Sentences with phrase «defined by the consumption»

For women, good fertility and hormonal balanceare defined by the consumption of foods rich in omega - 3 fatty acids, vitamin Е, iodine, choline, and vitamin С.
Our economy is defined by consumption.

Not exact matches

The first step for multinationals is to define the market by measuring current total consumption, examining product alternatives that satisfy similar needs, and studying potential spending likely to be unlocked once incomes grow.
To make sure data from the countries were comparable, the CREDES measured consumption in defined daily doses (DDDs), the amount of a drug that would be needed by a person weighing 75 kilograms.
«The annual potential of CO2 consumption is defined by the grain size and the weathering rate of the rocks used,» says Thorben Amann from Universität Hamburg's Institute for Geology, Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability (CEN), he is also lead - author of the study.
by Emily Flynn Placenta Consumption by Sarah Clark Mommy Brain by Estelle J. Graham Boyd Eight Reasons Not to Swaddle Your Newborn Infant by Wendy Priesnitz Diaper Free by Yulia Belov Define Blue: For Some, Love Takes Time by Ann Lloyd
«Herein, we examined if, relative to a grain - based mouse diet (chow), compositionally defined diet consumption would impact development of intestinal inflammation induced by dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) and moreover, whether DSS - induced colitis might also be attenuated by diets supplemented with inulin.
* Under conditions defined by EU law, the Worldwide Harmonised Light Vehicle Test Procedure (WLTP) laboratory test is used to measure fuel consumption and CO2 emissions from passenger cars, as well as their pollutant emissions.
Bentley's new turbocharged V8 was installed to achieve a clearly defined objective: reduce fuel consumption, and therefore CO2 emissions, by 40 percent compared with the company's familiar 537 - hp W12.
We're defining webcomics as any comics published online for free consumption by the general public that doesn't require a subscription service.
Chicken meal is the rendered (cooking to remove water and fat from fresh meats) dried meal from flesh, skin and parts such as bruised legs, thighs, breasts and whole deboned carcases of chickens, all of these different ingredients are defined by FDA and AAFCO as, «not for human consumption».
In many cases, by - product meals are derived from «4 - D» meat sources — defined as food animals that have been rejected for human consumption because they were presented to the meat packing plant as «Dead, Dying, Diseased or Disabled.»
In many cases, by - product meals are derived from «4 - D» meat sources [citation needed] â $» defined as food animals that have been rejected for human consumption because they were presented to the meat packing plant as «Dead, Dying, Diseased or Disabled.»
By - products are generally defined as animal parts that are not used for human consumption, such as bones, organs, blood, fatty tissue and intestines.
In 2005, the artist opened lesser new york in her Williamsburg loft, which was a response to Greater New York (2005) but it was lesser; it was a greater response to the lesser limits of the art world that she saw reflected in PS1's concurrent survey; this lesser exhibit / installation was organized under the auspices of a «fia backström production,» a lesser production of curated ephemera such as press releases, invites, posters, and so on culled from found materials and the work of a greater local network of friends and peers; the lesser aesthetics of dejecta, pasted directly onto the walls, reflects a greater decorative pattern, not unlike Rorschach images of a lesser art industry itself within a critique of a greater institutional relationship to art production; as such, the lesser display of curated ephemera (from nonartists and artists alike) not only comments on the greater vortex of art and capital, but also serves as a lesser gesture toward something like a memorial wall, not unlike a collection of posters on the greater Berlin Wall, or a lesser improvisational 9 - 11 wall, or, more recently, a greater Facebook wall, or the lesser construction wall surrounding the Second Avenue gas explosion in the East Village, all pointing to a lesser memorial for the greater commodified institution of art consumption; whereas in Backström's lesser new york each move repels consumption by both the lesser value of the pasted paper and its repetition, which dispels the greater value of precious originals; so the act of reinstalling lesser new yorkten years later at Greater New York — the very institution that rejected her a decade earlier — speaks to the nefarious long arm of Capitalism that can morph into an owner of its own critique; so that lesser new york is greater than its initial critique, greater than a work of institutional critique: it is a continuous institutional relationship, a lesser critique that keeps on giving in its new contexts; the collective spirit of artists working together playfully