Sentences with phrase «fair approximation of»

When those factors are accounted for (not perfectly, but a fair approximation of them), lo and behold!
Think of those root - beer - flavored barrel - shaped candies you had as a kid, and you'll have a pretty fair approximation of the tested vehicle's color.
Portugal's bumpy and at times poorly surfaced B and C - roads are a fair approximation of many of ours and the standout feature was the quality of the NSX's ride.
But adventure specialist Daedalic sculpts a fair approximation of the medieval epic in this first episode of three.
This is a fair approximation of how dark it will be.
It gives fair approximations of the temperatures of Venus, Earth and Mars (691 K, 288 K and 221 K versus the observed 735 K, 288 K, 214 K), and is a little oversensitive to CO2 and H2O changes (3.4 K increase on Earth with doubled CO2 and 10.2 K increase with doubled CO2 and H2O feedback — way too high compared to GCM results).

Not exact matches

«We just want to use an approximation of what their judgment was last year, and I thought that was a fair way to get to the number.»
For one thing, they've already been there; the movie can not be more than a zealous approximation of Rowling's achievement, a fair copy of a rapturous literary experience.
Under an alternative method, the fair - value approach, estimates are based on market values — market prices when they are available, or approximations of market prices when they are not — which better account for the risk that the government takes on.
The model where countries rule over others to get «a piece of the action» is a fair approximation economically of how countries act.
Though deliberately obnoxious, there is actually a fair amount of satisfaction to be had in thwarting Calendula's multitude of ways to prevent you from playing it, since rather than being true bugs and defects, they are merely approximations of such and thus require ample amounts of meta - guile in order to be conquered.
Since Russia is a pretty fair chunk of the land north of 30 degrees north, the CRU graph above is a rough approximation of the what the CRUTEM3 trends for Russia is, and you can see that it looks like the blue curve and not the red one.
I think Pratt's Law is a «fair» approximation if one wants to resume the three different periods of different growth in one simple formula.
Given that, if one wants freedom of choice and an efficient market, shouldn't one accept a market solution (tax / credit or analogous system based on public costs, applied strategically to minimize paperwork (don't tax residential utility bills — apply upstream instead), applied approximately fairly to both be fair and encourage an efficient market response (don't ignore any significant category, put all sources of the same emission on equal footing; if cap / trade, allow some exchange between CO2 and CH4, etc, based CO2 (eq); include ocean acidification, etc.), allowing some approximation to that standard so as to not get very high costs in dealing with small details and also to address the biggest, most - well understood effects and sources first (put off dealing with the costs and benifits of sulphate aerosols, etc, until later if necessary — but get at high - latitude black carbon right away)?
For the root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA), values above 0.08 indicate a poor fit of the model, values between 0.08 and 0.06 a fair fit, and values below 0.06 an excellent fit.
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