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  • This distinction is not consistently reflected terminologically in the literature.
  • The sociological result of the formalized spouse exchange relationship was extension of kinship both terminologically
  • Terminologically, the word " referendum " rarely appears in the French constitutions before 1958.
  • "terminologically inexact " or " factually challenged " can seem almost gentlemanly.
  • No, he didn't differentiate terminologically, but he did study alignments of different lengths.
  • Certainly I think you would be better off not being sharp when the rest of us are a bit terminologically inexact.
  • In central Asia, all members of a lineage were terminologically distinguished by generation and age, with senior superior to junior.
  • Biomes are terminologically similar to the concept of ecosystems, and are soil organisms, often referred to " as " ecosystems.
  • They distinguished terminologically between lu ! a  dialect and lisn  language ( ?An + s 1952 : 16 17; Naccr 1988 : 58 ).
  • Poet and noted biographer of Sylvia Plath, Edward Butcher, wrote an essay on Peters, stating that he " fairly categorized terminologically American poems and poets with his original poetic terminology ".
  • Keynes felt that Hayek was splitting hairs with him terminologically and published a public response to the Austrian's criticisms, writing,  Dr Hayek has seriously misapprehended the character of my conclusions.
  • The genetic diagnostics of the giant ripples in the Kuray Basin had a general character and was essentially limited to the terminologically correct definition only ( in fact, the purpose of the article of the authors mentioned was different ).
  • The strongest cyclones are called windstorms within academia and the insurance industry . ) the media or by the general public, and appears to have gained currency in academic and insurance circles as a linguistic and terminologically neutral name for the phenomena.
  • Second conjugation verbs behave as would normally be expected in an ergative language : the subject is declined in the least-marked case, the " nominative " case ( terminologically equivalent in this instance to " absolutive " cases in other languages ).
  • This distinction, symbolized in terms of " elder " and " younger " or " bigger " and " smaller ", was carried into the clan and family as well, and all members of a lineage were terminologically distinguished by generation and age, with senior superior to junior.
  • Yet, it may become even more terminologically complex; for, as Hahn and Kleinman indicate, there can also be cases where there are paradoxical nocebo outcomes from placebo rituals ( e . g . the TGN1412 drug trial ), as well as paradoxical placebo outcomes from nocebo rituals ( see also unintended consequences ).
  • From this point on, the Latin vernaculars were viewed as separate languages, developing local norms and, for some, orthographies of their own, so that Vulgar Latin must be regarded not as extinct  since all modern Romance varieties are its continuation  but as replaced conceptually and terminologically by multiple labels recognizing regional differences in linguistic features.
  • *Not only are they all fungi, they're in the same " taxonomical family ", making them about as close terminologically as the Canidae which includes all the dogs, wolves, jackals and foxes . ( Such comparisons at a distance are a bit subjective, but it gives you an idea of their closeness.
  • Despite these seemingly terminologically pitfall-laden inquiries, the question of Maya origins is justified for professional focus and elaboration, since all historical topics are, by their nature, constituted not only by ascriptions weighting the given topic in importance and cast by this or that interpretation or interpretative context but also by  fact .  Of necessity, these kinds of questions are rooted in the history of scholarship about this or that topic, taking into account different or new emphases or de-emphases, usually generationally or paradigmatically determined.
  • :: : : Some languages have a specific term for " wife's sister's husband " and / or a specific term for " husband's brother's wife " ( and sometimes the " husband's brother's wife " term is also used by two wives of the same man to refer to each other ), but I don't know of any language with a specific term for sister's husband's brother ( though in some languages such a relationship would be terminologically grouped together with some more basic kinship relationship ).
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