is lesser, whereas the critique of how artists can imagine working alongside the institution is greater, or vice versa; the lesser gesture of a curated mixed - media installation in one's home with no clear identification and no commercial validity becomes untethered when it is greater, and this particular lesser becomes greater in the Greater New York (2015) context; still, the instabilities of the organizing systems by Backström continue to put pressure on both the defining features of art production in both the lesser context and the decade - later greater one; further, the greater question of what constitutes an art as a lesser art becomes a dizzying conundrum when the greater art institution frames the lesser to be greater, when the lesser is invested in its lesser relationship to the greater.
Created in an era when TV ads were largely oriented towards housewives, the installation uses the language of implicit and explicit exploitation as a means for forcing its viewers to confront the confining grasp of the heteronormative American Dream, a Dream powered and defined by an industry of commodification and consumption (whether of Arm & Hammer baking powder or the naked female body).
Small - scale solar PV installations, defined by EIA as having capacity of less than 1 megawatt (MW), are usually located at the customer's site of electricity consumption.
• As a result, if we define net energy consumption as the product of gross energy consumption times an efficiency factor taking into account the efficiency of the energy sources used by households, we may observe an inverted - U relationship between gross energy consumption and income, even though net energy consumption may be monotonically increasing in income.
Many in solar and other renewable energy industries are looking ahead to a future defined by self - consumption of on - site generated power and energy storage.
Average vehicle fuel consumption: A ratio estimate defined as total gallons of fuel consumed by all vehicles divided by (1) the total number of vehicles (for average fuel consumption per vehicle) or (2) the total number of households (for average fuel consumption per household).
Responsibility, by which we mean contribution to the climate problem, is similarly defined as cumulative emissions (since some agreed starting year) excluding emissions that correspond to consumption below the development threshold.
Often this sense of freedom is defined by many throughout the developed and developing world as a choice of a variety of consumer goods for immediate or near - term consumption.
A. On May 4, 2007 the American Institute of Architects (AIA), the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air - Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), Architecture 2030, the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA), and the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), supported by representatives of the U.S. Department of Energy, agreed to define the baseline starting point for their common target goals as the national average / median energy consumption of existing U.S. commercial buildings as reported by the 2003 Commercial Building Energy Consumption Survconsumption of existing U.S. commercial buildings as reported by the 2003 Commercial Building Energy Consumption SurvConsumption Survey (CBECS).
As a result, TMD and Idemitsu succeeded in achieving the world's highest level of performance for an organic EL display screen of 2.2 - inch QVGA (240x320) format suitable for mobile equipment applications, with power consumption of 100 mW (based on typical movie screen images, defined by 30 % brightness of a full - white screen) and luminosity half - life of 60K hours (based on a full - white screen at 200 cd / m2).
This may sound like an overreach, but consider that Agenda 21 defines what we Americans know as the «single family residence» - which is to say, the middle class suburb with tract homes, soccer moms driving mini-vans, and consumption of energy restricted only by the wallets of the homeowners themselves - as most definitely «unsustainable.»
The global conservation movement is little more than a century old and, throughout its life, has displayed a consistent and defining characteristic: a brave and worthy but often futile struggle against the forces of growing human consumption, typified by persistent and widespread declines in species» populations, habitats, and natural resources, and the rising specter of climate change.
In his new book, Levi offers an intricate portrayal of the rapidly evolving American energy landscape — one defined by surging oil and gas production, a thriving renewable energy industry, and falling oil consumption — and illuminates the consequences of these changes for the economy, national security, and the environment.
Hazardous alcohol consumption was defined as AUDIT - C score ≥ 3.29 Information on IPV during the year preceding pregnancy recognition was collected using the violence against women (VAW) tool developed by the WHO.30
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