... dissent and opposition came. To the others in the fossil fields, how-
ever, the evidence that there had been these die-offs in the past seemed
o
verwhelming. But what were the causes of these events? ... the distant happenings at sea and
in the air.
Is there other evidence of what happened? It turns out that the
amount of
dust reaching the deep sea confirms suspicions that the
world at the ... the iconic constituents of the
Cretaceous period: There were none of the giant flat clams named
Inoceramus, perhaps the most common animal fossil of the entire Cre-
taceous; gone too were the...
... and the Chan-
nel Islands (part of the British Isles). The RPSGB accredits
MPharm degree courses in Great Britain as well as North-
ern Ireland, but registration with either the RPSGB or the
Pharmaceutical ... on
European sources than other health care professions.
Furthermore, this study has identified gaps in knowledge
about internationally trained pharmacists, not least our
lack of understanding aboutthe ... Britain, as they are the ones most
likely to be available to the pharmacy labour market in
Great Britain.
When looking back over the five preceding years, 2007
was the first year since 2002 when the...
... microsatellite separately (figures 3A
to 3D). The Devinas population was tested and was found to
be of Corsican origin by using the three microsatellites
pooled or by using either the FRPP91 or the ... at the three locus for the Corsican and the Aquitaine provenances, and location of the statistics S
D
of Devinas popula
-
tion. B. S distribution at the locus FRPP91 for the Corsican and the ... be achieved by
using only one microsatellite. The FRPP91 locus gave the
highest differentiation between the two provenances and
when the distribution curves were compared, this locus
showed very...
... a bar. The third
one ducked.
The humour in joke (4) results from the polyse-
mous use of the word bar. The first sentence leads
us to believe that bar is a place where one drinks,
but the second ... humour. It uses the notion of scripts
to account for the opposition in jokes. It models
humour as two opposing and overlapping scripts
put together in a discourse, one of which is
apparent and the ... through the flow of the dis-
course. This is discussed in more detail later.
2.1 Lexicons for Discourse modeling
Pustejovsky’s Generative Lexicon (GL) model
(Pustejovksy, 1995) outlines an ambitious...
... Judy.
31, What are the speakers mainly discussing?
32, What is the man doing?
33, Whatdoesthe woman suggest the man do?
34, How did the woman learn about painting?
35, Whatdoesthe woman plan ... allow them to determine the precise elevation. And it turns out
that the famous peak is actually a few feet higher than us previously thought.
40, What is the talk mainly about?
41, Why doesthe ... crazy about art myself, but whatabout Mary? She’s taking an art history course and
seems to be enjoying it.
Q: Whatdoesthe woman suggest the man do?
18, W: You know, if you closed your windows...
... argued the
tobacco industry, their main source of data was patient recall about past smoking habits:
patient recall is obviously known to be faulty. ird, again said the industry, other plausible
causes ... Cigarette
smoking did not cause lung cancer, Fisher argued; because he thought that had to be the
cause, the one and only cause, with no other causes. As noted previously (Chapter 7), part
of Fisher’s ... does not rule
out causation.
6. Plausibility.Itishelpful,writesHill,ifthecausativeinferenceisbiologicallyplausible.
is is a weak criterion, since what is biologically plausible depends on the...
... years; the larger the feature set, the
more numerous the required patches.
ã The less softw
are you have on a given system, the more lik
ely it is to be reliable, all other things being
equal. There ... interfere with each other.
ã Finally, the less software you have, the smaller the "attack surface" and therefore the less likely you are
to be bothered with viruses and malware.
Considering ... activation (use the phone, a KMS server, or the command "slmgr.vbs -ato")
ã Change the password (ctrl-alt-del)
ã Join a domain (using NETDOM)
ã Rename the computer (again, using NETDOM)
ã...
... says
and what you think your prospect is saying. There are the "facts," or " ;the words," and
then there are the stories, the things we make up aboutwhat we think our prospect ... prospect is
really saying. Frequently, the two have nothing in common!
Learning to hear what your prospect is actually saying versus what you make up they are
saying will result in hearing ... recently about changing the
way that you think. Many times, what we think is a "no" is really something that we are
making up! It is important to differentiate between the actual words your...