Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | Nu money means death , |
2 | The fingerboard/neck jointing and overall fretwork is exemplary ; the neck-edging feels impossibly smooth , and hopefully manufacturing consistency means that all similar-spec 'd Bass Collection instruments will be as good as this . |
3 | Once the interlining has been locked in , the two layers of fabric can be treated as one and made up in the same way . |
4 | Once it has recorded features of the sequence of parses , the algorithm continues : |
5 | He reports that the algorithm does indeed usually converge . |
6 | We agree that the specific algorithm we used wold have been inappropriate if we were interested in examining seasonal or short-term changes in primary production , not because the algorithm does not include a grazing term but because it does not include terms for irradiance and quantum efficiency . |
7 | This is not surprising as the algorithm to assign risk is weighted in favour of such cases . |
8 | A node and its children may all have almost identical f values , so the algorithm lacks sensible guidance . |
9 | The algorithm passes credit between rules , similarly . |
10 | Records will be read into primary storage , their keys will be transformed by the algorithm being used , and if the address the algorithm produces is free they will be stored in that address on the direct access device . |
11 | The algorithm keeps a second list , called CLOSED , of nodes which have been expanded and removed from OPEN . |
12 | As well as the set OPEN of known nodes which might lead to goals , and whose children have yet to be explored , the algorithm keeps a set called CLOSED of other known nodes whose children have been constructed . |
13 | The algorithm keeps a set of several strings . |
14 | The number of strings which the algorithm keeps may range up to a few thousand , and each bit string may be a few hundred long . |
15 | The algorithm calculates diff recursively for nodes in successive layers , starting at the top output layer and working back down to the input layer — hence its name , back propagation . |
16 | In each learning cycle , the algorithm calculates H , for each of its strings . |
17 | In one cycle , the algorithm takes one operator out of the list LOp and applies it to N , so producing just one child . |
18 | The algorithm takes about 50 CPU seconds on a SUN SPARCStation II to order 180 probes and 1150 clones from the S.pombe YAC library , and 247 CPU seconds to order 667 probes and 2837 clones from the S.pombe cosmid library , including the phase of contig ordering and consistency checking . |
19 | The algorithm involves two numbers , K and c . |
20 | The algorithm implemented with this particular robot could re-learn after its TV cameras were jogged . |
21 | Extend the algorithm to deal with a general dividend and divisor , and include a test for overflow ( i.e. when the quotient can not be represented in n bits ) . |
22 | Maybe P and Q and R behave alike , but there may be times when the algorithm folds a set { P , Q , R } where , say , Q sometimes occurs in a context which never contains P or R. The algorithm looks for any context which contains some of X 's children but not the others . |
23 | Whichever path the algorithm took , that path would pick up shortfall or cost of .1 . |
24 | It can not be exactly the algorithm given above because the desired outputs d from the top layer are not known , so it can not calculate y * ( 1-y ) * ( d-y ) . |
25 | The algorithm chooses for expansion the node having the best actual score so far , together with the best estimated score , h* ( n ) . |
26 | The algorithm discussed here omits the start symbol . ) |
27 | His analysis was more like the algorithm embodied in one of the later versions of Bacon . |
28 | The algorithm runs thus : IF Vs>Vdb |
29 | The algorithm runs thus . |
30 | It keeps a list , called OPEN , of nodes which the algorithm has found and which are not goals but whose children might be goals . |