Sentence examples for explicitly existed from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The problem, experts say, is that even in countries where these legal loopholes have been abolished, or never explicitly existed in the first place, the practice of allowing rapists to avoid jail time by marrying their victims is still prevalent.

Similar(59)

Not all these twins are conventional of Type 1 or Type 2. Indeed, our aim is to underline a peculiarity of the cubic-to-monoclinic transitions: if the lattice parameters of the monoclinic phase satisfy certain relations that we give explicitly, there exist many more twins than in the generic case.

Yet this can also be a set of rules for discussions among the participants, so that the content of these rules implies the existence of a collective agent without claiming that it exists explicitly.

The Fourth Amendment states that warrants issued must be specific to a person, place or task and this provision of the Bill of Rights exists explicitly to guard against the notion of a general warrant, where government can plunder through anyone's privacy at will.

First, the ion mass exists explicitly only in the Lorentz force (Eq. (1)) in the charge/mass ratio, q i /m i.

This class does not exist explicitly in the current HC DBMS model, however the information is maintained by the HC itself.

The ion charge, instead, exists explicitly in the equations of the hybrid model in two places, in (1) Newton's second law (Eq. (1)) and (2) the electron bulk velocity (Eq. (3b)).

Furthermore, the uncertainties that exist explicitly in the target observation and implicitly in the model formulation are rarely considered in inverse modelling.

To our knowledge this link only exists explicitly for time-invariant drift rates within individual trials, in which case there are analytic expressions for mean reaction time and choice probability.

For any pair of words (y', z') not explicitly considered, there exists another pair (y, z), formed by representatives, hence such that y' is a prefix of y, and z' is a prefix of z, and the two pairs have the same number of co-occurrences as shown in Figure 6.

Although entries on alienation did not appear in major social science reference books until the 1930s, the concept had existed implicitly or explicitly in classical sociological works of the 19th and early 20th centuries written by Karl Marx, Émile Durkheim, Ferdinand Tönnies, Max Weber, and Georg Simmel.

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