Sentence examples for employed this way from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

ANOVA, employed this way with respect to time, determines whether differences in average phase over time are significant (α =.01), in comparison to variance of phase within cones at single time points.

Similar(58)

A community, for instance, may conduct its affairs in a certain way while other communities never employ this way or use different ways, irrespective of environment [17].

However, the truth is no one knows how many workers are employed in this way: an updated estimate from the Office of National Statistics indicates that it is 250,000, while a new survey from the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development suggests that we are looking at as many as 1 million people.

British libel laws, which put the burden of proof on the defendant, are already employed in this way by wealthy plaintiffs, critics say; rather than mount expensive defenses, bloggers and others accused of libel often back down and withdraw their allegations.

As long as the U.S. Air Force is employed in this way, the White House can claim that it has all of the legal authority it needs under Article II to defend U.S. national security interests and the safety of American citizens and facilities in the region.

The quantitative method was employed in this way to maximise the potential of the qualitative method [ 30].

But the just war tradition has employed this idea in a way that makes it permissible to kill innocent third parties (i.e., noncombatants) in war, so long as the primary intention is to accomplish a legitimate war aim and so long as the killing of innocents is merely a foreseen but unintended secondary effect.

Although the methods presented here were not fully effective (one subject was consistently recognized under the forced choice study design even at the maximum deformation level employed) this paper may point a way toward solution of a difficult problem that has received little attention in the literature.

To repeat: in the preceding sentence "intended" is used in the broad sense; Aquinas sometimes employs it this way (e.g. ST II-II q. 64 a. 7), though in his official synthesis the word is used in the narrower sense to signify the (further) intention with which the act's object was chosen – object being the most proximate of one's (broad sense) intentions.

We believe that the assay we employ, the way we analyze the data and the way we interpret these data are significantly improved based on the reviewers' suggestions.

It is not of course being suggested that this justifies any useof deception, but rather that itis possible to justify the particular forms of deception employed here in this way.

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