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The notion of a rigid designator comes from Kripke (1980), who (roughly speaking) defines a rigid designator to be an expression that designates the same thing with respect to all possible worlds.
The approach will likely lead to product labeling that designates a drug for smaller patient populations.
Maybe, given the voters she most desperately needs, she could use the circle and cross that designates Woman.
Thirty states have legislation that designates men household heads, while women in 19 countries are legally obliged to obey their husbands.
Under Bellport's local ordinance, the municipality's supervisor appoints a commission that designates landmarks, which can be individual houses or historic areas, to be preserved.
They described Tibet's status under the Qing with a term that designates a "feudal dependency," not an integral part of a country.
"The America of Bush that designates a clear enemy is not accepted in France and Germany," said Nicole Bacharan, a political scientist.
In a book that designates Political Extremes with Capital Letters, the Republic of the title — the one the founding fathers had in mind — is under siege.
The league has a three-year deal, lasting through 2006, that designates Taco Bell the "official quick-serve restaurant" of Major League Baseball.
9. Jane Bruton Editor-in-chief Editor-in-chief Editor-in-chiefnates the week's must-haves has become a must-read since its launch in 2005.
This energy gap, also called a bandgap, is a region that designates energies that the electrons in the semiconductor cannot possess.
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