Sentence examples for according to which terms from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Viète retained the classical principle of homogeneity, according to which terms added together must all be of the same dimension.

Similar(58)

Cases were therefore defined according to which term contributed most strongly to indicate NEC, resulting in 4 cases of " Clostridium-associated" NEC and 7 of " Klebsiella OTU-associated" NEC.

This was the basic idea of his "physicalism," according to which all terms and statements of empirical science from the physical to the social and historical disciplines can be reduced to terms and statements in the language of physics.

There is a linguistic division of labor, analogous to Adam Smith's economic division of labor, according to which such terms have their references fixed by the "experts" in the particular field of science to which the terms belong.

There may be a problem for those more sophisticated forms of non-cognitivism according to which moral terms have both descriptive and prescriptive or expressive meaning when these are coupled with reliance on the Open Question Argument.

The focus has been either on the old Prebisch-Singer hypothesis - according to which the "terms of trade" between primary products and manufactured goods tended to fall in the very long run - and/or on the frequency and shapes of past price cycles.

In this paper, the approach of the EU Project CH4LLENGE (Addressing the four Key Challenges of Sustainable Urban Mobility Planning) [80] is followed, according to which the term "stakeholders" refers to organized groups and associations and is different from the term "citizens" which correspond to the wider public opinion.

The modest but significant reduction of intestinal adenoma burden by aspirin is consistent with previous work according to which long-term dietary administration of aspirin from conception onwards increased the survival of Apc Min /+ mice, while exposure during adulthood only did not (Sansom et al, 2001).

This is to accept a form of latitudinarianism about de re attitudes, according to which (nonempty) designating terms within propositional attitude verbs freely export outside the scope of propositional attitude verbs.

In the hydrological jargon, the Budyko hypothesis refers to the hypothesis according to which the long-term water and energy balances of the Earth's surface are largely dependent upon a single aridity ratio φ = Ex/P (where P represents long-term precipitation [mm/yr] and Ex long-term maximum evaporation [mm/yr]).

The best-known is Zipf's law on the distribution of word frequencies [6] [8], according to which the frequency of terms in a collection decreases inversely to the rank of the terms.

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