Depend Sentence Examples

depend
  • If I need any help, I can always depend on Josh.

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  • Do not depend on the putty.

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  • It might depend on the circumstances.

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  • A good deal may also depend on the soil.

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  • I was raised on a farm, and being an only child, I learned not to depend on others for entertainment.

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  • Every New Englander might easily raise all his own breadstuffs in this land of rye and Indian corn, and not depend on distant and fluctuating markets for them.

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  • No, it's not, but you're strong, and the lives of those you care about depend upon you.

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  • He officiated at the coronation of the boy king Edward VI., and is supposed to have instituted a sinister change in the order of the ceremony, by which the right of the monarch to reign was made to appear to depend upon inheritance alone, without the concurrent consent of the people.

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  • The priests of the Greek Church, on whom the rural population depend for instruction, are often deplorably ignorant.

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  • Not reckoning scattered notices, we depend principally upon five later compositions, Diodorus, book xvii.

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  • Under the system of grazing practised throughout Australia it is customary to allow sheep, cattle and horses to run at large all the year round within enormous enclosures and to depend entirely upon the natural growth of grass for their subsistence.

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  • For you'll admit that if we don't know for sure how many of them there are... hundreds of lives may depend on it, while there are only two of us.

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  • At the receiving station the differences in these systems depend chiefly upon variations in the actual form of the oscillation detector used, whether it be a loose contact or a thermal, electrolytic or magnetic detector.

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  • It appears, however, to depend upon the fact that an electric arc is not like a solid conductor.

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  • I depend upon you as much as Vara.

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  • There's no room for failure, not when the souls of the dead depend on you.

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  • Monotropas afford an extreme case of it, having lost their chlorophyll almost entirely, and come to depend upon the Fungi for their nutrinient.

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  • The ultimate value of numerical inquiries must depend on the equivalence of the units on which they are based.

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  • The splitting up of the vascular tube I into separate strands does not depend wholly upon the occurrence I of leaf-gaps.

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  • In such cases the characters of the adult tissue clearly depend solely upon the characters of the cell-walls, and it is usual in plant-anatomy to speak of the wall with its enclosed cavity as the cell, and the contained protoplasm or other substances, if present, as cell-contents.

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  • In other words, as these growing regions consist of cells, the growth of the entire organ or plant will depend upon the behaviour of the cells or protoplasts of which the merismatic tissues are composed.

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  • It makes me feel secure to know you're there and I can depend on you.

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  • The legal basis in any particular case is bound to depend on the circumstances.

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  • The relations of their bishops, priests or other ministers and lay office-bearers inter se and to their lay folk depend upon contract; and these Y P P contracts will be enforced by the ordinary courts of law.

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  • The different extent of quinqueradiate symmetry in the different classes would thus depend on the period at which they diverged from the sedentary stock.

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  • The king inquires into the state of things in 1066 because it is on that state of things that his rights of taxation depend.

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  • Swimming upstream is easier Fortunes all depend on how far upstream chemicals companies are placed.

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  • Much will depend upon the precise wording of the provision in question.

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  • He differs from Schopenhauer in making salvation by the "negation of the Will-to-live" depend on a collective social effort and not on individualistic asceticism.

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  • When the weakness of his eyes made it necessary for him to depend almost entirely on the service of readers and secretaries, in his eighty-first year he began to write the Weltgeschichte (9 vols., Leipzig, 1883-88).

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  • In his next work, Die Meistersinger, Wagner ingeniously made poetry and drama out of an explicit manifesto to musical critics, and proved the depth of his music by developing its everyday resources and so showing that its vitality does not depend on that extreme emotional force that makes Tristan and Isolde almost unbearably poignant.

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  • At the end of each twig is a membrane pierced by pores, and a number of cilia depend into the lumen of the tube; these cilia maintain a constant motion.

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  • In Denmark, on the proposal of the Academy of Science, a survey was carried out in 1766-1825, but the maps issued by the Danish general staff depend upon more recent surveys.

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  • For the same reason they refuse to occupy the time of worship with an arranged programme of vocal service; they meet in silence, desiring that the service of the meeting shall depend on spiritual guidance.

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  • But these contradictions do not depend upon any theory of number, for Russell's contradiction 2 does not involve number in any form.

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  • Under the first head would be included proportional taxes dependent upon the value of the property taxed; under the second, taxes whose amount does not depend upon that value.

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  • The concessionnaire companies have, however, wisely taken the view that it is better to depend upon their own revenues than upon any government guarantee, and have done their best to develop the working value of the lines in their charge.

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  • The soul, as being immaterial, is immortal, and its consciousness does not depend upon its connexion with the body.

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  • It has been compared with that of milk and of blood, which depend essentially on the coagulation or separation in curds of a proteid or albuminous substance, such as takes place when white of egg is warmed.

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  • Its settlement will depend in part on the cost of producing rubber from plants, which from their point of view it is to the interests of planters to reduce as far as possible.

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  • In spite of many errors, especially in Greek history, in which he had to depend upon secondhand information, the work of Baronius stands as an honest attempt to write history, marked with a sincere love of truth.

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  • The micas are bad conductors of heat and electricity, and it is on these properties that many of their technical applications depend.

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  • Other applications depend on the strength of its resistance to acids.

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  • Utilizing this principle he constructed the radiometer, which he was at first disposed to regard as a machine that directly transformed light into motion, but which was afterwards perceived to depend on thermal action.

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  • Pipes conveying the water of an aqueduct across a valley and following the contour of the sides are sometimes called siphons, though they do not depend on the principle of the above instrument.

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  • It is thus possible to study simultaneously all the theories which depend upon operations of the group. Symbolic Representation of Symmetric Functions.-Denote the s 8 s elementar symmetric function a s by al a 2 a3 ...at pleasure; then, Y y si,, si,...

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  • Further, it is increasingly felt that ethical judgments do not depend on reason alone, but involve every element in our character; and that the real problem of practical morality is to establish a harmonious balance between the intelligence and the feelings - to make a man's "I think this is right" correspond with his "I feel that it is so."

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  • These are to be regarded merely as typical specimens, for the details of a curve depend largely upon the physical condition and purity of the material; but they show at a glance how far the several metals differ from and resemble one another as regards their magnetic properties.

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  • But this " critical value " of the force is found to depend in an unexpected manner upon the hardness of the steel; the critical value diminishes as the hardness becomes greater up to a certain point, corresponding to a yellow temper, after which it increases and with the hardest steel becomes very high.

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  • Hence the changes of volume undergone by a given sample of wrought iron under increasing magnetization must depend largely upon the state of the metal as regards hardness; there may be always contraction, or always expansion, or first one and then the other.

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  • The fact being established that magnetism is essentially a molecular phenomenon, the next step is to inquire what is the constitution of a magnetic molecule, and why it is that some molecules are ferromagnetic, others paramagnetic, and others again diamagnetic. The best known of the explanations that have been proposed depend upon the magnetic action of an electric current.

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  • Whether the pericardium and the ventral sinus are made to expand simultaneously or all the movement is made by one only of the surfaces concerned, must depend on conditions of tension.

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  • William of Champeaux (1070-1121), who is reputed the founder of a definitely formulated Realism, much Y as Roscellinus is regarded as the founder of Nominalism, was instructed by Roscellinus himself in dialectic. Unfortunately none of William's philosophical works have survived, and we depend upon the statements of his opponent Abelard, in the Historia calamitatum mearum, and in certain manuscripts discovered by Cousin.

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  • The latter depend, it is true, on bodily organs during our earthly sojourn, but the dependence is not necessary.

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  • Less fortunate than his great exemplar, Charlemagne, Stephen had to depend entirely upon foreigners - men like the Saxon Asztrik 1 (c. 976-1010), the first Hungarian primate; the Lombard St Gellert (c. 977-1046); the Bosomanns, a German family, better known under the Magyarized form of their name Pazmany, and many others who came to Hungary in the suite of his enlightened consort Gisela of Bavaria.

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  • While, therefore, the logical development of algebraic reasoning must depend on certain fundamental relations, it is important that in the early study of the subject these relations should be introduced gradually, and not until there is some empirical acquaintance with the phenomena with which they are concerned.

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  • According to the assumed law of the secondary wave, the result must actually depend upon the precise radius of the outer boundary of the region of integration, supposed to be exactly circular.

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  • It is especially to be noticed that the resolving power does not depend directly upon the closeness of the ruling.

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  • The occurrence of sin 4 as a factor in (6) shows that the relative intensities of the primary light and of that diffracted in the direction B depend upon the condition of the former as regards polarization.

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  • Of the two parties who joined in it Retz could only depend on the bourgeoisie of Paris.

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  • A mass of living protoplasm is simply a molecular machine of great complexity, the total results of the working of which, or its vital phenomena, depend - on the one hand, Life con- of this water is absolutely incompatible with either moister by a ctual or potential life.

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  • Our ideas upon the subject are purely arbitrary, and depend upon our everyday experience.

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  • The undiscriminating diseases, on the other hand, we suspect not to be primarily of nervous origin, but to depend rather on the agency of other constituent tissues of this system, as of the blood-vessels or the connective elements.

