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decrements
verb
Third person singular of decrement
Exact(3)
Age decrements are negligible on tests that depend on vocabulary, general information, and well-practiced activities.
Cats that were bigger than usual, smaller than usual, or slightly out of frame caused significant decrements in performance.
Victims of bullying in schools do not consistently show decrements in their academic performance, and attitudes toward bullying are more positive when it is tolerated and accepted by school authorities.
Similar(9)
π/6 is 30 degrees since p=180 degrees so 7/6 π = 210 degrees, and 210 is the overall variable number being decremented by 360 degrees versus a cosine and sine function.
This will decrement 210 to -210, a total change of 420 over 360 cells, or 7/6 "time period units" compared to a sphere, in lengths, but also in terms of a particle's distance to travel over time, given the volume is known.
The age decrement in the ability to perform muscular work is much greater than any changes that can be detected in the enzyme activities of the muscles that perform the work.
The inventory databases should be linked in as well, so product inventories may be incremented automatically and supply inventories decremented as manufacturing proceeds.
Quite apart from the practical question of the optimal management of training programs (e.g., in coaching oarsmen in racing shells), the aversive inhibitory consequences of sustained action that are recognized as subjective fatigue and behavioral decrement are clearly adaptive.
I didn't have a good intuitive grasp of Gas Stations until I focused solely on the level of gas in the tank of the car over time and incremented the gas at the same rate it was decremented by driving: it was only then that it was viscerally obvious (to me, at least) that, given the conditions of the problem, the car could never run dry.
Dr. Stedman's group said the findings "raise the intriguing possibility that the decrement in masticatory muscle size removed an evolutionary constraint on encephalization".
Indeed, in the more recent psychological literature, "the Perky effect" has come to mean not the confusion of images with percepts, but the decrement in visual performance that results (in most circumstances) when one deliberately maintains an image in consciousness (Craver-Lemley & Reeves, 1992; Craver-Lemley & Arterberry, 2001).
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