Sentence examples for objects in common from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

The store is in fact an extension of that house, and the two will contain many design objects in common, including vintage Marimekko quilts, rugs by Dosa, wallpapers by the Finnish ceramicist Birger Kaipiainen and Iittala tableware.

As the MoMA design curator Edgar Kaufmann Jr. wrote in 1946, "Very few machine-made objects in common use are entirely exempt from direct human forming during their production.

They started with computer vision research and applied to document authoring tools to create WYPIWYG  (What You Perceive is What You Get) to interpret salient objects in common with what the user perceives, which allows tap-selection of meaningful objects in the scene.

Similar(57)

You can make at home spare parts of any object in common use and in a basically equipped laboratory also blenders and other machines.

Two ideas A and B are compatible if they have (represent) at least one object in common, i.e., if at least one object falls under both A and B. In the case in which not only some but all objects represented by A are also represented by B, A is included in B. If this relation is reciprocal, i.e., if A is included in B and B included in A, the ideas A and B are equivalent (coextensive).

Anne Secord, a historian of 19th century popular science, quotes an attendee of the society, Thomas Heywood, who describes it as being "without any regular place of meeting, without funds, without books and without rules; a sort of members, but no body, having only one object in common – their love of plants".

Asked why the hulking, rugged Bentleys, which were famously derided as trucks by Ettore Bugatti, appealed to Mr. Daniels, Mr Minoff said the watchmaker perceived qualities the two objects had in common.

The technique encapsulates the particle data, ancillary data, and metadata into abstract objects in a common framework to handle heterogeneous data sources.

The latter is better suited for applications in which there is some degree of interaction among objects, as it allows for the controlling of the relations among objects in a common dynamic model (those are much more complicated to handle through individual PF [29]).

The decrease in exploration at the sub-adult stage is likely to reflect an increase in neophobia, which is supported by a previous study on food and object exploration in common ravens (Heinrich 1995).

The idea is that there is an expansion of rights: we each own our labor and when that labor is mixed with objects in the commons, our rights are expanded to include these goods.

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