Sentences with phrase «narrow binding on»

Quilt and sham have narrow binding on edges.
Stevens, B., Sherwood, S. C., Bony, S. and Webb, M. J. (2016) «Prospects for narrowing bounds on Earth's equilibrium climate sensitivity», Earth's Future.
Even when updated by fnite Bayesian learning, uncertain structural parameters induce a critical ìtail fatteningî of posterior - predictive distributions, Such fattened tails have strong implications for situations, like climate change, where a catastrophe is theoretically possible because prior knowledge can not place su cents ciently narrow bounds on overall damages.

Not exact matches

Such shocks are probably best absorbed by changes in both prices and activity but if the authorities are bound to a narrow inflation target then virtually all of the shock has to impact on activity.
Having got himself so well launched, Whitehead now goes on to try and distinguish (actually not very well, since he is bound by his own work with Russell in writing Principia Mathematica) between what thought asserts that the world is like, and what sense - awareness shows it to be like, and I think he has far too narrow a notion of thought.
DE: I'd say that the bounding of a particular sense - awareness, when you are making it narrower and wider, will be in terms of some emphasis point — what attention fastens on and what becomes background.
I always love the wide variety of gifts you can purchase on CafePress, my problem is narrowing down the selection, but seriously you're bound to find something you love on CafePress, check out their Father's Day gift selection here: www.cafepress.com and pick out something extra just in case you win this giveaway for $ 25 gift card from CafePress!
The direct election of such leaders is almost bound to make that impossible, particularly where they are elected on the basis of some narrow agenda of their own.
The government suffered a narrow parliamentary defeat last night when Tory rebels joined the opposition to secure parliament a binding vote on the Brexit withdrawal deal.
It's a very rare lab that produces only science of high potential impact and broad relevance; even if you're focused on important problems, you're bound to produce some science that's just as good but of significance to a narrower audience.
Two weeks of continuous calculations on the supercomputer showed that the neuraminidase - binding site has a mostly negative charge (red); it is surrounded by positively charged regions (purple), with a narrow negative - charge pathway for the drug to follow.
If you are like me and prefer your interfacing on the public side of the yoke, you need to either turn under the hem edge of the waistband facing, or you can bind the raw edge with narrow bias binding.
That narrowing refers to a focus solely on academic goals, with the abandonment of civic goals — like fostering ties that bind Americans as «We the People.»
The Confusion of Languages is about collision — across boundaries and between cultures for sure, but it also showcases the clashes that can develop between people bound together by marriage, vocation or circumstance... It is a sharp and brilliant meditation on the steep costs of coloring outside the lines, especially in an environment where conforming to the norm demands the difficult task of walking between two very straight and narrow perimeters.
It's a very unusual book and I thought the writing was excellent, but I think my opinion of it was tainted, strangely enough, by the exuberance of its design: it was printed with purple ink on colored paper and bound in a narrow format.
The IPCC based the lowered bound on one narrow line of evidence: the slowing of surface warming during the past decade — yes, the faux pause.
Those who have brought public opinion to bear on this subject act under a mere moral responsibility — under no oath which binds their movements to the straight and narrow line drawn by the Constitution.
Earlier this year, in Hinton Organics, Lord Justice Carnwath noted obiter that «certain aspects of [the Corner House] principles have proved controversial, particularly the requirement that the claimant should have no private interest in the outcome of the case», as well as suggesting that, although on a strict view Goodson remains binding authority, it is impossible to ignore the criticisms in subsequent cases of its narrow approach.
Concerns have also been raised about the absence of a system of binding precedent, inconsistencies in decision - making, the cost and time involved in investment arbitration, lack of transparency and the very narrow grounds on which arbitral awards can be challenged.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z