Sentence examples for term for whether from inspiring English sources

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To obtain the results in Figure 7B, we then regressed each population's firing rates against a model that contained a constant term, a term for whether the model chose A on each trial, the difference in value between option A and B (= µA-µB /80), and the value of chosen option (= µA-µB /8'chose andtheals, µB/80 on 'chose B' trials).

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They also bear resemblance to "credence goods," an economic term for something — whether a jar of vitamins or an auto tuneup — whose true value can never quite be determined.

Lumber, Collective term for harvested wood, whether cut into logs, heavy timbers, or members used in light-frame construction.

Hence the ban.A vicious circle of price rises, stockpiling and export bans does not make sense in the medium term for any commodity, whether cotton, onions or iron ore.

Last week the President's Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighbourhood Partnerships (FBNP) delivered some recommendations on how to combat "modern-day slavery"—which has become a catch-all term for sex-trafficking (whether or not it involves moving people) and all forms of bonded or indentured labour.

The control variables include gender, immigrant status, a linear variable for education and age, a quadratic term for age and whether individual i lives in a single household, has child custody, has more than one employer, is currently studying, is a director, holds a permanent position or works shift work.

Professor Ward, who also serves as the caretaker of what he calls the world's largest lesbian-gay-transsexual bibliography on language, said: "What I have heard among lesbian, gay and transsexual partners is the use of the sex-appropriate term for their spouse, meaning, whether the person speaking is a man or a woman, they will refer to their female spouse as their wife.

Very different contextual 1-intensions will be generated for your term 'I', for instance, depending on whether we require that the target utterance of 'I' be spelled a certain way in every context or if we instead require that it be understood a certain way by the agent of the context.

Either way, keeping one's own company, having time to hear clearly the internal monologue – forget Virginia Woolf; it's just a posh term for thinking about food, or whether it's time for a nap – is a far from unhealthy state.

By contrast, the Barbican's show starts from the potentially subversive position that we should see Charles-Edouard Jeanneret, aka Le Corbusier, less as an architect than as a plasticien – a broad French term for anyone who makes things, whether they are watercolours or cathedrals.

For the clearest example the Mohists give of it is not knowledge of an a priori proposition, but knowledge obtained by analogical inference from information provided by an informant (B70).[13] So "knowledge by explanation" seems a catch-all term for knowledge obtained by inference, whether deductive, inductive, abductive, or analogical.

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