Search results for: "Deno" (805 results)
When we use that total enrollment figure as the denominator and the student enrollment in these four districts as the numerator, we find that their
other words, the probability that both A and B occur (called the probability of the intersection of A and B, denoted P(A ∩ B)) must be the same as the
Blue teams, denoted by t-shirt colors). Yael Granot and colleagues used eye-tracking technology to examine the effect of group identification on
account of the first objection addresses a different issue. One could argue that the arguments in Justice Iredell’s notes denote a lingering concern with
and to communicate an association’s views to outsiders—what I denote as associational speech. One last subject that must be considered is the nature
exercises of ethical judgment."6 Cook was engaged in denouncing the Supreme Court's generous construal of the entitlements secured to employers by "yellow
denouncing the exclusionary rule for allowing “[t]he criminal . . . to go free because the constable has blundered”), abrogated by Mapp v. Ohio
personal consequences beyond simply the medical ones. As these unusually frank judicial exchanges demonstrate, abortion exceptionalism denotes something
” refers to a jury that possesses some combination of three characteristics. First, “special jury” sometimes denotes a jury of experts, such as a jury
independent of its underlying rationale. The idea of property as despotic dominion that is often associated with Blackstone’s definition then denotes two