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"The most comprehensive example of the Japanese aesthetic of wabi-sabi is found within the traditions of the tea ceremony," Ms. Walkup wrote.
The Tufts initiative is the most comprehensive example of the efforts being made by hundreds of universities across the nation to re-emphasize public service as a core tenet of the curriculum.
The unified power flow controller (UPFC) is the most comprehensive example of a FACTS device at present [20].
Though the exact seed is hard to pinpoint, Horse Girl Energy has been posited by US tweeters as a sort of gentle companion to Big Dick Energy, the concept first proposed by Twitter user Kyrell Grant (@imbobswaget) in relation to the late Anthony Bourdain (Bourdain, along with Christine Baranski and Rihanna, remains its best and most comprehensive example).
Yet, the three CCoAOMT genes represent our most comprehensive example of differential gene regulation for duplicated genes (the phylogeny of the family is given in Figure 8).
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Even the most comprehensive database lacks, for example, something that every human on earth takes for granted: a story.
Even the most comprehensive guide to Hamburg, for example, would not necessarily have led you to the English-subtitled screening of the film "Oldboys" there last week.
For example, the most comprehensive studies began by mapping raw data, further explored the data using one or more cluster detection methods and then applied one or more spatial regression methods to understand the relationship with predictor variables (Dai et al. 2013; Shenoi et al. 2015).
For example, the most comprehensive meta-analysis to date suggests that most of the forms of childhood adversity that have been studied (such as emotional, physical and sexual abuse; neglect; loss of a parent) are associated with around a two- to threefold increased risk of psychosis (broadly defined).
For example, the most comprehensive U.S.-based multicity study of elderly hospital admissions (Bell et al. 2008) found the largest risk estimates for PM mass with aerodynamic diameter ≤ 2.5 μm (PM2.5; collected with a size-selective inlet with 50% cut-point of 2.5 μm aerodynamic diameter) for both cardiovascular and respiratory hospitalizations in northeastern cities and during the winter season.
While Riker (1982) offers a number of intriguing examples, the most comprehensive analysis of the empirical evidence for majority cycles is provided by Mackie (2003, especially Chapters 14 and 15).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com