Art historians refer to this post-1970 era as «postmodernism», although few commentators seem to know
the precise meaning of the term.
If you decide that you would like to accept an offer, be sure you know
the precise meaning of each term in the written offer before you sign the document.
Not exact matches
Finally, I'm uncomfortable with your use
of the
term «chaos theory», but that's because it has a
precise mathematical
meaning in my household.
Like those religious fellowships
of Liberia and Sierra Leone, the north Georgia congregations conveyed their culture (later he used the more
precise term «subculture») by
means of distinct idioms, symbolic dialects constructed both to express and to maintain group identity.
Androgynous and gynandrous have
precise meanings with neither
term being the obverse
of the other.
So maybe if we want to communicate the message
of Jesus we have to get away from archaic
terms like gospel which have become traditional» buzz words «or theological jargon devoid
of precise meaning and make anew the original intent which was about an announcement
of the coming
of God's Kingdom and all that that implies.
Yet it remains a misleading phrase to those who, lacking a technically
precise knowledge
of Whitehead's vocabulary, understand the
term «mental pole» by analogy to the ordinary
meaning of «mental.»
The
precise meaning of the Kingdom is still being investigated by biblical scholars, but we can confidently say that its significance is at least partially grasped in
terms of two other prominent biblical themes: justice and liberation.
The Foresight Institute is still focused on the original
meaning of the
term: atomically -
precise manufacturing or «molecular manufacturing».
Some
terms have more
precise meanings for a given version
of EPUB.
Juicy Excerpt # 5: Because the
precise timing
of this
mean reversion is not known in advance, and is indeed random, expecting the result to happen in the short -
term will not be possible.
There is no
precise definition
of the
term «Modern Art»: it remains an elastic
term, which can accomodate a variety
of meanings.
A couple
of the
terms you mention have
precise meanings within physical science (limit, prediction) and this is likely to be true
of many words about the future — therefore the cause is the embedding
of a scientific argument within a broader political one.
James McWilliams — eminent climate scientist that he is — is entirely in the realm
of dense (in
terms of meaning) and
precise language.
Allen and Annan seem to think it is a very
precise term that can only
mean > 50 %, but if you asked a bunch
of people or check a number
of definitions, I think you will see it is indeed ambiguous and imprecise.
Instead, you're using the world the way someone might use «Christian» or «evangelical» — that is, in a fundamentalist way that signifies the
precise opposite
of what the
term actually
means.
Although it might be possible to rewrite the first sentence using the synonym «attraction», this alternative fails to capture the
precise meaning conveyed by the original sentence, given how the
term is used in this area
of biomedical research.