Sentence examples for term that captures from inspiring English sources

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This year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released figures showing 1 in 68 children in the United States have Autism Spectrum Disorder, a term that captures the wide range of ways autism affects children.

The artist refers to this synthesis of Central Asian and European traditions as "romantic punk shamanism," a term that captures both the rebellious qualities of the work (the use of nudity in a Muslim nation) and the celebration of nature and imagination.

Using the same specification as in Table 2 column 3, we add controls for these characteristics and an interaction term that captures the differential effect for Australia.

where ϕ0j t and ϕ1j t are the parameters of the campus-specific production function in (3) and where ζ it is an error term that captures unobserved (to the econometrician) student preferences and characteristics.

However, for the purpose of this paper, CSR is conceived as an umbrella term that captures the variety of ways in which business relationships with society are being defined, managed, and practiced (Frynas & Yamahaki, 2016).

By focusing on the actual bodies and how those bodies travel across the DMZ, Kim explicates what she calls "social performance," a term that captures "the individual agency of the crosser by considering the dynamic network of motion, emotion, and visual representation, and spectatorship of border crossing" (12).

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Robert Lovett, a Republican, was an executive with the investment bank Brown Brothers Harriman, then served as a deputy to General George Marshall and as Harry Truman's Secretary of Defense, and helped create NATO and the C.I.A. Lovett was one of the so-called foreign-policy Wise Men, a term that captured how benignly Wall Street-Washington traffic was viewed in that era.

Is it our destiny to be so?" The questions posed by Mr. Ghannouchi have shaped successive generations of Islamists, a term that never captures their diversity.

The novel codes the relation between finitude and value through the notion of beauty (a term that also captures the novel's own tender and precious tone; it studiously avoids the customary scales and disorientations of the sublime or the traumatic).

The maximum quantity of free energy that microorganisms can catabolize (ΔrG) is given by the Gibbs energy at a reference state (ΔrG° = -RTlnKr) representing the intensive parameters (P, T) and an extensive term (RTlnQ) that captures the compositions of the vent solutions (equation 1): Δ r G = - RTln ( K r ) + RTln ( Q r ).

It's only slightly more specific than saying "purple," but it's still a broad term that could capture any number of hues.

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