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Перевод: completeness
[существительное] полнота ; законченность ; завершенность
Тезаурус:
- Completeness and Condition
- What Willis emphasises is that the culture of the shop floor is bounded and has a special sense of completeness about it.
- At worst there is a parochialism about this culture even though its completeness embraces a wide range of human activity and potential.
- The second line of research relates to the completeness of the interpretation of anaphoric expressions.
- Faith is out of focus, God is not seen as he is, and in this field of badly focussed vision, with its dangerous loss of clarity or completeness, doubt is encouraged to grow.
- Table 1.2 Comparison of two pellet collections from nest sites of barn owls in England and European eagle owls in Sweden: (1) bones extracted from intact pellets or those otherwise protected from trampling; (2) bones from decomposed pellets at the nest site: completeness of skeletal elements
- This brief and simplified introduction has been included for completeness, and hopefully to show that the examination of the earth's magnetosphere in relation to propagation is not a difficult project to undertake, the equipment is easy to build and has the advantage of being a both interesting and useful addition to your capability.
- But they seem happy to attribute orderliness and completeness to others, and indeed seem to be made happy by doing so.
- For the sake of completeness, if a relative refuses further treatment on behalf of a patient, this can be ignored, for the reasons advanced above.
- The collector, then, will always examine the evidence that his book is complete in every respect and, as well as all the trimmings with which we have temporarily been preoccupied, will carefully test the completeness of the text itself.
- Starfish are uncommon fossils, particularly in this state of completeness, since they easily break into their component plates.
- I have discovered a completeness of my mind and body so that it can work as a whole entity, instead of as a jumble of separate limbs, head and torso all working independently of one another.
- Shotwell (1955) attempted to distinguish between bones from different sources by devising an index of completeness of preservation, by which species represented by most complete remains must have been transported shorter distances and therefore have come from communities close by, while species with less well preserved remains must have come from more distant communities.
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