Proc Sentence Examples

proc
  • See Proc. Roy.

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  • He was also the author of important papers in which he extended to complex quadratic forms many of Gauss's investigations relating to real quadratic forms. After 1864 he devoted himself chiefly to elliptic functions, and numerous papers on this subject were published by him in the Proc. Lond.

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  • Fleming, " A Note on a Form of Magnetic Detector for Hertzian Waves adapted for Quantitative Work," Proc. Roy.

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  • Fleming, Proc. Roy.

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  • Soc. (1897-1898), lxii., and his earlier papers there cited; see also Proc. Camb.

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  • Aspinall on the Lancashire & Yorkshire railway to ascertain the resistance of trains of bogie passenger carriages of different lengths at varying speeds, and the results are recorded in a paper, " Train Resistance," Proc. Inst.

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  • For further information regarding the standard engine of comparison see the article Steam Engine and also the " Report of the Committee on the Thermal Efficiency of Steam Engines," Proc. Inst.

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  • This view is based on Dr Pinches's discovered list in which Sapatti is called the 15th day (Proc. of the Soc. of Biblical Arch., p. 51 foll.).

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  • Aldus in his edition of Cicero's De universitate (1583), dedicated to Crichton, laments the 3rd of July as the fatal day; and this account is apparently confirmed by the Mantuan state papers recently unearthed by Mr. Douglas Crichton (Proc. Soc. of Antiquaries of Scotland, 1909).

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  • History (April 1899); "On the Species of the genus Mus inhabiting St Kilda," Proc. Zool.

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  • See especially Sir Henry Howorth, Proc. of Society of Bibl.

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  • See obituary notices in the Proc. Lond.

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  • Among more recent investigations are those of Howorth, Proc. Soc. of Bibl.

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  • C. Lea, dealing with the determination of stress due to concentrated loads, by the method of influence lines will be found in Proc. Inst.

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  • The sloth-bear (Melursus labiatus or ursinus) is distinguished 1 Lydekker, in Proc. Zool.

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  • Hartig, Die Familien der Blattwespen and Holzwespen (Berlin, 1860); Walsh, " On the Insects, Coleopterous, Hymenopterous and Dipterous, inhabiting the Galls of certain species of Willow," Proc. Ent.

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  • See obituary notice in the Proc. Roy.

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  • Hadcock, late R.A., and published in the Proc. R.A.

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  • Sumpner, "The Measurement of the Power given by an Electric Current to any Circuit," Proc. Roy.

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  • Accordingly, for several years its use was restricted to the Marne; but in1883-1886drum weirs were 2 Proc. Inst.

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  • Biographical notices of him will be found in his Proc. Inst.

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  • Jeans, 2 who showed that a shell-like constitution of the atom, the shells being electrically charged, 1 Proc. Roy.

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  • Durham, "Tyrosinases in the Skins of Pigmented Vertebrates," Proc. Roy.

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  • If the effects depended merely on the velocity of translation of the molecules, both conductivity and viscosity should increase directly as the square root of the absolute temperature; but the mean free path also varies in a manner which cannot be predicted by theory and which appears to be different for different gases (Rayleigh, Proc. R.S., January 1896).

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  • While the mountainous parts of Morocco continued to be occupied by pure Berber people, the Shluh or Shilluh, the Andalusian Moors flocked to 5 Proc. Zool.

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  • Parish, Hallucinations and Illusions and Zur Kritik des telepathischen Beweismaterials, and Mrs Sidgwick's refutation in Proc. S.P.R.

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  • Another general solution of the problem is given in the Proc. Loud.

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  • Records of experiments on the friction of a pivot bearing will be found in the Proc. Inst.

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  • C. Greenhill treated the problem of the centrifugal whirling of an unloaded shaft with different supporting conditions in a paper On the Strength of Shafting exposed both to torsion and to end thrust, Proc. Inst.

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  • Hist, (1892); "Decapoden and Schizopoden," PlanktonExpedition (Ortmann, 1893); "Euphausiidae," by Stebbing, Proc. Zool.

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  • Benham describes backward shifting of the oral aperture in certain Chaetopods, Proc. Zoolog.

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  • Fletcher, "On the Specific Identity of the Australian Peripatus, usually supposed to be P. leuckarti, Saenger," Proc. Linn.

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  • Cope, "Synopsis of the Extinct Batrachia of North America," Proc. Ac. Philad., 1868, p. 208.

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  • Biog.) that this was due to some disturbances at Winchester (Proc. P.C. vi.

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  • A brief abstract of Smith's methods and results appeared in the Proc. R oy.

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  • Proc. R.G.S., 1886-1887; Arthur Carey, " Explorations in Turkestan," see vol.

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  • The earliest experiments of this nature are due to Benjamin Robins in 1743 and Count Rumford in 1792; and their method has been revived by Dr Kellner, War Department chemist, who 5 employed the steel spheres of bicycle ball-bearings as safetyvalves, loaded to register the pressure at which the powdergas will blow off, and thereby check the indications of the crusher-gauge (Proc. R.S., March 1895).

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