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Exact(8)
The communion between reviewer and his public is based upon the presumption of certain possible joys of reading, and all our discriminations should curve toward that end.
Commands made by finite individuals are not reliable, because the validity of what they say depends upon the presumption that the persons concerned are free from those defects that render one's words dependable.
These numbers are based upon the presumption that non-countable activity would not increase above present levels and that this activity would be shared among a greater number of radiologists.
There is a particular potential issue for catalyst samples containing heavy metals, which may present (relatively) wetting surfaces to mercury, when the standard analysis is based upon the presumption of consistent non-wetting behaviour.
At the very least, these preliminary diagnoses should be suggested as "pox-like" (e.g., [15]), but in no case should further analyses be based upon the presumption of true pox infections without confirmation.
This advice is based upon the presumption that lack of conception despite evidence of ovulation may be due to anti-estrogenic effects of CC on the endometrium.
Similar(52)
A forcible strip search upon arrest inverts the presumption of innocence into the presumption of guilt.
"We find this to be an absolutely bizarre bill because the presumption upon which it is based is flawed," said Dr. John Gearhart, director of the stem-cell program at Johns Hopkins University.
This rhetorical victory recalls the successful defense in the George Zimmerman trial, which relied upon the tacit presumption that the right to self-defense was afforded to only one party that night — coincidentally, the non-black one.
The House climate bill has that provision, but President Obama spoke out against the carbon tariff upon passage, I believe under the presumption the "free -trade loving Senate would never go free -trade
So much for the accuracy and impartiality of the authors of The Times' Editors' Note, who appear either to have developed a severe case of institutional amnesia, or decided to confer the presumption of innocence upon cellphone radiation, as the newspaper did upon asbestos for an entire decade after the mineral had been shown to be the most important industrial carcinogen in the world.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com