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  • Lardaceous disease, however, here and in other regions, now appears to be due to the specific toxins of pyogenetic micro-organisms. In stone of the kidney a great advance has been made in treatment by operative means, and the formation of these stones seems to recent observers to depend less upon constitutional bent (gout) than upon unhealthy local conditions of the passages, which in their turn again may be due to the action of microorganisms.

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  • The date of the discovery of diamonds,, upon which its wealth and importance chiefly depend, is uncertain,, but the official announcement was made in 1729, and in the following year the mines were declared crown property, with a crown reservation, known as the "forbidden district," 42 leagues.

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  • The size, shape and design of the cars depend on the size of the mine passage and of the hoisting compartments of the shafts; on whether the cars are to be trammed by hand or hauled in trains; whether they are loaded by shovel or by gravity from a chute; and whether they are to be hoisted to the surface or used only for underground transport.

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  • This danger can be reached only in small degree by laws and inspection; but the safety of the men must depend upon the skill and care of the miners themselves and the officers in charge of the underground work.

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  • Impressed by the unsatisfactory positions in which the Allied troops found themselves on the peninsula, by the impossibility of their making any progress at their existing strength, and by the risks that the army ran in remaining on such shores without any safe harbour to depend upon for base in stormy weather, Monro, after examining the situation on the spot in the closing days of Oct., declared unhesitatingly for a complete withdrawal.

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  • It has been proved that these variations depend to a great extent on the chemical nature of the glass of which the thermometer is made.

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  • For a cavity filled with liquid in the interior of the body, since the liquid inside moves bodily for a motion of translation only, 41 = - x, 42 = -, 43 = - z; (2) but a rotation will stir up the liquid in the cavity, so that the'x's depend on the shape of the surface.

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  • But the presence of the medium makes the effective inertia depend on the direction of motion with respect to the external shape of the body, and on W' the weight of fluid medium displaced.

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  • The reason of this preference for the eastern bank of the Tigris was due to its abundant supply of water, whereas the great Mesopotamian plain on the western side had to depend upon the streams which flowed into the Euphrates.

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  • That evaporation in vacuo, in a multiple-effect evaporator, is advantageous by reason of the increased amount of sugar obtained from a given quantity of juice, and by reason of economy of fuel, there is no doubt, but whether such an apparatus should be of double, triple, quadruple or quintuple effect will depend very much on the amount of juice to be treated per day, and the cost of fuel.

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  • John, however, did nothing to prevent the surrender of Rouen, which had been besieged by the English, and on which the fate of the kingdom seemed to depend; and the town was taken in 1419.

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  • The amount and speed of movement of water by this means, and the distance to which it may be carried, depend largely upon the fineness of the particles composing the soil and the spaces left between each.

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  • The amount and nature of the clay or marl to be added to the soil will depend largely upon the original composition of the latter, the lighter sands and gravel requiring more clay than those of firmer texture.

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  • It is an energetic oxidizing agent, and on this property its most important applications depend.

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  • This treatment is frequently very successful indeed in relaxing the bronchial spasm upon which the most obvious features of an attack depend.

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  • By means of them the depth and width of the furrow are regulated, whereas in the case of "swing" or wheelless ploughs these points depend chiefly on the skill of the ploughman.

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  • The only ports of importance are Yambu and Jidda, which serve respectively Medina and Mecca; they depend entirely on the pilgrim traffic to the holy cities, without which they could not exist.

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  • In good seasons it is sufficient for the cultivation of the summer crop of millet, and for the supply of the perennial streams and springs, on which the irrigation of the winter crops of wheat and barley depend.

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  • Many of the furnaces now in constant use depend mainly on this principle, a core of granular carbon fragments stamped together in the direct line between the electrodes, as in Acheson's carborundum furnace, being substituted for the carbon pencils.

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  • It had come to depend largely upon the Germans for the importation of all its luxuries and of many of its necessities, as well as for the exportation of its products, but regular trade with the three kingdoms was confined for the most part to the Wendish towns, with Lubeck steadily asserting an exclusive ascendancy.

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  • The stimulation of the liver is said to depend upon the solution of the resin by the intestinal secretion.

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  • Green in the first chapter of his Prolegomena to Ethics, involves the absurdity that our whole experience is a tissue of relations with no points of attachment on which the relations depend.

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  • Practically all the industries and occupations of this extensive region depend upon them for labourers and servants.

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  • It is a singular conception, and the results obtained depend largely on chance.

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  • Cyprian was the first to proclaim the identity of heretics and schismatics by making a man's Christianity depend on his belonging to the great episcopal church confederation.

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  • To many the interest of such stories will depend on their parallelism to the Biblical account in Genesis i.; the anthropologist, however, will be attracted by them in proportion as they illustrate the more primitive phases of human culture.

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  • Under the governor are seven kaimakams, all Christians except a Druse in Shuf, and forty-seven niudirs, who all depend on the kaimakams except one in the home district of Deir al-Kamar.

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  • It follows from the first law that the intrinsic energy of a substance in a given state must always be the same, or that the change of E in any transformation must depend only on the initial and final states, and not on the path or process.

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  • A rectangular trough of boards, whose dimensions depend chiefly on the size of the planks available, is set up on the higher part of the ground at one side of the claim to be worked, upon trestles or piers of rough stone-work, at such an inclination that the stream may carry off all but the largest stones, which are kept back by a grating of boards about 2 in.

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  • The strengths employed depend also upon the mode of precipitation adopted, stronger solutions (up to 0.25% KCN) being used when zinc is the precipitant.

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  • This brought the strength of his command up to eight corps, numbering some 220,000 men; an enormous mass to feed in a district swept bare of supplies by the operations of the preceding week, and with only one railway line, terminating at Courcelles, to depend upon.

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  • Doubts about transubstantiation made him uneasy; some of Luther's tracts fell in his way, and he was comforted by Luther's dictum that salvation does not depend on human dogmata.

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  • Its medicinal uses depend on the contained benzoic acid.

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  • The pope, moreover, had come to depend to a considerable extent for his revenue upon the payments made by his nominees, which represented a corresponding drain on the resources of the secular states.

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  • During the war between Rome and Alba Longa it was agreed that the issue should depend on a combat between the two families.

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  • Similarly the hypothenar muscles for the little finger underlie the three ulnar marginal mountains, the sizes of which depend on their development and on the prominence of the pisiform bone.

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  • Rayleigh points out that this clinging of the sound to the surface of a concave wall does not depend on the exactness of the spherical form.

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  • The velocity of a disturbance along such a bar, and its modes of vibration, depend therefore on the elastic properties of the material and the dimensions of the bar.

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  • But, if quite regular disturbances are impressed on the jet at intervals of time which depend on the diameter and speed of outflow (they must be somewhat more than ?r times its diameter apart), these disturbances go on growing and break the stream up into equal drops, which all move with the same velocity one after the other.

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  • The questions depend partly upon the view taken of the origin and structure of the book of Kings (q.v.) and partly upon the results of historical criticism.

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  • Concrete in a shell is a name which might be applied to all the methods of founding a pier which depend on the very valuable property which strong hydraulic concrete possesses of setting into a solid mass under water.

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  • The impact stresses depend so much on local conditions that it is difficult to fix what allowance should be made.

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  • It was pointed out as early as 1869 (Unwin, Wrought Iron Bridges and Roofs) that a rational method of fixing the working stress, so far as knowledge went at that time, would be to make it depend on the ratio of live to dead load, and in such a way that the factor of safety for the live load stresses was double that for the dead load stresses.

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  • The answer to the problem will mainly depend on the estimate which we form of the Society of Jesus and its whole activity.

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  • The size which they finally attain and their general condition depend chiefly on the abundance of food (which consists of crustaceans and other small marine animals), on the temperature of the water, on the season at which they have been hatched, &c. Their usual size is about 12 in., but in some particularly suitable localities they grow to a length of 15 in., and instances of specimens measuring 17 in.

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  • All orderly thought and all increase of knowledge depend partly on establishing a clear and accurate connexion between particular things and general ideas, rules and principles.

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  • The position of these fringes will depend on the total retardation in time of the one beam with respect to the other; and thus it might be expected to vary with the direction of the earth's motion,.

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  • This result is inconsistent with the aether remaining at rest, unless we assume that the dimensions of the moving system depend, though to an extent so small as to be not otherwise detectable, on its orientation with regard to the aether that is streaming through it.

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  • The close inter-relation which existed in primitive society between magic, priesthood and kingship has been indicated by Frazer in his Early History of the Kingship. His remarks throw some light on the early character of priesthood as well as kingship. " When once a special class of sorcerers has been segregated from the community and entrusted by it with the discharge of duties on which the public safety and welfare are believed to depend, these men gradually rise to wealth and power till their leaders blossom out into sacred kings."

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  • Being thus obliged to depend upon his writings for the support of his family, and having learned by the fate of his Saturn that the general public are not attracted by works requiring arduous study, he cultivated a more popular style.

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  • In some speeches delivered at Munich in 1861 he outspokenly declared his view that the maintenance of the Roman Catholic Church did not depend on the temporal sovereignty of the pope.

