence introduced by wind power.
  • He also indirectly caused Proust to change the title of his " magnum opus ", " In Search of Lost Time " : Initially it was called " Les Intermittences du cSur ", but when Proust learned that Binet-Valmer had published the novel " Le CSur en d閟ordre " ( 1912 ), the name was changed to " ?la recherche du temps perdu ", with the former title making an appearance as a subtitle in the volume " Sodome et Gomorrhe " ( 1921 / 22 ).