词汇 | example_english_stringent |
释义 | Examples of stringentThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. The quantity of exports has declined since the early 80s due to the stringent procedures by the government. Previously, discount window loans were typically granted at below-market rates, with stringent requirements employed to limit access to this credit. They also increase the political influence of political constituencies who favour more stringent regulatory policies and reduce the influence of business. In order to allow such subpopulation gene expression patterns to be recorded in our analysis we chose a less stringent cutoff value. In principle, the answer is yes, although two factors support waiving this responsibility and imposing more stringent duties on mere genetic contributors. Food producers should consider stringent safeguards to prevent contamination of food-processing equipment during renovation or construction activities, including enhanced in-plant environmental monitoring. If t 1, the condition is made less stringent by the prospect of an outright victory by one or the other party. We show theoretically the stringent conditions necessary to reduce vote-seat disproportionality in high threshold systems and empirically their high variance (and higher levels) of distortion. Needless to say, the employment of child labour did not cease immediately, nor were the restrictions particularly stringent. Gradually, this stringent assumption is relaxed to allow for a more realistic description of the process. Principled reasons are presented that argue for maintaining a stringent definition of communities of practice, such that more than shared practices or behaviors is required. To begin with, it assumes that more stringent standards lead to higher production costs for firms. Finally, for multinational corporations operating in several jurisdictions it is more efficient to organise their operations according to the most stringent standards. A variety of special schemes with less stringent rules fail to bridge the coverage gap. However, stringent public health measures seemed to be effective in breaking the disease transmission chain. The second category is of cases in which a command makes a duty more stringent. The condition (5.85) is less stringent than (5.87). Perhaps surprisingly, now we reject the transparent view even with the less stringent test against the general alternative. There is also concern that development and acceptance of stringent environmental guidelines could lead to increased liability and financial responsibility for impacts from contamination. The conditions for this to happen are not particularly stringent. Rather than attempting to find stringent restrictions on the uniqueness of steady states, we simply accept the fact of multiple steady state equilibria. Since 1993, as successive central governments have restrained public spending and taxation, social services departments have experienced escalating demands for support but stringent budgetary constraints. Second, the criteria for receiving grants-in-aid were made progressively more stringent, which was then followed by observations about the inadequacies of the schools. Indeed, humans would often fail the rather stringent criteria demanded by the comparative psychologists. Increasingly stringent criteria of damage exclusion were thus examined using individuals with no worse than minor damage and m1 values representative of fully expanded wings. Both these illustrative examples represent integration between a smaller country/region with less environmental regulations and a larger region with more stringent environmental regulations. However, with less stringent criteria, the sequence from perspective taking to pronoun acquisition varied either slightly or considerably. Later, poor law reform was welcomed at a time of stringent government welfare cut-backs. In the first stringent analysis, we classified complete recovery or much improvement as improved. In a secondary analysis, a more stringent criterion was used: no change, a little worse, or a little better (+ one category). There was evidence that the stringent safety and health requirements for these environments negatively affected the quality of life of the less dependent residents. After decades of local work rules, southerners were accustomed to more stringent controls on welfare recipients' labor. At the same time, it is less clear that these countries can be said to have consolidated democracies using more stringent criteria. However, when the standard becomes very stringent the option of a high-efficiency boiler with a baghouse becomes the cheapest option. In particular, the latter can be replaced by much more stringent equity requirements. In brief, the conditions under which temporal variation will maintain genetic are very stringent, while spatial variation is more likely to maintain variation. A further consideration is that the laboratory environment might not have been stringent enough to produce a trade-off between development rate and early fecundity. He seems to follow no stringent methodological approach whatsoever. Thus, such measurements could constitute a very stringent test of our quantitative understanding of this effect. Changes in the pelvic -oor following childbirth incontinence develops, treatment strategies and stringent standardised follow-up protocols should be available. Second, it means that this obligation is a very stringent one. Only in this way can the solution concepts pass more stringent theoretical and empirical tests. To this end, experimental psychopathologists are interested in showing that novel cognitive impairments in schizophrenia pass a more stringent test. They were mainly concerned with promoting female education and achieving enhanced mobility for women through relaxation of the more stringent forms of female seclusion (parda). The restricted size of the patient groups came from the need to adopt stringent diagnostic criteria. Major subsystem participants may favour, or at least be more receptive to, less stringent regulation of the industry when aggregate profit levels decrease. The stabilizing effect of dust collisions may provide a more stringent requirement on the ion drift than the stabilizing effect of dust cyclotron damping. Recently, a more stringent definition of remission has been proposed. Thus, in order to determine univocally the microisland structure one needs a more stringent limitation on the sponginess. Reducing