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  • Thorell's classification (1859) of Gnathostonta, Poecilostoma, Siphonostoma, based on the mouth-organs, was long followed, though almost at the outset shown by Claus to depend on the erroneous supposition that the Poecilostoma were devoid of mandibles.

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  • Again, many of the results or conclusions of criticism are mutually independent, while others are interrelated and depend for their validity on the validity of others.

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  • This interval does not depend upon a mere list of Eponym years; we have in the annals of Sargon and Sennacherib full particulars of the events in all the intervening years.

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  • But (i.) Nero 2 is really September 56-September 57; (ii.) it is doubtful whether Eusebius had any authority to depend on here other than Josephus, who gives no precise year for Festus - Julius Africanus is, hardly probable, since we know that his chronicle was very jejune for the Christian period - and if so, Eusebius had to find a year as best he could.'

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  • Thus these three different reckonings agree closely, but all equally depend on the Greek and Roman standards, which are not well fixed.

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  • The highest sphere of knowledge - the supra-rational - as well as the very possibility of knowledge, must depend on divine communications - that is, on revelations.

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  • The answer will depend, in the first instance, upon how much is included under the term " Neoplatonism."

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  • The excess above this will depend on the circumstances of the country, and the consequent demand for labour - wages being high when national wealth is increasing, low when it is declining.

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  • Dual numbers anti logarithms depend upon the expression of a number as a product of 11, i oi, 1.001.

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  • Geographers are practically helpless as historians, and problems of the former elevation and distribution of the land and sea masses depend for their solution chiefly upon the palaeontologist.

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  • Wheat is widely cultivated and a considerable part of the population depend upon it for their bread.

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  • In Europe the corn spirit sometimes immanent in the crop, sometimes a presiding deity whose life does not depend on that of the growing corn, is conceived in some districts in the form of an ox, hare or cock, in others as an old man or woman; in the East Indies and America the rice or maize mother is a corresponding figure; in classical Europe and the East we have in Ceres and Demeter, Adonis and Dionysus, and other deities, vegetation gods whose origin we can readily trace back to the rustic corn spirit.

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  • Thus from an early age young Strachan had to depend upon his own resources and even to assist his mother, whom he loyally aided till her death in 1812.

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  • Hot wire voltmeters, like electrostatic voltmeters, are suitable for use with alternating currents of any frequency as well as with continuous currents, since their indications depend upon the heating power of the current, which is proportional to the square of the current and therefore to the square of the difference of potential between the terminals.

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  • Similar matters arising in nonconformist bodies can only be tried by the ordinary secular courts, and generally depend upon the question whether a minister has done any act which is not in accordance with the rules governing the particular body of which he is a minister.

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  • For maintaining his seat the horseman should depend upon his thighs and knees only, and not upon the knee and calf; a proper seat should be a mixture of balance and grip; a man riding by balance only is sure to be thrown, while to grip with all one's might during an hour's ride, is to undertake as much exertion as should last for a whole day.

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  • As with road riding, so with hunting, the actual length of the stirrups will depend a good deal upon the shape and action of the horse, but the nature of the animal and the peculiarities of the country ridden over will also have something to do with their adjustment.

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  • When a commercial crisis occurs much may depend on his initiative.

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  • The executive does not depend upon the General legislature, but holds its powers by a direct commis- charaeterof sion from the people.

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  • The filaments of the gill (ctenidium) of Mytilus and Arca thus form two closely set rows which depend from the axis of the gill like two parallel plates.

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  • The gill axis d is seen lying in the sub-pallial chamber between the foot b and the mantle c. From it depend the gillfilaments or lamellae - formed by united filaments - drawn as black lines f.

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  • When Regard Is Had To The Sun'S Motion Alone, The Regulation Of The Year, And The Distribution Of The Days Into Months, May Be Effected Without Much Trouble; But The Difficulty Is Greatly Increased When It Is Sought To Reconcile Solar And Lunar Periods, Or To Make The Subdivisions Of The Year Depend On The Moon, And At The Same Time To Preserve The Correspondence Between The Whole Year And The Seasons.

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  • Thus The Uniformity Of The Intercalation, By Continuing To Depend On The Number Four, Is Preserved, And By Adopting The Last Correction The Commencement Of The Year Would Not Vary More Than A Day From Its Present Place In Two Hundred Centuries.

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  • If The Commencement Of The Year, Instead Of Being Retained At The Same Place In The Seasons By A Uniform Method Of Intercalation, Were Made To Depend On Astronomical Phenomena, The Intercalations Would Succeed Each Other In An Irregular Manner, Sometimes After Four Years And Sometimes After Five; And It Would Occasionally, Though Rarely Indeed, Happen, That It Would Be Impossible To Determine The Day On Which The Year Ought To Begin.

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  • Olger Danske and Barbarossa, and depend ultimately on an identification with the gods of the Northern Pantheon, notably Thor.

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  • The constitution of 1875 abolished the one-fifth revenue provision, made the support of the schools, except that derived from the land grant of 1819, and poll taxes, depend upon the appropriation of the legislature, and established separate schools for whites and blacks.

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  • The most important manufacturing industries are those that depend upon cotton for raw material, with a gross product in 1900 valued at $26,521,757.

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  • The value of all such evidence will naturally depend largely upon the estimate formed of the biblical narratives, but it is necessary to observe that these have not yet found Egyptian testimony to support them.

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  • In 1875 the district, till then a sanjak of the vilayet of Tripoli, was made to depend directly on the Ministry of the Interior at Constantinople; and the Senussites soon ceased to be de facto rulers of Cyrenaica.

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  • The people depend so entirely upon agriculture, and the harvest is so entirely destroyed by a single monsoon failure, that wherever a total failure occurs the landless labourer is immediately thrown out of work and remains out of work for the whole year.

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  • He regards this universal experience as the result entirely of intersubjective intercourse, and concludes that its subject is not numerically distinct from the subject of individual experience, but is one and continuous with it, and that its conceptions depend on the perceptions of individual experience.

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  • But if the bodies are of different substances, say one of iron and the other of gold, the ratio of these magnitudes is found to depend upon something else besides bulk.

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  • At times of bad trade even those who usually depend on their own resources seek the aid of experienced agents, who sometimes find a grievance if their services are rejected when trade improves and sales are made easily.

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  • The osmotic pressure (defined as the difference in the hydrostatic pressures of the solution and solvent when their vapour pressures are equal and they are consequently in equilibrium through a perfect semi-permeable membrane) may also depend on the absolute values of the hydrostatic pressures, as may the vapour pressure of the liquids.

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  • It is thought to depend upon some connexion, not yet anatomically demonstrated, between the third cranial nerve and its nucleus in the floor of the iter and the substantia nigra.

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  • It was at once clear, however, that the elector could not depend on his officers or troops, who remained faithful to their oath to the constitution.

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  • Christian had to depend mainly upon hired troops, supported by native levies recruited for the most part from the peasantry on the crown domains.

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  • These pigments primarily depend upon special acids contained in the thalli of lichens, and their presence may readily be detected by means of the reagents already noticed.

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  • That this process did not depend upon electrolysis, but was simply an instance of electrical smelting or the decomposition of an oxide by means of carbon at the temperature of the electric arc, is shown by the fact that the Cowles furnace would work with an alternating current.

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  • These will depend on the meaning we attach to the word Alps as referring to the great mountain-chain of central Europe.

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  • The precise character and form of the folds produced will depend upon the nature of the cloth and other accidental circumFIG.

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  • It should be noted that butterflies are the chief agents in securing the continued existence of such alpine flowers as depend on insect fertilization, the other insect fertilizers being mostly wanting at great heights.

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  • Heating by hot water may be said to depend, in part, on the influence of gravity on water being to some extent overcome by heating in a boiler.

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  • If this series of operations be made to depend upon the continuous rotation of a winch or handle, the arrangement constitutes an electrostatic influenceenachine.

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  • The distribution of species does not depend on elevation to the same extent as in Java, where the horizontal zones are clearly marked; and there appears to be a tendency of all forms to grow at lower altitudes than in that island.

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  • The frame upon which the whole network of the Dutch railways may be said to depend is formed of two main lines from north and south and four transverse lines from west to east.

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  • Again, the accuracy of the statement that the fleshy Agaricini, Polyporei, Pezizae, &c., are relatively rarer in the tropics may depend on the fact that they are more difficult to collect and remit for identification than the abundantly recorded woody and coriaceous forms of these regions.

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  • No sharp lines can be drawn, however, since many mycelia are intercellular at first and subsequently become intracellular (Ustilagineae), and the various stages doubtless depend on the degrees of resistance which the host tissues are able to offer.

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  • But cast iron for the basic open-hearth process can be made from almost any ore, because its requirements, comparative freedom from silicon and sulphur, depend on the management of the blast-furnace rather than on the composition of the ore, whereas the phosphorus-content of the cast iron depends solely on that of the ore, because nearly all the phosphorus of the ore necessarily passes into the cast iron.

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  • Other physical properties might be considered; as a general rule they depend upon the distribution of negative and positive elements in the molecule.

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  • Also he took advantage of the rule of the Commonwealth to indulge much more freely than he might have otherwise dared in rationalistic criticism of religious doctrines; while, amid the turmoil of sects, he could the more forcibly urge that the preservation of social order, when again firmly restored, must depend on the assumption by the civil power of the right 2 L.W.

