Sentences with phrase «words adds to the effect»

A panel of decorative tiles printed with foodie words adds to the effect.

Not exact matches

In other words, we add one of the five risk - free assets to the following base set of eight ETFs and measure effects on the Top 1, equally weighted (EW) Top 2 and EW Top 3 SACEMS portfolios:
not only is the placebo effect very real, you don't have to have any actual change interventional treatment (in other words, you don't need to add a sham treatment / placebo for the effect to be seen)-- just the increased attention and tracking / support by interested parties can improve clinical status
However, and quite surprisingly I should add, you might be interested to know the effect your words have upon a believer in God of forty years, and by the way I wish to thank you for your words in this province, that when I read such terse thoughts they have the distinct effect of deepening, in an extraordinary way, my faith and cause me to love and worship God even more than ever.
The tight wording of the Article 50 bill is intended to stymie any efforts to add in amendments to the effect that parliament should have a full and continuing role in Brexit negotiations.
Scientists are still unsure exactly how this effect works, but one theory is that individuals trying to remember words will repeat the growing list each time a new term is added.
Your molecular clock is ticking faster 22.11.2009 High vitamin D level lengthens life expectancy of elderly Dutch 21.11.2009 Constant fight against appetite reduces life expectancy 09.11.2009 Stress reduces life expectancy at molecular level 07.11.2009 Animal study: melatonin extends lifespan 25.10.2009 Fish fatty acids reduce age - related physical performance decline 24.10.2009 Old muscles weaker, but tire less quickly than young ones 23.10.2009 How creatine lengthens your lifespan 20.10.2009 Melatonin keeps brain cells young 03.10.2009 Long marriage adds years to your life 18.09.2009 Drink three cups of tea a day and add five years to your life 11.09.2009 Life extending bacteria found in gut of Chinese centenarians 08.08.2009 Your initials determine how old you get 30.07.2009 Lecithin anti-aging supplement keeps hearing sharp 18.06.2009 Live ten years longer with just one multivitamin pill per day 06.06.2009 Life - extending effect of virgin olive oil shown in fat rats 22.05.2009 Daily dose of Echinacea lengthens life expectancy 24.04.2009 The less you sit, the older you'll get 21.04.2009 Animal study: nori contains life prolonging substance 06.04.2009 Vegetarianism is healthy, but not because of lack of animal protein 27.03.2009 Meditation lengthens lifespan 20.02.2009 Live longer with healthy fats 30.12.2008 Vitamin D delays aging at genetic level 28.12.2008 Physical exercise delays molecular aging by ten years 25.12.2008 How a low - carb diet helps against aging 23.12.2008 Vitamin D extends your life expectancy 22.12.2008 Too much growth hormone reduces life expectancy 07.11.2008 S - Words extend lifespan of writers and psychologists 11.10.2008 Creatine extends lifespan of mice 08.10.2008 Slim - waisted rats live longer 23.09.2008 Gingko lengthens rats» lifespan 12.09.2008 Strong men live longer 31.08.2008 Male orgasm prolongs life 23.08.2008 Ginkgo prolongs life 17.08.2008 Ginkgo protects the elderly against the first signs of Alzheimer's 16.08.2008
Miscellaneous Math Songs Action Fraction — Hap Palmer Adding and Subtracting Decimals — Jim Thompson Alligator Fractions (Teaching the Relative Values of Fractions)-- Jennifer Fixman Bar Graph Dance — Science Maniacs Check Your Work — Professor Larry Lesser Counting by 1, 2, 5 and 10 — Jennifer Fixman Cause and Effect: If... Then «Cowboy Logic» — It All Adds Up A Fraction is Part of a Whole — Jennifer Fixman Fraction Rock — Joe Crone Fractions (1/2, 1/3 and 1/4)-- Kathleen Wiley The Funky Fractions Rap — Earth Tone Productions Learning the «Greater Than» and «Less Than» Signs — Jennifer Fixman The Metric Song — Kathleen Carroll Multiplying Decimals — Jim Thompson Numbers On My Mind — Ken Whiteley Place Value — Learning Math by Song Prime Numbers — Kathleen Wiley The Prime Numbers Song — Tim Pacific Range Dog (Median, Mode, Mean and Range)-- Jim Thompson Round it Off — Mr. R's Songs That Teach Slip to the Side (Rounding Numbers)-- Joe Crone Smell My Feet (The Time Song)-- Tim Pacific Solving Word Problems — Learning Math by Song Try Again — Ken Whiteley What Place?
In other words, of the possible variation which Curry first suggests, off of the extreme reading that the «could be» one end of the equation = - the one that just happens to have the maximum plausible natural variability that the IPCC could even reasonably conceive, in Curry's estimation, be exactly what the natural variability here in fact IS, but then from there goes extreme again, and concludes that within her own plus minus 20 % range — guess what — IT ALSO goes in the extreme direction, away from the mean of natural variability averaging out and the change we see is our influence (which assuredly it is not, but the point is it is impossible to pinpoint any small range, though Curry here does it anyway) so that in effect IT IS 50 % to 60 % (or 70 % when she adds on that «anthropogenic is 50 % or less.
In Kazakewich v. Kazakewich, [1936] A.J. No. 10 (C.A.), the Alberta Court of Appeal summed up the ratios in Lambe, Severn and Edwards in this way at paragraph 86: I take it then that in approaching the interpretation of the pertinent sections of The B.N.A. Act with respect to the administration of justice, a Court should keep in mind that these sections are embodied in an Imperial statute to which the ordinary rules for the interpretation of statutes apply, that therefore the intention of the framers of this Imperial statute must be ascertained as at the date of the enactment by having regard to the words employed without extraneous aids to interpretation where the language is unambiguous, and that having regard however to the nature of the statute, a great constitutional charter, the widest and most liberal construction of the words used should be adopted with a view to giving effect to the whole scheme of Canadian union [Emphasis Added].
It was settled law that, before interpreting a statute by adding, omitting or substituting words, a court had to be abundantly sure of three matters: (i) the intended purpose of the statute or provision in question; (ii) that, by inadvertence, the draftsman and Parliament had failed to give effect to that purpose in the provision in question; and (iii) the substance of the provision Parliament would have made, although not necessarily the precise words Parliament would have used, had the error in the Bill been noticed.
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