Sentence examples for which we understand as from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

The second component we identify is risk communication, which we understand as the processes of communicating the risks associated with a pandemic outbreak, primarily to relevant and potentially affected publics.

It is difficult to strike a balance between elective CS, which we understand as a procedure that occurred before labor, and vaginal delivery in the absence of randomized controlled trials [ 2].

Therefore, Liimakka [ 76, 81] suggests that young women need to develop 'bodily empowerment' and 'embodied agency', which we understand as a power to act, grounded in embodied trust and acceptance of self – and this is in line with our conclusions in the present study.

Similar(57)

We were not able to achieve equal magnitude of the amplification and deamplification of a signal, which we understood as most likely being the result of too weak coupling of the input and output ports.

The deal, which we understand could be announced as soon as next week, will value Go-Jek's business at around $9.5 billion, one source told TechCrunch.

A visual with which we understand Sharon's modern struggles as more than just personal choice.

We thus used G-tests of independence and conducted post-hoc P-value corrections for multiple comparisons as necessary, which we understand to be the most appropriate choice of tests for our unreplicated data and our question.

After the optimised sampling process previously described, a sample of three articles was configured per decade, which we understood to act as an exploratory sample.

He did that in some mysterious way, that we cannot explain, which triggered the events we understand as the "big bang", setting the laws of physics as we know them.

The internal consistency was very high and the items appeared to describe a uni-dimensional construct which we would understand as providing a dimension of dental anxiety ranging from low to high.

Another argument on behalf of impossible worlds, quite pervasive in the literature (e.g. Beall & van Fraassen 2003, Chapter 4; Nolan 1997; Restall 1997; Brogaard & Salerno 2013), comes from counterpossible reasoning, which we can here understand as particular counterfactual reasoning from conditional antecedents which are not only false, but impossible.

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