Sentence examples for perceived to each from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

We also asked researchers and others via online surveys and blog posts which they would prefer, and what barriers they perceived to each version of the tool.

Similar(59)

As for Experiment 1, we conducted a pretest of these items to determine whether the abstract and concrete versions of each behavior were perceived to correspond to each other as intended.

Here, our premise is that critical information might arise from examining how a range of specific situations are perceived to affect each of a range of specific personality tendencies.

I watched from a distance in St .Mary's Episcopal Church while my two estranged friends, not unlike the angels of the Qur'an, humbly set aside any grounds for self-righteous indignation, real or perceived, to "bow" to each other out of recognition that they were each a beloved friend of Phyllis.

Some items were perceived to be similar to each other, and some items contributed their respective scores to more than one user-need domain, problematic due to the inflation of inter-domain correlations that results.

The number of false "same" judgments given to stimulus pairs that differed in the identity of a single consonant or vowel was used as a metric of perceptual distance, on the assumption that pairs of stimuli perceived to be more similar to each other should have a higher incidence of erroneous "same" judgments.

Correlations of journal quality assessments might be interpreted as demonstrating how the traditional German journals, on the one hand, and the US mainstream journals, on the other hand, are each perceived to offer a discourse of a rather uniform type of quality, while EAR, AOS and CPA are too diverse to fall into one of these two discourses.

Stewart pushes people's buttons, Didion writes, because, all too often, ambition and domesticity are perceived to be at odds with each other.

As a result, individual actors can be pinpointed on a movie screen, so the voice of each is perceived to emanate from an exact position, while the voices of other actors can give the impression of being in the middle of the audience.

Li and Thompson (1979) use the phrase "conjoinable" to refer to the same basic idea that certain clauses or sentences may be perceived to be tightly connected with each other and form a single unit of discourse for the purposes of anaphoric reference.

Sharing what he perceived to be "key" moments in each of the seventeen music videos, Walker of MTV identified one for "Haunted" where Beyoncé "begins to crack under the pressures of her iconic status".

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