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  • The earliness of the feed, its quantity and its quality will all depend in very great measure Manage - upon the proper management of the irrigation.

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  • The Sangam and Pennar systems depend on two weirs on the river Pennar in the Nellore district, the former about 18 m.

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  • The communication of the French emperors original proposals to the South German governments, whose traditional policy had been to depend on France to save them from the ambitions of the German great powers, was enough to throw them into the arms of Prussia.

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  • From 1878 to 1887 there was no strong party on which Bismarck could depend for support.

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  • Now that Bismarck could no longer depend on the support of the Liberals, it would be impossible to carry on the government if the Catholics maintained their End of,the Kulturpolicy of opposition to all government measures.

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  • They had supported him in his commercial reform of 1878, but by opposing the Septennate in 1880 they had shown that he could not depend upon them.

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  • Bismarck therefore, who took this rebuff much to heart, said he would have nothing more to do with the matter, and warned those interested in colonies that they must depend on self-help; he could do nothing for them.

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  • The decision of Germany would theoretically have to depend on the question which party was the aggressora question which notoriously is hardly ever capable of an answer.

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  • In other cases scales have been employed which make the result mainly depend on the brightest part of the display.

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  • This decided step was required by Hungarian feeling, but it was a policy in which Austria-Hungarycould not depend on the support of Germany, for - as Bismarck stated - Bulgaria was not worth the bones of a single Pomeranian grenadier.

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  • It was impossible to maintain a strong party of moderate constitutionalists, on whom the government could depend, unless there was a large nucleus from Lower Austria.

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  • The new elections on which so much was to depend did not take place till January 1901.

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  • What would have happened had it continued to depend upon its spiritual force only for propagation we cannot say.

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  • All these towns, which depend largely on the cotton industry, are separately noticed.

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  • The proportions of the industry depend upon the area of land capable of cultivation.

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  • Scholars in England, America and Denmark, as well as in Germany, have taken part in this great enterprise, and though the completion of it may be far off, the collections of classified material already made are very valuable for consultation.i At present Egyptologists depend on Heinrich Brugschs admirable but somewhat antiquated Wrterbuch and on Levis useful but entirely uncritical Vocabolario.

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  • In Egypt the agricultural seasons depend more immediately on the Nile than on the solar movements; the first clay of the first month of inundation, i.e.

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  • Subsequent operations were to depend upon the amount of resistance he encountered.

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  • Carnelley and Williams employed certain salts of known melting point; whilst the Seger's cones, employed in porcelain manufacture, depend on the fusion of small cones made of clay.

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  • He changed the sentence on Katte to one of death and ordered the execution to take place in Frederick's presence, himself arranging its every detail; Frederick's own fate would depend upon the effect of this terrible object-lesson and the response he should make to the exhortations of the chaplain sent to reason with him.

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  • Under this term are comprehended all cements whose setting properties primarily depend on the hydration of calcium sulphate.

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  • The mode of preparation is to calcine the gypsum at temperatures which depend on the class of cement to be produced.

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  • The shape and colour of these roughnesses depend on the nature of the underlying rock.

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  • Obviously variations depend on the constitution of the varying organism; a modification, whether it be large or small, is a modification of an already definite and limited structure.

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  • The passing away of pain or suffering is said to depend on an emancipation.

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  • When a naval battle was in progress, it would depend for its manoeuvring on the rowers.

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  • It has now been firmly established, both experimentally and mathematically, that coronae are due to diffraction by the minute particles of moisture and dust suspended in the atmosphere, and the radii of the rings depend on the size of the diffracting particles.

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  • As an historical source, therefore, the value of Judges will depend largely upon the question whether the Deuteronomic editor (about 600 B.C. at the earliest) would have access to trustworthy documents relating to a period some six or seven centuries previously.

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  • Restrictions necessary for the proper conservancy of the forests are, however, imposed, and the system of shifting cultivation, which denudes a large area of forest growth in order to place a small area under crops, is held to cost more to the community than it is worth, and is only permitted, under due regulation, where forest tribes depend on it for their sustenance.

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  • Abolish the moneylender, and the general body of cultivators would have nothing to depend upon but the harvest of a single year.

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  • The methods of measurement, founded on rise of temperature, may be classed as thermometric methods, since they depend on the observation of change of temperature with a thermometer.

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  • Supposing that the two stars are of unequal surface brilliancy, the magnitude at minimum will depend on which of the two stars is the nearer to us, accordingly there are two unequal minima in each revolution.

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  • The divergences depend mainly on the different views taken by their authors as to the order of stellar evolution.

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  • There is a close interdependence between the constant of procession and Lhe solar motion; the two determinations must generally be made simultaneously, and both depend very considerably on the systematic corrections required by the catalogues compared.

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  • Of the various modern determinations of the apex, we give first those which depend, wholly or mainly, on the Auwers-Bradley proper motions.

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  • The large differences between these results, derived from the same material, depend mainly on the different systematic corrections applied by each astronomer to the declinations of Bradley.

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  • Side by side with the new processes introduced, the idea of the indeterminate sentence was started and put in practice, by which release was made to depend upon reasonable hope of amendment and sentences were prolonged until it was more or less certain that the treatment had resulted in cure.

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  • Government grew strong because it could draw on a society which was going ahead in enterprise and well-being; social intercourse progressed because it could depend on a strong government to safeguard it.

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  • Finally, since sense, memory and experience are the origin of inference, primary inference is categorical and existential, starting from sensory, memorial and experiential judgments as premises, and proceeding to inferential judgments as conclusions, which are categorical and existential, and are true, so far as they depend on sense, memory and experience.

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  • In these truths predicates are accepted or rejected by subjects, and therefore depend on the reflection of fact in Xoyot (propositions).

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  • Knowledge of the implications of it does not depend on observation of all members of the class.

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  • His critics incline to press the point that association itself is only intelligible so far as it is seen to depend on universals of the kind that he denies.

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  • The conclusions seem not merely to fall within, but to depend on these organic and controlling formulae.

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  • The physical properties of a heterogeneous body (provided they vary continuously from point to point) are known to depend, in the neighbourhood of any one point of the body, on a quadric function of the co-ordinates with reference to that point.

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  • The method of deducing the specific heat from Regnault's formula for the variation of the total heat is evidently liable in a greater degree to the objections which have been urged against his method of determining the specific heat, since it makes the value of the specific heat depend on small differences of total heat observed under conditions of greater difficulty at various pressures.

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  • Elections are by Australian ballot; the constitution prescribes that no law shall " be enacted whereby the right to vote at any election shall be made to depend upon any previous registration of the elector's name " (extremely unusual).

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  • Northern Italy and the rest of the western Church, still more the eastern Church, did not depend upon him so closely for their administration.

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  • For it can only depend on the mass m of the bob, the length 1 of the string, and the value of g at the place in question; and the above expression is the only combination of these symbols whose dimensions are those of a time, simply.

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  • Again, the time of falling from a distance a into a given centre of force varying inversely as the square of the distance will depend only on a and on the constant u of equation (15).

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  • Conditions of Stiffness and Strength.After the arrangement of the pieces of a structure and the size and figure of their joints or surfaces of contact have been determined so as to fulfil the conditions of stabilityconditions which depend mainly on the position and direction of the resultant or total load on each piece, and the relative magnitude of the loads on the different piecesthe dimensions of each piece singly have to be adjusted so as to fulfil the conditions of stiffness and strengthconditions which depend not only on the absolute magnitude of the load on each piece, and of the resistances by which it is balanced, but also on the mode of distribution of the load over the piece, and of the resistances over the joints.

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  • The foi-m and arrangement of the pieces of the frame depend upon the arrangement and the motions of the mechanism; the dimensions of the pieces of the frame required in order to give it stability and strength are determined from the pressures applied to it by means of the mechanism.

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  • The amount and effect of the variations of pressure and temperature undergone by the air depend on the principles of the mechanical action of heat, or THERMODYNAMIcS, and are foreign to the subject of pure mechaifisni.

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  • But the proof that his scheme was the work of a great poet does not depend merely upon the artistic unity which excited the wonder of Aristotle.

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  • The generic characters are based upon definite modifications of form which affect the entire facies of the animals, while the specific diagnoses depend upon minor characters, such as the number of myotomes or muscle-segments.

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  • These, in their turn, depend mainly upon the character of the people who inhabit the country.

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  • The factors upon which the growth of a population depend are internal, operating within the community, or external, arising out of the relations of the community with other countries.

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  • Which of these two views should be adopted in any case seems to depend upon the motives with which the earlier operations (usually the discharge of the cargo) were presumably undertaken.

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  • The liability of the insurer was thus made to depend, not upon the character of the loss, but upon the fact or possibility of contribution.

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  • Their liability did not depend upon the accident of whether the interests all belonged to one person or not.

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  • In art and learning, morals and government, the old walls came crashing down; in the general bankruptcy of authority men were forced to depend on themselves.

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  • Like contracts contrary to public policy, they depend to a great extent for their illegality upon the discretion of the court in the particular case.

