Examiner Sentence Examples

examiner
  • Bezout, appointed examiner, of naval candidates.

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  • He was examiner in logical and moral philosophy (1857-1862 and 1864-1869) to the university of London, and in moral science in the Indian Civil Service examinations.

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  • The brilliant way in which he sustained his preliminary examination won him the friendship of the examiner, Bishop Jasper Brokman, at whose palace he first met Frederick III.

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  • If the offer was made, it was declined, and Cranmer continued at Cambridge filling the offices of lecturer in divinity at his own college and of public examiner in divinity to the university.

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  • The first sketch of Mill's political philosophy appeared in a series of contributions to the Examiner in the autumn of 1830 entitled "Prospects in France."

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  • He was examiner in the Ecole Polytechnique, but held few important state offices.

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  • It is interesting, in view of his later efforts to spread the knowledge of the Bible among the people, to know that in the capacity of examiner he insisted on a thorough acquaintance with the Holy Scriptures, and rejected several candidates who were deficient in this qualification.

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  • But here something (probably the examiner) was at fault, for a note was attached to Pasteur's diploma stating that he was only "mediocre" in chemistry.

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  • Among those which also include political and social topics, and are more particularly dealt with under Newspapers, may be mentioned, the Examiner (1808-1881), the Spectator (1828), the Saturday Review (1855), the Scots or National Observer (1888-1897), Outlook (1898), Pilot (1900-1903), and Speaker (1890), which became the Nation.

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  • In 1862 he removed to London to become scripture examiner in London University, and he spent the rest of his life in literary work.

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  • The Medical Examiner's Office will conduct an autopsy.

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  • He has been an examiner for three of the British exam boards.

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  • The medical examiner ruled Clements ' cause of death blunt trauma to the head.

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  • Dean and Sackler took names, shooed the men out of the shop and left the back room to the medical examiner.

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  • In 1822, however, when he had just completed his seventeenth year, this intention was abandoned, and he entered as a clerk in the examiner's office of the India House, "with the understanding that he should be employed from the beginning in preparing drafts of despatches, and be thus trained up as a successor to those who then filled the highest departments of the office."

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  • How little this criticism was justified may be seen from the fact that Mill's inductive logic was the direct result of his aspirations after political stability as determined by the dominion of the wisest (Examiner letters).

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  • In 1856 he became head of the examiner's office in the India House, and for two years, till the dissolution of the Company in 1858, his official work, never a light task, kept him fully occupied.

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  • The year following he was appointed an official in the India House, in the important department of the examiner of Indian correspondence.

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  • Among the daily newspapers the San Francisco Examiner (IndependentDemocratic, 1865), the Chronicle (Republican, 1865), the Call (Republican, 1856) and the San Francisco Bulletin (IndependentRepublican, 1855) are chiefly important.

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  • An act approved on the loth of April 1908 authorized a Civil Service Commission of four members appointed by the governor, who choose a chief examiner and a secretary of the commission.

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  • Within a few weeks he had become the lampooner of the fallen treasurer, the bosom friend of Oxford and Bolingbroke, and the writer of the Examiner, a journal established as the exponent of Tory views (November 1710).

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  • The Examiner headline read " A jobs bonanza for Huddersfield " .

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  • When we came out with the examiner he took us to a mobile canteen.

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  • Edith Esch has been appointed external examiner in Applied Linguistics for Trinity College, Dublin for a period of three years.

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  • This document is assessed internally then moderated by the external examiner.

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  • More importantly, they gave evidence of safe clinical practice as verified by an external examiner.

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  • He was an external examiner in English at Lampeter.

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  • An External examiner has the right to moderate marks awarded by the internal examiners.

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  • The independent examiner of the Charities accounts for the 2005 financial year is Mr Peter Patrick.

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  • The independent examiner shall not be an officer or a member of the general committee.

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  • The results envelopes are handed out at the College by a senior examiner or a member the Examinations Section staff.

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  • When you attend a motorcycle or moped test present the DL196 to your driving examiner.

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  • Irish Examiner Squirrels are rather partial to milk chocolate Aahh.

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  • In 1816 Hunt published Keats's sonnet O solitude in the Examiner and in 1821 La Belle Dame sans Merci in the Indicator.

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  • Students will usually have a viva with the external examiner.

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  • Other papers founded by him were the Chicago American (1900); The Chicago Examiner (1902); the Los Angeles Examiner (1902); The Boston American (1904), and the Atlanta Georgian (1906).

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  • He also purchased the Boston Advertiser (1917); the Chicago Herald (1918), thereafter combined with the Examiner as the Herald and Examiner; the Washington Times (1919); and the Madison Wisconsin Times (1919).