this clearance will require a more stringent alignment tolerance, which will require a considerable engineering effor t to achieve. The transition matrix test is not only more stringent, it is also more appropriate. Ascending unemployment rates may lead subsystem participants to support less stringent regulation as a means of encouraging both industry and general economic growth. Secondly, a more stringent estimate of inter-coder reliability assessed the boundaries of co-narrations. The downside of our recommendations is that data requirements are more stringent. Her reference to music and dancing reflects her family's willingness to accept a less-stringent facet of religion. Accepting the conclusion that there is a critical period for second-language acquisition, therefore, must be justi®ed by relatively stringent criteria. Growing concern over environmental degradation has lead to increasingly stringent regulations to control actions that harm the environment, both at the national and international levels. He concludes that the magnitude of environmental expenditures in countries with stringent environmental policies is not sufficiently large to cause a noticeable effect. Chapter 2 would form part of the introduction under stringent editorial circumstances ; chapters 3 and 4 would also be merged. The use of the solution method in chemical analysis demanded more stringent criteria for discerning chemical elements and pr inciples. Using the stringent external criterion, 38 patients had improved (completely recovered and much improved) and 38 were stable. Conservatively, we chose a slightly more stringent criterion to define stable patients-those experiencing a change of 10 points or fewer. In contrast, all the pairs except for two showed significance at the stringent level of p 0.0002 for the extended edges. Eighteenth-century composers, including reformers, balanced stringent demands for change with practical accommodations for singers. Although the results from section 3 are encouraging, it is important to find out how the idea will hold up under more stringent conditions. Eliminating subtrees with only non-head words: this led also to a decrease in accuracy; the most stringent metric decreased from 798% to 771%. Scholars have traditionally viewed socialist realism as a doctrine with such stringent requirements that artists could never hope to meet them. However, at a higher type they may then be more stringent, requiring totality for all such functions. Both countries wanted to solve the ' addictive ' nature of the problem, but the groups that proposed more stringent regulations differed substantially in both nations. The main difference is that the conditions on the parameters and are more stringent. Finally, the restriction on government expenditures is made more stringent (in period 45), reducing the set of stationary equilibria from three to one. The conditions under which a small economy's real interest rate is dictated solely by global factors are highly stringent. If it is clear that the money will go to the people next door, intuitions say he is under the more stringent obligation to give. Nationalism at its first stage makes stringent demands on the individual. Isolated from organized labor, feebly represented by their association, and continuously defied by a stringent colonial government, the civil servants' conditions worsened. In order to control for family-wise error a stringent probability level of p<0.001 was adopted throughout. He then considers a somewhat less stringent standard. Isserles reasoned that we may therefore ignore the opinions of those medieval rabbis who based a stringent legal ruling on fears of such a possibility. In a secondary analysis we evaluated the influence on responsiveness of a less stringent external criterion. The requirements for approval of new pharmaceuticals are relatively stringent, specifying the need for well-designed, robust, randomized controlled trials on safety and efficacy end points. Stringent regulation will raise investment and production costs, and potentially reduce margins, for all producers. They are designed to meet broad retirement goals, with contributions and benefits determined under a backdrop of stringent federal regulations. Respectively, the results in each table represent an increasingly stringent test of the political contagion hypothesis. Given the stringent eligibility criteria for retirement on health grounds, those who take it must be judged incapable of work. However, without the stringent editing to which printed dictionaries are subjected, one may still be sceptical about online dictionaries. Thus, even the goods currently being exported are increasingly being expected to meet stringent environmental standards. A less stringent method may therefore be needed to analyze microaray data. Different but equally stringent rules apply to the" scheduled drugs", those on the" poisons list" and all other" drugs". The primary finding was that psychological maltreatment was consistently and robustly related to adjustment, even under the most stringent conditions. At the same time, while this is an important concern, a stringent operationalization of resilience carries a distinct advantage. More recently, three home videotape studies have used a more stringent methodology. In contrast, the present study utilized a stringent all-pass criterion in determining children's false belief performance. Students anticipated considerably less stringent parental repercussions on discoveries of their substance use compared to rudeness to others, academically disengaged behaviors, or delinquent acts. As discussed above we assume an increasingly stringent environmental policy in terms of emission factors, since that is a realistic expectation. If the expected marginal damages are large, because the probability and/or magnitude of possible harms are large, then stringent first-period abatement will be appropriate. Countries that pursue a stringent regulatory regime thus appear to achieve more rapid growth. By the 1990s, the regulatory agency realized the need for more stringent standards in enforcing regulations. Thus, the policy implication that more stringent environmental standards should be used would still apply here when the target ground subsidence levels are overachieved. An emulation or a "compatible" is unlikely to meet the stringent hardware demands. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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