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  • Either wrought, pig, iron sponge or iron bars are employed, and it is important to notice that the form in which the copper is precipitated, and also the time taken for the separation, largely depend upon the condition in which the iron is applied.

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  • The relative prices of the different classes depend upon the crop, upon the demand and upon the quality of the fibre; in 1905 the prices of Daisee j ute and First Marks were practically the same, although the former is always considered inferior to the latter.

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  • The relative quantities of oil and water depend upon the quality of the batch.

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  • The beggars' depots are "exclusively devoted to the confinement of persons whom the j udicial authority shall place at the disposal of the government" for that purpose, and these are classified as (a) able-bodied persons who, instead of working for their living, depend upon charity as the Romans, as is shown by an abundance of objects unearthed by excavation, amongst which may be mentioned a fine statue of an athlete (the Diadumenos) in the British Museum.

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  • All who approach fling themselves to the ground, life and death depend on his nod.

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  • We have also considered in a general way the treatment of local diseases by passive protection, active protection and repair of waste; but both maintenance of health and repair of waste depend very largely upon the condition of the blood.

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  • If, he continues, we are to live after death, it is of importance for us to consider on what our future state may depend; for we may be either happy or miserable.

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  • Now, whatever speculation may say as to God's purpose being necessarily universal benevolence, experience plainly shows us that our present happiness and misery depend upon our conduct, and are not distributed indiscriminately.

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  • When the argument from analogy seems to go beyond this, a peculiar difficulty starts up. Let it be granted that our happiness and misery in this life depend upon our conduct - are, in fact, the rewards and punishments attached by God to certain modes of action, the natural conclusion from analogy would seem to be that our future happiness or the reverse will probably depend upon our actions in the future state.

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  • Butler, on the other hand, seeks to show that analogy leads us to believe that our future state will depend upon our present conduct.

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  • The native dances, slow but not ungraceful, and more restrained than those of Andalusia or the south of France, are obviously Moorish in origin, and depend for their main effects on the movement of the arms and body.

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  • The action between the capillary tube and the water has been called capillary action, and the name has been extended to many other phenomena which have been found to depend on properties of liquids and solids similar to those which cause water to rise in capillary tubes.

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  • He thus found for the pressure at a point in the interior of the fluid an expression of the form p =K+ZH(1/R+i/R'), where K is a constant pressure, probably very large, which, however, does not influence capillary phenomena, and therefore cannot be determined from observation of such phenomena; H is another constant on which all capillary phenomena depend; and R and R' are the radii of curvature of any two normal sections of the surface at right angles to each other.

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  • If the thickness of the film is greater than 2E, there will be a stratum of thickness c-2E in the middle of the film, within which the values of p and x will be pc and In the two strata on either side of this the law, according to which p and x depend on the depth, will be the same as in a liquid mass of large dimensions.

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  • The discrepancy seems to depend upon Young having treated the attractive force as operative in one direction only.

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  • This phenomenon is due to the activity of a whole series of marine bacteria of various genera, the examination and organisms depend on the discovery that their patho genicity or virulence can be modified - diminished or increased - by definite treatment, and, in the natural course of epidemics, by alterations in the environment.

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  • It is important that these two essential factors should be kept clearly in view, since the means of defence against any disease may depend upon the power either of neutralizing toxins or of killing the organisms producing them.

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  • The increased ingestion of bacteria in active immunity would seem to depend upon the presence of immune opsonins in the serum.

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  • Natural immunity against toxins must be taken into account, and, if Ehrlich's view with regard to toxic action be correct, this may depend upon either the absence of chemical affinity of the living molecules of the tissues for the toxic molecule, or upon insensitiveness to the action of the toxophorous group. It has been shown with regard to the former, for example, that the nervous system of the fowl, which possesses immunity against tetanus toxin, has little combining affinity for it.

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  • Variations in chemiotaxis towards different organisms probably depend in natural conditions, as well as in active immunity, upon the opsonic content of the serum.

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  • Whether bacteria will be destroyed or not after they have been ingested by the leucocytes will depend upon the digestive powers of the latter, and these probably vary in different species of animals.

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  • Verworn to depend upon stimulation to contraction or the reverse.

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  • They are armed with bows and arrows, but depend almost entirely in battle on the charges of their mounted spearmen.

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  • The character and amount of the flux necessarily depend upon the character of the ore, the object being to concentrate in the lead button all the gold and silver while dissolving and carrying off in the slag the other constituents of the ore.

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  • In his Misere de la philosophie (1847) he lays down the principle that social relationships largely depend upon modes of production, and therefore the principles, ideas and categories which are thus evolved are no more eternal than the relations they express, but are historical and transitory products.

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  • The qualification and disqualification of district councillors, whether urban or rural, now depend upon the Local Government Act 1894.

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  • They can charge water rents which depend upon agreements with consumers, or they may charge water rates assessed on the net annual value of the premises supplied.

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  • In such places agriculture is made possible by irrigation, and the Mormon villages, both here and farther south along the base of the Hurricane Ledge, depend largely on this industry.

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  • But since the results of the higher criticism depend on the soundness and thoroughness of the criticism called " lower," and since Duhm has the advantage of being exceptionally free from that exaggerated respect for the letters of the traditional text which has survived the destruction of the old superstitious veneration for the vowel-points, it may be best to give the student his " higher critical " results, dated 1901.

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  • The spacing, or distance from centre to centre of the floor beams, will depend upon the type of fire-proof flooring employed; it also depends to a considerable extent upon the amount and character of the floor load and the length of span.

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  • Some architects depend solely upon partitions, and a building with a well-constructed iron frame should be safe if provided with brick partitions or if the exterior of the iron framework is covered with well-built masonry of sufficient thickness.

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  • The night of the 4th of August 1789 put an end to this contrast at one stroke and the further history of rural population came to depend entirely on the play of free competition and free contract.

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  • The seeds of some genera depend on animals for dispersal, the carpellary scale (Microcachrys) or the outer integument being brightly coloured and attractive.

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  • In consequence of the radiation of heat the whole body will be more condensed than before, but whether it is hotter or colder than before will depend on whether the contraction set up is more or less than enough to restore an exact balance.

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  • Instead of confining himself, as before, to the fruitless integration of three differential equations of the second degree, which are furnished by mathematical principles, he reduced them to the three co-ordinates which determine the place of the moon; and he divided into classes all the inequalities of that planet, as far as they depend either on the elongation of the sun and moon, or upon the eccentricity, or the parallax, or the inclination of the lunar orbit.

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  • The relative depths recorded in the several gauges depend mainly upon the direction of the valley and steepness of the bounding hills.

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  • Much will depend upon the judicious placing of the gauges.

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  • It is obvious that the angles at the base of such a hypothetical dam must depend upon the relation between its density and that of the water.

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  • This action is obviously much reduced where the rock sides of the valley rise slowly; but in cases where the rock is very steep, the safest course is to face the facts, and not to depend for water-tightness upon the cementing of the masonry to the rock, but rather to provide a vertical key, or dowel joint, of some material like asphalt, which will always remain water-tight.

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  • For the sake of compactness and convenience of reading the extension of the springs, and consequently the load, is frequently indicated on a dial, by means of a small rack and pinion, which give motion to a finger on the dial-plate, but the regularity and correctness of the indications of the finger will depend upon the condition of the rackwork and upon the friction, and these will vary with the wear of the machine.

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  • It emanates from Palestine or Syria, and is independent of the documents already mentioned; and upon it the Constitutions themselves very largely depend.

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  • Moreover, the spurious Ignatian epistles, which are also Syrian, depend throughout upon the Constitutions.

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  • The soil is very fertile, but since the dam over the Karun at Ahvaz was swept away and the numerous canals which diverted the waters of the river for irrigation became useless, a great part of the province is uncultivated, and most of the crops and produce depend for water on rainfall and wells.

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  • The dimensions of the nave depend to a large extent on the method of keying or otherwise securing the pulley to the shaft.

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  • He was one of a number of Newton's friends who began to be uneasy and dissatisfied at seeing the most eminent scientific man of his age left to depend upon the meagre emoluments of a college fellowship and a professorship.

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  • If, then, there is objective truth at all, the existence of real facts must be made known to us otherwise than through the logical faculty of thought; and, as the regress from conclusion to premises must depend upon something not itself capable of logical grounding, mediate thought implies the consciousness of immediate truth.

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  • This again was followed by a psychology, which made thought [as well as sensation, which was conceived to differ from thought only in respect of its object] depend upon the excess of the one or the other of the two constituent elements, fire and night.

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  • If we have to divide 935 by 240, taking 12 and 20 as factors, the result will depend on the fact that, in the notation (20) (12) of § 1 7, 935=3 " 1 7 " 1 1.

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  • The doctrine which first made him famous, and commended him to all members of the anti-clerical faction, was that unworthy holders of spiritual endowments ought to be dispossessed of them, because dominion should depend on grace.

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  • At the small towns along the river it is nearly impossible to obtain beef, vegetables, or fruit of any sort, and the inhabitants depend largely upon river fish, mandioc, and canned goods for their subsistence."

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  • The parameter which determines the variable curve may be given as a point upon a given curve, or say as a parametric point; that is, to the different positions of the parametric point on the given curve correspond the different variable curves, and the nature of the envelope will thus depend on that of the given curve; we have thus the envelope as a derivative curve of the given curve.

