Dictionary
were divergence
noun
The degree to which two or more things diverge.
Exact(2)
Indeed, Argentina's comparative economic performance (see Fig. 1 in Glaeser, Di Tella and Llach of this volume) reveals two periods were divergence appears to be present: the period leading to the crisis of the 1930s, when the series appears to begin to fall (with some exceptions), and the 1970s, another period of heavy political instability, when the decline appears to accelerate.
O'Leary et al. [ 8] recognize that 'Ghost lineage estimates are minimum divergence dates and may underestimate the timing of actual splits', but they subsequently abandoned this premise and accepted their fossil-based minimum-age constraints as though they were divergence times in inferring the biogeography and palaeoenvironment of a Palaeogene placental ancestor.
Similar(57)
To quote Lant Pritchett, it's divergence, big time.
Economically, the comparisons are trickier, but here too there is divergence.
When there is divergence between your policy and the people's beliefs and interests, you will have this vacuum that creates disturbance".
But as Ms. Herrera and Ms. Gardini illustrate, there's divergence about what looks right now, especially among women in their 20's and 30's.
Since u is divergence free, I 12 becomes zero.
In particular it is divergence free and foliation independent.
The typologies cited clearly show that there is divergence regarding the different types of incubator.
Standard growth theory models would predict that there could be divergence favouring the resource rich.
There is divergence with their coalition partners over allowing Ofsted to inspect academy chains.
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