Example sentences of "assume that [art] [noun] of " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Despite the somewhat aggressive stance suggested by the quotation from Neisser , I assume that a mixture of experimental and naturalistic research is necessary to understand real world problems .
2 The calculations assume that a total of respondents from five hypermarkets is deemed to be adequate , that is 380 .
3 Let us take a loop immersed in a magnetic field as shown in Fig. 4.13(a) and assume that a section of the loop moves a distance dl coming to a position shown in Fig. 4.13(b) after a time dt .
4 Her paper argues for the importance of standpoint to be taken into account in discussion of fundamentals such as epistemology and ontology , but also suggests that feminist political theories which assume that a conception of the subject is already available need to be complemented by more radical feminist theories ( such as those of Daly or Irigaray ) which criticise and take apart the metaphysical implications inherent in philosophical conceptions of the subject .
5 Assume that a duty of care is owed by A to C as a rescue was reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances .
6 In so doing , they assume that the users of dictionaries are linguistically knowledgeable .
7 The current drafting and CAD processes assume that the significance of any entity will be obvious or easily ascertained by anyone wishing to know .
8 In the money supply equation we adopt a policy rule which Barro ( 1976 ) showed would lead to policy ineffectiveness ; that is , we assume that the quantity of money is linked only to the once-lagged value of :
9 If we ignore , momentarily , the " " murie wordes of the Hoost to the Shipman " " at the end of the tale , and assume that the narrator of the tale is a woman — it really does not matter who she is — the narrator then becomes a close parallel to the wife within the tale : a wordsmith ; a user of language who combines the sordid matere of carnal indulgence with a gilded linguistic cover .
10 For simplicity , we assume that the effects of different loci multiply , and we neglect linkage disequilibrium and genetic variation , to derive approximations to the survival probabilities , give the optimal life history in the absence of mutation .
11 Some psycholinguistic models ( e.g. Cole & Jakimik 1980 ) assume that the beginning of a word is known , either because it is at the beginning of the utterance or because the previous word has been identified .
12 Theories of proactive interference ( see , e.g. Spear 1978 ) usually assume that the capacity of the first-formed memory to interfere with that formed second tends to increase as the retention interval is extended .
13 Thus we assume that the forces of demand and supply have free play ; that there is no close combination among dealers on either side , but each acts for himself , and there is much free competition ; that is , buyers generally compete freely with buyers , and sellers compete freely with sellers .
14 We make the assumption ( equation 4 ) that the experimental exothermicity provides a measure of the contribution from base pair stacking and equate ΔH helix with ΔH s ( i.e. , we assume that the exothermicity of hydrogen bond formation in water is small , as supported by hydrogen bond inventories [ 32 ] , and by the relatively small favourable free energies of these bonds relative to exothermicities of base stacking ) , and that ΔG s is mainly enthalpic in origin ( i.e. , ΔG s ≃DH s ) .
15 So we should not be dogmatic , and assume that the kind of life we have on Earth is the only kind that could exist in the entire Universe ; and ‘ living ’ clays may flourish elsewhere , perhaps even on Mars ( as suggested by Professor Hyman Hartman of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ) .
16 It will take us even further if we assume that the dependence of effects on causes is smooth .
17 Now assume that the Bank of England repurchases £5 million of government bonds on the open market .
18 Assume that the Bank of England wishes to raise interest rates .
19 Assume that the population of a particular nation-state is divided into two distinct localities .
20 When I dip my toe in the swimming pool before going in , I assume that the temperature of that part of the water is representative of the temperature of the whole pool .
21 Clearly one can , if one wishes , assume that the exploit of Morgoth of which the Eldar never learnt was the traditional seduction of Adam and Eve by the serpent , while the incoming Édain and Easterlings are all sons of Adam flying from Eden and subject to the curse of Babel .
22 They assume that the parts of society form an integrated whole and thus examine the ways in which the social stratification system is integrated with other parts of society .
23 Second , we assume that the study of strategic vision must take into consideration strategic content as well as the strategic contexts of product , market , issue , process , and organization .
24 We assume that the distribution of income to factors is such that is a declining function and is an increasing function .
25 In effect , these programs assume that the task of extracting edges from the visual image has been completed , and concentrate on converting a set of lines into a 3-D interpretation .
26 It is only because they assume that the entry of black families into their neighbourhood makes it ‘ undesirable ’ , for example , that white residents ‘ act rationally ’ to keep them out and protect the value of their properties .
27 Most discussions of power assume that the pattern of influence is always top down .
28 If we assume that the number of professional programmers , these are people who are competent to use and develop software , is roughly proportional to the number of commercial computers in operation , this means that if the trend continues , in ten years time , there will be a need for roughly a hundred times as many computer programmers than we 've got as present .
29 For this reason , when games theorists talk about the Iterated or Repeated Prisoner 's Dilemma game , they always assume that the end of the game is unpredictable , or known only to the banker .
30 Both assume that the nature of government , indeed the existence of a state at all , depends on the type of resources available to a regime , and the ways in which these resources may be transferred .
  Next page