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  • Observe that the radical, square root of a quartic function, is connected with the theory of elliptic functions, and the radical, square root of a sextic function, with that of the first kind of Abelian functions, but that the next kind of Abelian functions does not depend on the radical, square root of an octic function.

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  • Observe that the positions of the summits depend on the penultimate curve u=o, viz.

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  • The main difficulty which the condenser ought to overcome and upon which its efficiency should depend is the removal of naphthalene; this compound, which is present in the gas, condenses on cooling to a solid which crystallizes out in the form of white flakes, and the trouble caused by pipe stoppages in the works as well as in the district supplied is very considerable.

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  • The Ferns form the great majority of existing Pteridophytes; the importance and interest of the other groups, of which the Club-mosses and Horsetails are the most familiar examples, depend largely on the fact that they are the surviving representatives of large families of plants which flourished in earlier geological periods.

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  • The dorsiventrality of the prothallus has been shown to depend mainly on the illumination, the filamentous form being retained in feeble light; a similar result is obtained when the prothalli are cultivated in water.

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  • The hypothesis is, that all human ideas, even the most complex and abstract and sublime, ultimately depend upon " experience."

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  • To prove this, our thoughts of space, time, infinity, power, substance, personal identity, causality, and others which " seem most remote from the supposed original " are examined in a " plain historical method," and shown to depend either on (a) perception of things external, through the five senses, or on (b) reflection upon operations of the mind within.

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  • Neither the deterrent nor the reformatory theories of punishment (q.v.) necessarily depend upon or carry with them a belief in the freedom of the will.

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  • Ethics then is usually confined to the particular field of human character and conduct so far as they depend upon or exhibit certain general principles commonly known as moral principles.

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  • Just in so far as it presupposes the apprehension of moral facts, it must presuppose a knowledge of the system of social relationships upon which some at least of those facts depend.

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  • In a rightly ordered polity social and individual well-being alike would depend on that harmonious action of diverse elements, each performing its proper function, which in its social application is more naturally termed SLKawwVGv7.

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  • The fundamental differences between pagan and Christian ethics depend not on any difference in the value set on rightness of heart, but on different views of the essential form or conditions of this inward rightness.

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  • It is impossible, e.g., to accept his ordered hierarchy of " springs of action " without perceiving that the real principle upon which they can be arranged in order at all must depend upon considerations of circumstances and consequences, of stations and duties, with which a strict intuitionalism such as that of Martineau would have no dealing.'

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  • The difference between the positive and negative figures seems to depend on the presence of the air; for the difference tends to disappear when the experiment is conducted in vacuo.

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  • Chief among its industrial establishments are the famous iron and steel works of Krupp, and the whole of Essen may be said to depend for its livelihood upon this firm, which annually expends vast sums in building and supporting churches, schools, clubs, hospitals and philanthropic institutions, and in other ways providing for the welfare of its employees.

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  • The first depend on the mean longitudes of the planets, and always tend back to their original values when the planets return to their original positions in their orbits.

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  • Here he stated the principle, not before recognized, that the kind of sensation following stimulation of a sensory nerve does not depend on the mode of stimulation but upon the nature of the sense-organ.

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  • In mathematics the term has received special meanings; in mathematical tables the "argument" is the quantity upon which the other quantities in the table are made to depend; in the theory of complex variables, e.g.

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  • At the polls, all votes are given orally, a system which facilitates corruption; the officials who control the elections depend for their livelihood on the ban, usually a Magyarist; and thus, even apart from the privileged members, a majority favourable to Hungary can usually be secured.

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  • Their episcopal sees of Karlowitz and Pakrac depend upon the metropolitanate of Belgrade; but from 1830 to 1838 Karlowitz was itself the headquarters of the Servian Church.

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  • As an historical record its value must depend upon a careful criticism of its contents in the light of biblical history and external information.

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  • Any careful perusal of modern attempts to recover historical facts or an historical outline from the book will show how very inadequate the material proves to be, and the reconstructions will be found to depend upon an interpretation of the narratives which is often liberal and not rarely precarious, and to imply such reshaping and rewriting of the presumed facts that the cautious reader can place little reliance on them.

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  • These labours are indispensable for scientific biblical study, and are most fruitful when they depend upon comprehensive methods of research.

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  • Upon geographical conditions likewise depend to a large extent the political conditions prevailing among the various tribes.

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  • Quincke have shown that they depend upon the size and form of the apertures and upon the state of the surface on which they are traced.

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  • The actual details of the systems of lenses depend upon the object for which the polariscope is intended, and are given for some of the principal types of instruments in Th.

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  • The Peltier effect and the thermo-E.M.F., on the other hand, do not depend on the state of the surfaces, but only on the state of the substance.

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  • The errors attending the determination of the size of a microscopic object depend chiefly on the accuracy of the objective micrometer; any errors in the micrometer being magnified by the objective.

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  • He was the first to recognize the insufficiency and the unreliability of the feudal levies, the first to employ a regular army on a large scale, the first to depend more upon strategy and tactics than upon mere courage.

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  • With regard to the merits and demerits of the last two mentioned processes - expression and extraction - the adoption of either will largely depend on local conditions and the objects for which the products are intended.

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  • The commercial value of tea, coffee, wine and other beverages may be said to depend largely on the delicate aroma which they owe to the presence of minute quantities of ethereal oils.

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  • Each sporangium had, on one side only, a longitudinal or slightly oblique annulus, several cells in width; the numerous spores were all of the same size; certain differences among them, which have been interpreted as indicating heterospory, have now proved to depend merely on the state of preservation.

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  • Reason was, for Kant, an organic whole; the speculative and moral aspects are never severed; and the solution of problems which appear at first sight to belong solely to the region of speculative thought may be found ultimately to depend upon certain characteristics of our nature as practical.

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  • Of the essential properties of clay some are merely physical, and depend on the minute size of the particles.

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  • While Alex appreciated beauty, his pride would hardly depend on it.

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  • He could depend on Carmen to take good care of the stallion in his absence, but the horse missed him – or maybe it was the other way around.

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  • In rural areas, the ongoing marginalization of poor farmers has led them to depend increasingly upon subsistence agriculture.

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  • When using collateral texts to generate keyword indices the robustness of any index will depend on the contents of the source text.

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  • The resonant charging properties depend on the chosen tank capacitor value and the leakage or ballast inductance of the supply.

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  • Taxes will depend on the period of time over which the participant chooses to receive the installments.

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  • Clearly, any art of reaching agreement through conversation is going to depend on an art of interpreting interlocutors.

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  • Even now irrevocable damage may have been done to the ecosystems on which we all ultimately depend.

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  • Their manifest aspects depend on the nature of the substances, organ- isms, or forms through which as powers or forces they work.

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  • Whether the occupiers together have a joint tenancy or whether they each have individual licenses will depend on the particular circumstances of the case.

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  • Laminin receptors The distinct biological activities of laminin receptors The distinct biological activities of laminins can also depend on the repertoire of laminin receptors expressed by the specific cell type involved.

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  • Iraqis need to be able to earn a decent living, rather than depend on food handouts.

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  • Solutions to complex, and often long-standing problems depend upon a multitude of resources, talents, and expertise.

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  • The depletion is unaffected by cobra venom factor treatment and thus presumably does not depend on complement lysis (Isaacs et al 1992 ).

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  • The animals which depend upon migration are having their migration routes closed off by farmers.

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  • This function does not depend on the program- Ming language.

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  • Those who remained loyal to the papacy had to depend for spiritual ministrations upon priests who were educated abroad.

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  • This will depend on which comes first - part of the vector multiplication rules; do you remember?

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  • Several projects depend on fMRI, as does much work generally in the field of systems neuroscience.

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  • Energy requirements for these processes depend on high-grade uranium ore, which is expected to be exhausted within 50 years.

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  • Even African pastoralists, whose lives depend on cows, sheep and goats, get more nutrition from milk than from meat.

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  • The nasal percept does not depend on continuity between the formants of the vowel and nasal consonant.

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  • He is fairly prescriptive in his advice in situations where the " right " answer may really depend on balancing a number of factors.

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  • Too smallthe primary depend upon where pdf accessed botman to educate employees.

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  • A poor publican was drowned in tears, who constantly attends the word of grace, on which all his hopes depend.

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  • Some non-depolarising muscle relaxants depend on the kidney for elimination.

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  • But while businesses can physically relocate in the material world, in cyberspace they depend on their domain name.

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  • All will depend upon the intensity of review; and the factors which presently point toward ` judicial self-restraint ' continue to remain valid.

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  • I for one am glad that my Easter faith does not depend on handling deadly snakes or drinking poison.

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  • But the statement seems to make sonship depend solely and exclusively on God's calling, that is, on his adoptive act.

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  • Simply stated, for all your Afrikaans translation needs, Kwintessential are the company you can depend on.

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  • The scale of the World Bank debt reduction will also depend on how much the donors commit to financing the debt write-off.

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  • The dividing line between hard and soft X-rays is not well defined and can depend on the context.

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  • The coastal zone is also a key natural resource on which livelihoods depend.

