Showing 821 - 840 results of 1,123 for search '"England ', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 821

    Dangerous Liaisons? by Norman L Jones

    Published 2000-01-01
    “…A case in point was a few days last month during which I attended a well-sponsored meeting of the Ontario Lung Association, reviewed a couple of papers reporting drug trials, read of the threats of litigation made by pharmaceutical companies to two Ontario researchers, heard of a public apology made by the New England Journal of Medicine regarding reviewers' conflicts of interest and received a critical letter from Dr Rob McFadden, an associate editor of the Canadian Respiratory Journal, about a sponsored publication that accompanied the last issue of 1999. …”
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  2. 822
  3. 823

    A shared tradition: transmitting maritime knowledge in print by Margaret E. Schotte

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…This article recommends adopting a comparative perspective, since much can be learned by tracing the evolution of these shared practices as they traveled from Spain and Portugal to the Netherlands, France, and England, and back again. …”
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  4. 824

    ‘Splendid Little Soldiers’—Invasion, Empire and the Fantasy of Dominance in Saki’s When William Came by Petra Rau

    Published 2007-03-01
    “…Saki radically disrupts the English fantasy of dominance and imagines the end of the British Empire culminating not just in a German invasion but in a lasting occupation of England. In representing the Germans as admirable imperialists, Saki deconstructs national difference—the very criterion upon which both invasion fiction and imperialist politics are based. …”
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  5. 825

    A Study on the performance of Four Regression Models in Predicting Weather Temperature Based on Python by Li Taobei

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This study assesses how well four regression models—linear regression, random forest regression, support vector regression (SVR), and K-Nearest Neighbors (KNN)—predict weather temperatures using a dataset from England. Standardizing and expanding features were part of the data preprocessing process to capture non-linear interactions. …”
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  6. 826

    Camellias at a Glance by Sydney Park Brown

    Published 2012-04-01
    “…Native to Asia, the first camellia plants were brought to America in 1797 and grown in New England greenhouses. Over the last 200 years, they have proven to be dependable additions to the southern landscape, where they grow and bloom with minimal care in most inland areas of North and Central Florida. …”
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  7. 827

    Tracking Couples who leave the Study Location in Historical Studies of Fertility: an Australian Example by Helen Moyle

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…However, because of the high mobility in Australia in the 19th and early 20th centuries, couples who moved out of the colony were tracked to other places, and births and deaths that took place in other Australian colonies and other countries, such as New Zealand and England, were included in the database. A wide variety of data sources were used for this task, most of which are available on the internet. …”
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  8. 828

    Maths on display po polsku, czyli matematyczne prezentacje na lekcjach w klasie III by Katarzyna Wojcieszek

    Published 2014-04-01
    “…The author's search for effective ways of supporting pupils in their construction of knowledge is based on an application derived from England of the Maths on display strategy as a way of organising and holding a lesson, the primary aim of which is generation of stimulating and interesting instructional aids. …”
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  9. 829

    À quel(s) public(s) s’adresse Darwin ? L’Origine des Espèces, entre ouvrage scientifique, œuvre littéraire, et texte de vulgarisation by Camille Debras

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…The links between science, religion, moral and politics are so intricate in Victorian England that Darwin needs to convince public opinion as well as the scientific community. …”
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  10. 830

    The Pact of Baghdad on Account of its Effect to Relationship of Turkish - Arabian by Mustafa Bostancı

    Published 2013-12-01
    “…The base of Baghdad Pact, which was organized for the purposes of preventing penetration of the Soviet Union into Middle East, was laid by a convention entered by and between Turkey and Iraq on February 24, 1955, and Iran, Pakistan and England joined the pact at a later date. Effects of Baghdad Pact, which alienated Turkey from the region while reinforcing anti-western camp, on Arabian society were not positive at all; particularly Egypt protested against this pact accepting it to be the heaviest strike on Arabian Union. …”
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  11. 831

    ‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest by Chandrica Barua

    Published 2023-03-01
    “…Gouramma had found herself in 1850s England, displaced from her homeland and culture, anglicized and Christianized, pruned and displayed as the glorious civilizational project of the Empire, and yet never truly being an inhabitant of Victorian interiors. …”
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  12. 832

    R post-vocalique et histoire de l’anglais by Jacques Durand

    Published 1999-12-01
    “…In this paper, I explore the way in which a different norm emerged in England and in the United States concerning the pronunciation of post-vocalic r’s: the R. …”
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  13. 833
  14. 834

    Nutrition, Nurture and Nature by Helen Macbeth, Paul Collinson

    Published 2013-11-01
    “…Situations in Scotland, Ireland and England are described to exemplify this in regard to differing conceptions of, and political debates surrounding, the use of land. …”
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  17. 837

    Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie by Patrice Larroque

    Published 2010-12-01
    “…In Standard English these verbs do not have a third person -s present tense inflection, an -ing form, a past participle; they do not permit a direct object and are not followed by another modal verb.While a double modal construction was possible in Early Modern English and is still found in some regional non-standard varieties in the southern states of America, the north of England (in the Midlands), and Scotland, it is no longer in use in Standard English.Although such structures as I might could be able to visit ..., I’d might just let you know, She shouldn’t ought to be there, We’ll shall go, erm, go to the market, are now accounted mistakes, they are nonetheless diachronically and synchronically interesting. …”
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  18. 838

    O casamento de Leonor e Frederico III (1451-1452) e as relações entre Portugal e o Sacro Império nos finais da Idade Média by António Martins Costa

    Published 2019-03-01
    “…In the late Middle Ages, the young dynasty of Avis, after linked by kinship to England, Aragon and Burgundy, attempts to create in the space of Christianity a connection at the highest level: the Holy Roman Empire. …”
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  19. 839

    Elicitation and experimentation: implications for English sociolinguistics by Cameron Morin, Carmelo Alessandro Basile

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…We illustrate our points with two case studies in English: an exploratory survey of double modal acceptability in Southeast England, and a sociolinguistic questionnaire on the use of necessity modals in Singapore English.…”
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  20. 840

    Review of Culture in Construction Projects: Status Quo and Challenges by Jin Li

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…The results indicated that the high-published contributors of countries were Peoples R China, Australia, the USA, England, and Singapore. We also identified the critical institutions, high cited articles, keyword co-occurrence, cluster analysis, as well as the research interests and methods in this field. …”
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