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  • He attended lectures while supporting himself by teaching mathematics and physics at the polytechnic school at Zurich until 1900 and finally, after a year as tutor at Schaffhausen, was appointed examiner of patents at the patent office at Berne, where, having become a Swiss citizen, he remained until 1909.

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  • The working of the new order in France, and the personalities of the leading men, had a profound interest for him; he wrote on the subject in the Examiner.

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  • Third, and worst of all, he had prefixed a preface to the sixth volume, in which he went out of his way to rouse the enmity of the men on whom depended his annual re-election to the post of examiner for the Polytechnic school.

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  • He was afraid of getting some other officer into trouble, and silently fixed his eyes on Bagration as a schoolboy who has blundered looks at an examiner.

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  • You can also use the occasion to scout around for a good external examiner.

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  • In 1816 Hunt published Keats 's sonnet O Solitude in the Examiner and in 1821 La Belle Dame sans Merci in the Indicator.

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  • We may require yo u, at our expense, to be examined by a medical examiner of our choice.

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  • The chief medical examiner found that there was no physical injury to her body, including trauma or wounds, which would indicate any foul play.

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  • In a report released March 26, 2007, the Broward County, Florida medical examiner stated that Smith "ingested several medications" but those drugs were at "therapeutic levels."

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  • The subject is asked to tell a story to the examiner about each picture.

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  • Studies of the interactions between examiners and test subjects have found that the race, sex, and social class of both participants influence both the stories that are told and the way the stories are interpreted by the examiner.

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  • The chief risks involved in taking the TAT are a bad "fit" between the examiner and the test subject and misuse of the results.

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  • The examiner presents a series of test materials to the child and observes the child's responses and behaviors.

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  • Before performing an adaptive behavior test, the examiner explains to the parents the purpose of the test.

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  • If the test is given directly to the child, the examiner describes what will happen during the test procedure and the parents are asked not to talk to the child during the test to avoid skewing results.

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  • Under blue cobalt light, the part of the cornea abraded will be stained by the dye and is easily seen by the examiner.

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  • The examiner may ask the child to describe, for example, what led up to the scene depicted, the emotions of the characters, and what might happen in the future.

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  • Audiometric testing with the audiometer is performed while the patient sits in a soundproof booth and the examiner outside the booth communicates to the patient with a microphone.

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  • One ear is tested at a time, and a technique called masking, in which noise is presented to the ear not being tested, assures the examiner that only one ear is tested at a time.

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  • When evaluating infants, rather than testing of threshold levels, the examiner establishes the minimum response level at which the child responds to auditory stimuli.

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  • A computer compiles the findings into a waveform that gives the examiner information about the location of a hearing problem anywhere along this pathway from the ear canal to the brainstem.

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  • The test is administered orally to an individual child who is seated such that neither the examiner's mouth nor the words on the test form are visible to the child.

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  • The examiner reads each word-pair only once, and the child indicates whether the word-pair consists of different or identical words.

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  • The test is usually done with resistance, meaning the examiner holds the area while the patient is asked to move.

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  • The examiner looks for tongue protrusion and/or abnormal movements.

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  • Autopsy. The autopsy, usually performed by a medical examiner or coroner, focuses on finding any identifiable cause of death.

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  • Intelligence testing requires a clinically trained examiner.

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  • The examiner should be made aware of a child's potential limitations before the day of the test so that appropriate accommodations are available.

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  • In both tests, the examiner uses a computer, monitor, amplifier, loudspeaker, stimulator, and high-tech filters to see and hear how the muscles and nerves are responding during the test.

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  • The examiner tests the infant's response to light, sound, or touch during sleep and the infant's ability to block out stimulation during sleep.

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  • One specific method, called the Ortolani test, begins with each of the examiner's hands around the infant's knees, with the second and third fingers pointing down the child's thigh.

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  • With the legs abducted (moved apart), the examiner may be able to hear a distinct clicking sound, called a hip click, with motion.

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  • The examiner's middle finger is placed over the outside of the hipbone while the thumb is placed on the inner side of the knee.

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  • The "Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Development and Operation Guide," prepared by the Sexual Assault Resource Service, describes the ideal protocol for collecting evidence from a sexual assault victim.

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  • Before giving the BSID test to a child, the examiner explains to the parents what will happen during the test procedure.

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  • This is to allow the examiner to establish a focused rapport with the child once the procedure has started and avoid diverting attention from the child to the parents during the test.

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  • If the examiner is not well-trained in psychometric evaluation, subjective interpretations may affect the evaluation of these tests.

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  • Psychological testing requires a clinically trained examiner.

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  • It requires a skilled, trained examiner to administer and interpret a projective test.

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  • The examiner places the person in a comfortable position, usually seated on the examination table with legs hanging free.