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  • The investigation of this question upon the elastic solid theory will depend upon how we suppose the solid to vary from one optical medium to another.

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  • It is not difficult to prove that (3) remains unaltered, when this circumstance is taken into account; and it is evident in any case that a correction would depend upon the square of (D' - D).

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  • Many edible fungi depend upon minute and often obscure botanical characters for their determination, and may readily be confounded with worthless or poisonous species; but that is not the case with the common mushroom, for, although several other species of Agaricus somewhat closely approach it in form and colour, yet the true mushroom, if sound and freshly gathered, may be distinguished from all other fungi with great ease.

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  • The formal fact of thinking is what constitutes our being; but this thought leads us back, when we consider its concrete contents, to the necessary pre-supposition on which our ideas depend, the permanent cause on which they and we as conscious beings depend.

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  • That, as now constituted, mind does depend on brain, life on body, must be conceded, but that this dependence is so absolute that the function must cease with the organ has not been scientifically demonstrated; the connexion of the soul with the body is as yet too obscure to justify any such dogmatism.

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  • Large herds of swine in all the great oak woods of Germany depend for their autumn maintenance on acorns; and in the remaining royal forests of England the inhabitants of the neighbouring villages yet claim their ancient right of "pannage," turning their hogs into the woods in October and November.

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  • When the stresses acting between the parts of a system depend only on the relative positions of those parts, the sum of the kinetic energy and potential energy of the system is always the same, provided the system be not acted upon by anything outside it.

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  • Nevertheless, many schools are still defective, both from a hygienic and a teaching point of view; while the economic position of the elementary teachers, who in Italy depend upon the communal administrations and not upon the state, is still in many parts of the country extremely low.

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  • The differentiations of structure that char acterize animals and plants are being shown to be orderly and definite in many respects; the relations of the various parts to one another and to the whole, the modes of repetition of parts, and the series of changes that occur in groups of repeated parts, appear to be to a certain extent inevitable, to depend on the nature of the living material itself and on the necessary conditions of its growth.

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  • It is the cell-walls which connect the different cells of a tissue (see below), and it is upon their characters (thickness, sculpture and constitution) that the qualities of the tissue largely depend.

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  • It is possible, however, that the segregation of characters in the gametes may depend upon something far more subtle and elusive than the chromosomes or even of possible combinations of units within the chromosomes, but so far as we can see at present these are the only structures in the cell with which it can be satisfactorily associated.

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  • If the surface of the globe had been symmetrically divided into sea and land, and these had been distributed in bands bounded by parallels of latitude, the character of vegetation would depend on temperature alone; and as regards its aggregate mass, we should find it attaining its maximum at the equator and sinking to its minimum at the poles.

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  • The maximum density of population which a given region can support is very difficult to determine; it depends partly on the race and standard of culture of the people, partly on the nature and origin of the resources on which they depend, partly on the artificial burdens imposed and very largely on the climate.

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  • This theory he exemplifies by two orders of cases, (i.) the putting to death of the man-god, who is often also the king, on whose health is held to depend the safety of his people, of the world, or even of the universe; and (ii.) the annual killing of the representative of the spirit of vegetation or of the Corn-spirit (see Demonolog Y).

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  • He was never content with secondhand accounts when the primary sources were accessible; " I have always endeavoured," he says, " to draw from the fountainhead; my curiosity, as well as a sense of duty, has always urged me to study the originals; and if they have sometimes eluded my search, I have carefully marked the secondary evidence on whose faith a passage or a fact were reduced to depend."

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  • It is extremely important to consider how far the economic conceptions based upon this view of the action of men in the ordinary business of lif e - such, for example, as the doctrine of marginal utility - depend for their truth and relevance on the fact that in economics we are dealing with large aggregates.

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  • A more accurate expression (see Condensation Of Gases and Molecule) is (p+a/v 2) (v - b) =RT, in which a and b are quantities which depend on the composition of the gas, and vary from one gas to another.

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  • The magnitude of this separation would obviously depend on the magnitude of the substituent group, which may be so large (in this case propyl is sufficient) as to cause unequal horizontal deformation and at the same time a change in the vertical direction.

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  • In this category are the manufacture of agricultural machines, of tools and implements for agriculture, forestry and mining; such industries as depend for their raw material on the exploitation of the natural resources of the country, viz.

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  • It was at last realized that the laws of algebra do not depend for their validity upon any particular interpretation, whether arithmetical, geometrical or other; the only question is whether these laws do or do not involve any logical contradiction.

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  • The early Syriac translations are in many cases so literal as to do violence to the idiom of their own language; but this makes them all the more valuable when we have to depend on them for reconstructing the original texts.

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  • The lake really lies on the watershed between the two, and is probably a glacial relic. Its contribution to either infant stream appears to depend on conditions of overflow determined by the blocking of ice masses towards one end.

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  • The methods of manufacture of steel by cementation, case-hardening and the Harvey process are important operations which appear to depend on the diffusion of the carburetting material into the solid metal.

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  • In some domes, for instance in a dome at the university of Birmingham, a sound from one end of a diameter is heard very much more loudly quite close to the other end of the diameter than elsewhere, but in St Paul's Lord Rayleigh found that " the abnormal loudness with which a whisper is heard is not confined to the position diametrically opposite to that occupied by the whisperer, and therefore, it would appear, does not depend materially upon the symmetry of the dome.

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  • It is just conceivable that his statement may ultimately depend on some such ancient tradition as may have been known to Chaldaean magi.

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  • Of the four souls of a Dakota, one is held to stay with the corpse, another in the village, a third goes into the air, while the fourth goes to the land of souls, where its lot may depend on its rank in this life, its sex, mode of death or sepulture, on the due observance of funeral ritual, or many other points (see Eschatology).

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  • A rider with an insecure seat is apt to be thrown by any unexpected movement the horse may make; and, without a firm seat, the acquirement of good hands is well-nigh hopeless, because, when the balance is once disturbed the insecure rider will have to depend on something else for the maintenance of his seat, and this generally takes the shape of "riding on the horse's mouth," a practice as cruel as it is ugly.

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  • The commercial value appears to depend on the essential oil and aroma, not on the amount of caffeine, tannin or extract.

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  • Among the most important structures produced in repeated series are the reproductive cells; and Pearson points out that if the variability of animals or of plants be supposed to depend upon that of the germ-cells from which they arise, then the correlation between brothers in the array produced by the same parents will give a measure of the correlation between the parental germ-cells, the determination requiring, of course, the same precautions to avoid the effects of differentiation as are necessary in the study of other repeated organs.

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  • In optical systems composed of lenses, the position, magnitude and errors of the image depend upon the refractive indices of the glass employed (see Lens, and above, " Monochromatic Aberration ").

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  • In all cases the important action is the binding of complement to the bacterium by means of the corresponding immune body; whether or not death of the bacterium occurs, will depend upon its susceptibility to the action of the particular complement, the latter acting like a toxin or digestive ferment.

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  • For we, " not knowing what particular size, figure and texture of parts they are on which depend, and from which result, those qualities which make our complex idea, for example, of gold, it is impossible we should know what other qualities result from, or are incompatible with, the same constitution of the insensible parts of gold; and so consequently must always coexist with that complex idea we have of it, or else are inconsistent with it."

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  • Half-shade analysers depend upon the facility with which the eye can distinguish slight differences in the intensities of two streams seen in juxtaposition, when the illumination is not too bright.

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  • It would all depend on advances in computing and radio telescope technology.

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  • Well over half the population, 14-16 million people, already depend on food rations distributed under the UN 's Oil for Food program.

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  • How this works will depend on whether you have rudder pedals or not.

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  • Whether companies will be prepared to accept higher pension costs will depend on how far the economy slips into recession.

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  • However, most people in the country, and almost all the poorest, depend on smallholder agriculture for their livelihoods.

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  • How much you actually spend will depend on your interests and how much socializing you do.

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  • But the statement seems to make sonship depend solely and exclusively on God 's calling, that is, on his adoptive act.

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  • If your soil is n't sopping wet, you can sow some thing now but it does depend on what you 're growing.

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  • Of course every policy is different and your rights will depend on what was stipulated in the contract.

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  • Emissions and residues The emissions of SO2 from a stoker boiler will depend on the sulfur content of the coal.

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  • How you feel immediately after stoma surgery will depend on the reason for your surgery.

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  • The exact level would depend on the number and stringency of the conditions that needed to met and thus audited.

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  • Nearly all the 300 households depend on subsistence farming for their living.

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  • Thousands of the world 's poorest people depend on global supply chains to survive.

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  • Vast swaths of the country depend entirely on private generators.

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  • The level of shop theft committed against your premises will depend on a range of factors.

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  • All seemed to depend on picking up the trump suit.

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  • These cells appear to depend heavily on an internal system of cross-linked proteins, called the tubulin cytoskeleton, to maintain their shape.

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  • Topsoil depth can depend on many things, from underlying geology to what the ground is used for.

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  • Thus the fragmentation mechanisms do not depend upon which of the valence orbitals has been ionized.

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  • Some entries on tax returns depend on the valuation of an asset.

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  • The quest for the historical Jesus is therefore valueless to evangelical Christians whose beliefs do not depend on historical facts.

