Sentences with phrase «usual criteria»

And the state is legitimized when the other states recognize it (I know that this is not the usual criterion of legitimacy, but it is the only real one!).
Persons best described by Stage 6 typically exhibit qualities that shake our usual criteria of normalcy.
Judd Marmor and others have used both clinical and other data to show that male homosexuals as a group are no less mentally healthy, by the usual criteria, than heterosexuals — except insofar as blanket discriminatory social attitudes render them so.
He went into hospice for kidney failure, expecting to be dead within six months — the usual criterion for hospice and to qualify for assisted suicide where it is legal.
Each of these statements presupposes a particular set of environmental conditions in order to hold; and when the notion of environment is made explicit, the usual criteria do not suffice to distinguish between them.
These farms were not being certified by RA under their usual criteria.
We already had the usual criteria before starting a family, like solid careers, a large enough home, a big yard, and financial stability.
With the abandonment of the usual criteria for authorship, and given the importance of publications, it might be supposed that high - energy physics has evolved strict new rules for deciding on authors.
Everyone has good and bad qualities, you might know instantly that the date is not for you in a romantic sense or you might find that although they don't meet your usual criteria in the looks department, that as regards personality, they are intriguing and yes, attractive.
An example of an existing EEF project that met our usual criteria is Thinking, Doing, Talking Science, which had previously been evaluated in 16 primary schools through a match study.
Papers are selected on the basis of discipline, novelty, and general significance, in addition to the usual criteria for publication in specialized journals.
An uplift can be applied for in accordance with the usual criteria, ie exceptional competence, skill, expertise, despatch, exceptional complexity etc, but only in respect of offences in class A, B, C, D, G, I, J or K.
A domain name may be protected by registering it as a trade mark, provided it satisfies the usual criteria for registration under the Trade Marks Act 1994 (TMA 1994), which to a great extent also mirrors the registerability provisions of the Trade Mark Regulation 40 / 94 / EC and the Trade Mark Directive 89 / 104 / EEC.
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