Sentence examples for discernible contribution from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

The guiding principle is that all these titles should, in some sense, have made a discernible contribution to who we are today, and to the way we live, think and write.

Meireles, Liverpool's main summer import at £11.7m after impressing in central midfield for Portugal during the World Cup, was deployed wide on the right but had to drift inside to make any discernible contribution, while Torres, even with the former Utrecht favourite Dirk Kuyt moved up to support, again cut an isolated figure.

The gating+ algorithm compares the vector magnitudes at every frequency to determine the appropriate frequencies to pass - effectively those frequencies that make a discernible contribution.

In fact, the MCD spectrum of Co II Cbl in the presence of the SeCobAW93H/ATP complex does not contain any discernible contribution from the δ-band transition, while the features at higher energies are analogous to those observed in the presence of SeCobAWT and SeCobAW93F.

Similar(56)

The spectroscopy results show no discernible B4C contribution to the plasma emissions.

With Roger Bacon, Duns Scotus, and Robert Grosseteste, the first chancellor of Oxford University, a significant English contribution is discernible.

However, we find no evidence of this (Fig. 4a): a threefold increase in the size of the group had no discernible impact on PGG contributions in the treatment (using group size of each session as independent variable to predict the average contribution in the final round of the game in treatment: coeff = −0.015, p = 0.782, Table S13).

"I have relied on my own experience in reaching the conclusion that the imposition of the death penalty 'represents the pointless and needless extinction of life with only marginal contributions to any discernible social or public purposes.' " Still, he felt bound by the precedents of the Court to uphold lethal injections.

And in a 2008 case upholding the method of lethal injection, Justice John Paul Stevens concurred out of respect for court precedent but characterized capital punishment as "the pointless and needless extinction of life with only marginal contributions to any discernible social or public purposes".

Having voted in 1976 to uphold capital punishment, he now agreed with the late Justice Byron White (in Furman v Georgia, 1972) that its imposition represents "the pointless and needless extinction of life with only marginal contributions to any discernible social or public purposes".

Compared with the results for W = 0.7 μm, it is clear that the incoherent contributions become more discernible for W = 1.5 μm; the minimum value of the SHG intensity becomes non-zero, and it is much larger than for W = 0.7 μm.

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