Sentence examples for definite closure from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

The Academies Enterprise Trust, England's largest chain with 77 schools, said it had identified just one definite closure, a special school, while some of its secondary schools would be partially closed.

No wonder then that the easy heroics of James Bond remain compelling, and when The Night Manager was adapted recently it was given a more definite closure than the book's ending, which made it far more optimistic in its view of the ability of the good Englishman – and woman – to take on global corruption.

Similar(58)

In Russell's research, she discovered that fans found it easier to move on from a show if there was definite, unambiguous closure, and if they stayed in contact with the communities that grew up around the series.

The requirement to repeat the ERCP procedures with stent exchange before the definite fistula closure is reported in the literature [2, 8].

All patients with complex anal fistulas who underwent a definite surgical closure performed by one surgeon (fistulectomy, rectal advancement flap repair) were prospectively enrolled, and data were retrospectively analyzed in relation to obesity.

The isomerization of the rhodopsin molecules embedded in membranous disks of the rod outer segment (ROS) by the impinging light triggers a chain of reactions, referred to as photo-transduction, which causes the closure of definite ionic channels in the cell membrane [ 1, 2].

Not definitive, just definite.

Shadow Welsh secretary Owen Smith said: "I welcome the possibility that north Wales could be the location for a new super prison somewhere down the line but the more immediate and definite news today is the closure of another six prisons with a total loss of 2,600 prison places over the next three months".

For (X,Yin mathbf{H}_n), (Xge Y) indicates that (X-Y) is positive semi-definite; i.e., in the closure of (mathbf{P}_n), and (X>Y) indicates that (Xin mathbf{P}_n).

This study reports on an experiment on the effects of need for closure, defined as a desire for definite knowledge on some issue and the eschewal of ambiguity.

Need for cognitive closure (NFCC) is a "desire for definite knowledge on some issue [ 5]".

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