Sentences with phrase «early maturity»

Dry soil encourages the production of the plant hormone abscisic acid in vine roots, which is correlated with earlier maturity of wine grapes.
«Youths would also be attracted to farming since this partnership would provide the necessary seeds with early maturity.
If this reflects overall population size, lower population densities in the North Pacific may indicate less intraspecific competition, faster growth, and perhaps earlier maturity.
«I shift the lens and landscape as I explore the 25 - year developmental sweep from the ages of 15 to 35 and focus on the lessons that parents learn from their «almost - grown» progeny — those progeny of early maturity who are still figuring out the calculus between distance and intimacy, still negotiating the balance between separation and closeness to their parents.
However, typical Canadian mortgages seem to mature in ten years at a fixed rate, so i can not be held constant, and the relationship between r and p is less strong at earlier maturities, thus the most likely way for prices to collapse is for a financial collapse as described above.
Such early maturity will likely affect her peer relationships, because early maturing girls are more likely to date and spend time with older males than are girls who mature on time (Magnusson, Stattin, & Allen, 1985).
Young Stalin superbly achieves the author's intention: to show the development and early maturity of the ultimate politician.
His research lead to the pedigreed Pekin duck, bred for better disease resistance, early maturity, feed conversion, weight and meat.
A new study in Nature Climate Change finds that warming and declines in soil moisture, but also vine management practices to lower yields to produce better - quality grapes, brought the fruit to early maturity.
Wine growers in Australia have long observed that changes in the climate bring their grapes to early maturity — leading to changes in the balance of flavors and aromas that could bring down the value of wine.
Juno is very matter - of - fact about the situation, and perhaps her early maturity causes everyone else to consider that she knows what she's doing deep down, even if they don't actually agree with her means or her methods.
The intellectual foment of 19th century New England arguably represents the earliest maturity of American thought, a spiritual founding to echo the political founding a half century earlier.
«CDs from the assumed bank are separately insured until the earliest maturity date after the end of the six - month grace period.
When there is a chance you will need the money early, buy the product with that earlier maturity.
Any earlier maturity dates will require you to purchase a new CD every three to six months to keep your ladder in place.
[But this works both ways — the table above predicts no maturities for the next year & a half, and three months later we've already had 4 early maturities!
They still rely on a flattened cubist spatial structure but on a much larger scale and with light flooding the canvases and brush marks recalling American art of the heroic post-war days; recalling, in fact, his own heroic days, for despite an increasingly sure technique, these later works are quieter, blander even, than the assertive and clamorous combines of his early maturity.
The following summer he joined the older artists in their camp at Box Hill, and under the influence of his new friends his art blossomed into an early maturity.
Early maturity claims: - Backdating reduces the tenure of a policy and facilitates early maturity.
the early maturity policies or later maturity policies
In this way, the behaviors of peers in response to the girl's early maturity could be said to mediate associations between pubertal timing and sexual outcomes (Baron & Kenny, 1986; Holmbeck, 1997, 2002).
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