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  • Whether the payments continue will depend to a large extent on the whims of bureaucrats in the EC or in the US administration.

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  • The dividing line between hard and soft x-rays is not well defined and can depend on the context.

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  • Which one you choose will depend on the look you have in mind, the options available in your area, and your budget.

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  • When it comes to infant bowel habits, what your child expels will depend primarily on what he eats.

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  • This will depend greatly upon the maturation of your baby as well as his overall health.

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  • However, if you are wanting to adopt an infant, your wait time may depend on the birth mother.

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  • Be sure you also give a list of foods that your child is not allowed to have, such as choking hazards like grapes, hotdogs, hard candy, etc. Of course, this list will depend on your child's age.

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  • Build a good support system of friends and family that you can depend on to listen to you and to love your child.

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  • Almost any type of cuisine could work for a baby shower, but your decision will largely depend on the style and feel you are going for.

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  • Weaning from the bottle to cup will depend on your baby's need to suckle along with his abilility to master drinking from a cup.

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  • What you choose to buy in regards to baby's first holiday season may depend upon a couple of things.

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  • However, you and your child can build a special bond and possibly become closer than normal simply because you depend so much upon each other.

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  • Some use zinc formulations while others depend on petroleum byproducts.

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  • When it comes to baby cameras, whether you choose the monitor/camera combination or the more traditional baby camera will depend largely on a few factors.

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  • The final look of the invitation or greeting card will depend on the color scheme utilized, any text added (and the font used), and how busy or refined the look of the card is.

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  • Others depend on relatives or friends who are more experienced in caring for a baby to teach them about diapering their child.

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  • Fold the bottom edge up a bit (the exact length will depend on how big your baby is; if you have large liners and a newborn, this fold will be quite large).

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  • The amount of diapers you need will depend on how often you plan to wash the dirty diapers and how old your baby is.

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  • Even when parents can hear their children, they still often depend upon the extra security of a baby monitor that can magnify every sound babies make.

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  • Parents also depend on monitors to alert them of their child's activities when they are on the opposite side of the house or even out in the yard.

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  • Again, your choice will depend on your overall aesthetic and the current style of the room in which the armchair will be situated.

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  • Again, the material you choose will depend on how the design of the table lamp fits your overall style.

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  • The kind of sleepwear you choose will depend on the time of year, the weather and the region of the country where you live.

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  • The size of the sofa you buy, of course, will also depend on the size of the space where you intend to place it.

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  • Ultimately your purchase will depend upon how much time you'll spend in front of the computer monitor and what you do with it.

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  • The information you can gather at retail outlets will depend if the sales people are on commission or not.

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  • Most likely your choice will depend upon vendor availability in your area and price.

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  • This decision will depend on how you plan to use the motorcycle.

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  • The price of a used CD will depend on not only its condition, but also on its popularity, availability and whether or not it's currently in print (out of print CDs are going to cost you a lot).

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  • What you buy will depend on what you can afford to buy.

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  • The type you use will depend on the project you're doing, and it's not always possible to substitute one type for another.

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  • Turnaround time will depend upon the printer's workload, but is generally 10 business days or less.

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  • Look for high ratings, but don't depend on them exclusively.

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  • The cost will depend on the timeshare resort size and location.

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  • Picking the right area will largely depend on the reasons why you are buying a property in Germany.

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  • Generally, bowling balls with soft finishes grip the lane better than bowling balls with hard finishes, but this may also depend on how exuberantly the bowling alley oils the lanes.

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  • Materials range from wood to metal to fiberglass and depend on your expertise and finances.

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  • Where you purchase your laptop desk will largely depend on the type of design you need.

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  • Flower specials will depend on the time of year, but there are a few places you can look every time to compare prices.

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  • The rates for Treasury bonds depend on auctions, which may set a price less than, equal to or greater than the face value of a bond.

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  • The information you need to provide will depend upon the vendor you select.

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  • The option that works best for you will depend on your style preference, lifestyle and budget.

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  • The right gifts for family members depend a lot on your knowledge of what the person likes.

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  • A lot will depend on your specific needs and what you can afford to pay.

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  • What you look for will depend on the type of instrument you are buying.

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  • You can expect to pay from $150 up to $200 for a good in-home cleaning, you may be able to find this service for less - it will all depend on where you live.

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  • The amounts depend on how much you are making.

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  • The exact weight will depend on the kitten and the breed.

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  • The type of cat food you get at the beginning will depend on the cat's age and condition, as well as any recommendations that your vet might have.

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  • Other aspects of cat care depend on the age of the animal since older cats and newborn kittens necessitate more specified care.

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  • The answer may depend on many factors, some lifestyle and some environmental.

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  • Cats, due to their unique biology, depend upon food sources for nutrients such as thiamine and amino acids called taurine and arginine.

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  • The goal is to provide you with accurate and useful info you can depend on.

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  • Extended finance terms to help offset the cost of the special equipment can mean the difference of having to depend on other people and having the ability to do it on your own.

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  • Again, the specific fee amounts depend on the card issuer but are generally the same as if you were overdrawn on your checking account or bounced a check.

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  • The sources you utilize in your search for online information should depend on exactly what types of questions you have.

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  • Whether you need quarterly updates versus monthly, or all three reports versus one, will depend entirely on your needs, and you should make sure you weigh the pros and cons of each plan before committing to one.

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  • Interest rates vary by company and depend on your creditworthiness.

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  • Whether child support can be collected will depend on whether the non-custodial parent is living in a country that has a reciprocal agreement with the United States, however.

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  • The rate of alimony payments will depend on the payer's financial situation.

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  • If you want to get a divorce, the issue of division of assets and debts will depend on whether you live in one of the community property states.

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  • The version you choose will depend on how much support you need to fill out the forms.

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  • The types of Georgia marriage separation forms you need for your divorce depend on the facts of each case.

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  • Your success in getting replacement cushions for your sofa will depend on what type of cushions you have.

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  • The retailer that will best meet your needs will depend on where you are located.

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  • Beyond that, the selection of batting or foam will depend on how firm you want your cushions to be.

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  • These chairs tend to be fairly inexpensive but price will always depend on the material and the quality.

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  • The repair parts you might need will depend on what kind of furniture you have.

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  • The amount of protection you need from an outdoor furniture cover will depend on the type of climate you live in.

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  • Additionally, the life cycles of fish and other marine life are adversely affected since there are many species that depend on cold water in order to reproduce and grow.

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  • For example, the Polar Bear and Emperor Penguins depend on sheets of ice for a place to give birth to their young and rest during their travels.

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  • The best approach to rain water conservation will depend on the needs and conditions of a household and its locality.

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  • Self-sufficiency is a way of life in which you depend on less on outside resources to provide you with things like food, shelter and clothing.

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  • The size and elaborateness of your tumbler will depend on the amount of waste you have to compost as well as your construction skill.

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  • The type of heat pump you install will depend on the land you have available along with the type of soil and rock found at the site where you plan to install it.

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  • For example, the Hubble telescope and the Mars Rovers depend upon solar panels for power.

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  • The risk that someone is prepared to take when buying a used panel will largely depend on their experience and knowledge.

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  • How much you can save by switching to wind power will depend on the climate of where you live and the average wind speed, but the one thing you can know is that overall you will save.

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  • Shopping for the wind turbine right for your home will depend on your budget and whether or not you plan to install the turbine yourself.

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  • Scientists depend upon the ability to re-test experiments and try to duplicate research results to prove theories.

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  • Before you begin, you'll need to collect small pinecones - how many will depend on the size of your frame.

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  • Colored lights tend to have regional followings, and so your feelings on these might depend on where you live.

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  • Keep in mind that some of the specifics of the installation process will depend on your tiles and your ceiling material, but the basic process is outlined below.

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  • Again, this may depend upon how old the institution is.

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  • The cost of the project will depend on the materials you choose to use and purchase.

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  • A selection of paint brushes - the sizes you need will depend on the stencils you are using.

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  • All residential and commercial decorator jobs have a varied list of responsibilities that depend on who signs the final paycheck.

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  • How many coats you need to apply will depend on what and where you're painting.

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  • The right one will depend on where you want to put it.

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  • Obviously the amount of light you need will depend on the size of the space.

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  • The type of fabric you choose will depend on where it will be used and your overall design plan.

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  • The metal hardware set includes two finials, three to six brackets, and up to four telescoping rods(amounts depend on length of rod set).

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  • The technique you use to apply your liner will depend on the type of liner you choose.

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  • Shades of color depend on your personality - at least I think so.

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  • Just like there can be many different hues in a sunset, the eye shadow colors you will use will depend on your eye color.

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  • Besides major world occurrences, the fluctuations in the value of currency depend on a number of factors, including many that are purely economic.

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  • For instance, a teacher's continued certification may depend on his or her completion of professional development experiences.

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  • The possibility is actually very troubling to authors who depend upon copyright laws to protect their livelihood.

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  • Regardless of which resource you use, never depend completely on the Internet as your ultimate resource for medical information.

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  • Sensuality is a subjective term, so how you approach the composition of your sensual photography will depend on your own artistic aesthetic and how you want to market your work.

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