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  • The examiner may position, or hold, one of the limbs during testing, and may require exposure of the ankles, knees, abdomen, and arms.

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  • For this reason, the examiner will attempt to elicit the response with the smallest stimulus possible.

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  • An older inhibited child or teenager, for example, may not cling to his or her mother or cry when coming to an unfamiliar laboratory but may hesitate to talk to the examiner and may smile infrequently.

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  • It is simply a way for an examiner to check the files you are keeping on your children and to review your curriculum.

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  • An examiner may also review recent work that the child or children have done to see if they are meeting the minimum standards for their grade level.

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  • These include the official MySpace, Facebook and YouTube accounts, Everglow, the Twilight Examiner column, and many more.

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  • Many business schools offer courses and an increasing number offer bachelor or masters degrees in the field, and many forensic accountants have either the Certified Public Accountant or Certified Fraud Examiner designations.

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  • There was once a time when people associated The Examiner with Rupert Murdoch's San Francisco Examiner.

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  • As such, the Examiner is now an online publication with pages for just about every state.

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  • Although the Examiner is no longer owned by Rupert Murdoch, it's interesting to note that it is in alignment with the speech he made to the American Society of Newspaper Editors.

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  • Given its local focus, the control of the Examiner's content is decentralized and the ability for users to make comments represents Murdoch's concept of a community of readers.

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  • In 1886 he became proprietor of the San Francisco Examiner, the first of a long chain of papers to come under his control.

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  • He commenced his work as a writer for the London newspaper press in connexion with the Morning Chronicle, and he afterwards became a leading contributor to the Examiner and the Daily News.

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  • He wrote in the Examiner and made a public speech in favour of the association a few months before his death.

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  • An examiner may have underestimated the time required to answer the questions which he has set; this will be obvious if with a large number of candidates (say 300 or 400) none approaches the maximum mark.

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  • Fawsitt (The Education of the Examiner, Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow, 1905) shows that frequency-curves deduced from actual investigation of class-marks are not symmetrical, but have two maxima corresponding to the performance of " non-workers " and of " workers."

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  • Within two years and a half he had mastered all the subjects prescribed for examination, and a great deal more, and, on going up for examination at Toulouse, he astounded his examiner by his knowledge of Lagrange.

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  • She was conscientious with regard to her duties as examiner.

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  • In both tests, the examiner uses a computer, monitor, amplifier, loudspeaker, stimulator and high-tech filters to see and hear how the muscles and nerves are responding during the test.

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  • In one common method of administration, the examiner shows the subject only ten of the 31 cards at each of two sessions.

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  • The examiner summarizes and interprets the stories in light of certain common psychological themes.

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  • For example the examiner says "outdoor" and tells the child to say the word but to not say "out."

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  • The examiner will also assess the sensation capabilities of the pharynx, by stimulating the area with a wooden tongue depressor, causing a gag reflex.

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  • Decreases or increases in muscle tone can help the examiner localize the affected area.

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  • The examiner uses a rubber mallet to strike different points on the individual's body and observes the response.

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  • The letters in the Examiner may be taken as marking the close of his period of meditative search, and his return to hopeful aspiring activity.

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  • The state treasurer is the bank examiner, and to him all banks must make a quarterly statement and submit their books for examination twice a year.

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  • The Christian Examiner dates from 1824 and lasted down to 1870.

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  • His real bent and choice were towards a pastoral cure in a country parish; but he remained in Oxford, acting first as a public examiner in the schools, then as a tutor in Oriel, till 1823.

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  • In 1804 he was appointed professor of mathematics at the Lycee, in 1809 professor of analysis and mechanics, and in 1816 examiner at the Ecole Polytechnique.

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  • His services to his party as writer of the Examiner, which he quitted in July 1711, were even surpassed by those which he rendered as the author of telling pamphlets, among which The Conduct of the Allies and of the Late Ministry, in beginning and carrying on the Present War, and Remarks on the Barrier Treaty (November and December 1711) hold the first rank.

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  • A lieutenant-governor, secretary of state, treasurer, auditor, examiner, and inspector, commissioner of labour, commissioner of insurance, chief mine inspector, commissioner of charities and corrections, and president of the board of agriculture are elected each for a term of four years, and the secretary of state, auditor and treasurer are, like the governor, ineligible for the next succeeding term.

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  • With the consent of the Senate he appoints all officers whose election or appointment is not otherwise provided for, including the bank examiner, state chemist, dairy and food commissioners, the boards of labour and health; the directors of the state institutions, &c., and fills all vacancies in elective offices until new officers are chosen and qualified.

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  • Banks are subject to the supervision of an examiner and in addition are required to make weekly reports to the comptroller-general.

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