Sentence examples for so generalised from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

The lazy analysis of Mancini is to say that he's over-cautious because he's Italian, a weary stereotyping that's so generalised as to be meaningless.

But it makes her characters very accessible, for the detail is so spare, and often so generalised, that readers can interpret them in their own way.

If these questions seem vague and portentous today – not to mention sexist, of which more below – it is partly because over decades the term itself became so generalised as to be almost invisible.

The answer is thus a binary variable (yes or no, 1 or 0) and so generalised linear regression techniques must be used.

Although such a statement is so generalised as to sometimes be true, frequently perceptions that low-income countries cannot carry out high-class research may lead to more stringent guidelines and safeguards.

So if you we're trying to promote vitamin D you'd have to go against that sort of argument that sunlight is terrible for you Healthy group As I said before, if you say "moderate" something boosts your vitamin D, then that's fine, but if [a recommendation] is so generalised then it ceases to mean anything.

Similar(53)

The obtained theoretical, numerical and experimental results have permitted to detect the relationships between the joint configuration and the singular stress field, as well as to implement a new design method based on the so called generalised stress intensity factors.

The routing of wagons /freight cars either individually or in blocks is subject to a mass of technical, operational and commercial imperatives so a generalised model (Blocking Problem) aimed primarily to reduce costs could readily lose touch with the reality of sustaining a routinely commercially competitive portfolio of service offers.

The results of Levene's test showed that the assumption of homoscedasticity was not valid for the dependent variables, so appropriate generalised models of regressions were used.

Because the evidence base for the economic evaluation of NCDs is so weak, generalised CEA will have an increasingly important role to play in public health decision making, so long as local factors are fully taken into account.

The classic snap-through problem of shallow arches is revisited using the so-called generalised path-following technique.

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