A number of different proposals exist for the historical occasion of the letter, both in shorter studies and in monographs. |
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Every paleobotanist working in the Cretaceous or Tertiary will want to have copies of these monographs available for reference. |
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The mimeograph machine was going all the time, churning out a cross-flurry of monographs, memos and rough drafts. |
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It would appear that my previous monographs had been so well received that they are desirous of an encore, a repeat performance, a reprise. |
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The collections were accessioned by the NMB, and distributed to specialists for identification and preparation of systematic monographs. |
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The wide interest for basic and applied research on photochromism in the last decade is well documented by two monographs. |
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The solution is to develop an official pharmacopoeia similar to the German commission E monographs. |
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In spite of the wealth of monographs on aspects of eighteenth-century Paris, few historians have offered a synthetic treatment of that city. |
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Of special interest are a series of monographs related to distance education. |
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In a series of essays and monographs written between 1885 and 1900, Freud radically reconceptualized hysteria. |
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The other element of academic publishing is books, particularly research monographs. |
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The full list of her book chapters, articles, monographs, curricula, manuals and more runs to many pages. |
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The future historians of the built environment of Blairism won't be consulting back issues of AD or the glossy monographs of the starchitect. |
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There existed until very recently only a handful of monographs on the subject. |
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His book on ecological genetics went through several editions and his monographs on moths and butterflies are still used. |
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In thousands of journal articles and scholarly monographs Christianity's holy wars have been probed, analyzed, and debated. |
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It is difficult not to grin, if Ptolemaic land-leases or Greek optatives or German monographs make you giddy. |
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From then until his death he published a succession of monographs on German art, including further studies of Kandinsky, Kirchner, and Klee. |
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His books are model monographs, daunting in their research and free of tendentiousness. |
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Author of over 200 scientific papers, inter alia, monographs and courses on drug control, published in many countries throughout the world. |
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Products should comply with quality standards in relevant European Pharmacopoeia monographs or those in the pharmacopoeia of a Member State. |
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Modern technology has brought further developments, and the garden's website offers a chance to see the library catalogue online along with a number of floras and monographs. |
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Some 200 monographs in the collection relate to the early development of the science of geology. |
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Mr. Park published various articles and monographs on law of the sea, energy and Chinese law. |
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The legal questions presented in contemporary periodicals and monographs cannot be understood without such a foundation for analysis as this book provides. |
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The monographs also include memoirs and autobiographies of personalities linked to the city. |
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A critic may also question why other important topics, such as intelligence and reconnaissance, air-sea rescue, and helicopters, were not covered in separate monographs. |
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Academics will have to take time off from writing specialized articles and monographs long enough to write rigorous and stimulating textbooks for all grade levels. |
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In addition to single botanical monographs, there are several monographs on proprietary herbal combination products that have been the subject of clinical research. |
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This series was established in 1966 to bridge the gap between specialist articles and monographs on the one hand and general surveys on the other. |
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Although there are detailed monographs on leading goldsmiths in London, New York and Philadelphia during this period, nothing comparable exists for Ireland. |
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The social history of crime is a vibrant area of intellectual enquiry, which since the 1960s has generated a proliferation of monographs and essays on a diversity of issues. |
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I hope it will encourage the appearance of other local monographs as well as much-needed comprehensive studies of African American religion and churches. |
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Every once in a while it is refreshing to put aside detailed academic monographs in favor of shorter studies that are full of suggestive concepts and ideas. |
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Where no such Community herbal monograph has yet been established, other appropriate monographs, publications or data may be referred to. |
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When Community herbal monographs in the sense of this paragraph have been established they shall be used as the basis for any application. |
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The mandate of that board would be to determine comprehensive monographs for each product. |
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It will establish herbal monographs relevant for the precise but speedy evaluation of the applications for authorisation. |
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The deliberation of the Academy includes three chapters and five monographs. |
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University presses still compete for many monographs, including revised dissertations, and, contrary to this belief, they pay advances for a significant number of them. |
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All the information gathered was presented in monographs and a cross analysis was conducted to verify replication of explanations. |
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They hold over 76 million monographs and subscribe to nearly 570,000 journals. |
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Wilde's charm also had a lasting effect on Parisian literati, who produced several original biographies and monographs on him. |
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If we hold as actual the work that Gilles Deleuze individuated in the series of monographs published between 1953 and 1995, what would be this work's virtuality? |
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All monographs appertain to adults unless otherwise specified. |
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The Science of Geology Collection includes more than 200 early monographs and journal issues relating to geology, mineralogy, paleontology and the theory of the earth. |
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Today, more than 20 works have been illustrated by Alain Thomas, including several tales for children, monographs, bestiaries and books for bibliophiles. |
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In addition to the actual labels, it includes extensions of the labels such as package inserts, product monographs, information on prescribing, and file cards whether included in the packaging or available on request. |
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The monographs of Section 2.2 are replaced by trigraphs. |
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The necessary specifications of the radio-nuclide shall be described in accordance, where relevant, with the general monograph or specific monographs of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
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This collection includes a variety of documents such as monographs, specialized catalogues, brochures and series on philately, as well as numerous works about the history of Canadian and international postal services. |
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Numerous other classifications have been suggested and are discussed in the papers and monographs listed in the selected bibliographies at the end. |
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It is intended to include all important reference works and a wide selection of specialized monographs, as well as a very extensive collection of journals and major indexing and abstracting services in the field. |
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It has great monographs for vitamin C or St. John's wort or black cohosh. |
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Won't opening up access to the detailed, considered arguments held within humanities monographs do wonders for the reputation and impact of subject areas whose contribution to society is often under-rated? |
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We don't write humanities monographs for riches. |
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If we are going to increase our reliance on monographs for the time being, we are going to need better monographs than we have to get accurate and helpful information to the public. |
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Finally, close to one hundred monographs on jazz-dictionaries, guides, biographies, history books, photographs-complete the extraordinary collection. |
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Holdings comprise more than 14 000 monographs, 425 journal titles and more than 500 general, geological and geophysical atlases and related thematic atlases make up the atlas collection. |
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The NRC Research Press currently publishes 15 electronic journals as well as monographs and conference proceedings, and provides free access for Canadians to the electronic versions of these journals. |
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When new Community herbal monographs are established, the registration holder shall consider whether it is necessary to modify the registration dossier accordingly. |
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There is tremendous momentum right now for the digitization of print monographs, as seen by several large-scale projects such as the Google initiative and the European Union digitization strategy. |
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In addition, our library has assembled a large collection of periodicals and monographs on forestry, forest engineering, environmental issues, and relevant patents to meet the needs of our members. |
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The content of monographs and articles is also a gift to publishers. |
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The recommended comparable dosage regimens for Torisel and the comparable drug products were based on the respective product monographs and supported by clinical literature. |
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The historical details outlined in his monographs serve as paradigms for Sallust. |
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There are also monographs for some of the herbs in my dispensary, Inula helenium, Arctium lappa and Paeonia officinalis. |
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Contemporary philology has had a growing interest in the period and in the epitomai again, which has been proved by several colloquiums, monographs on the subject. |
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We possess in full two of the historical works that have been convincingly ascribed to Sallust, the monographs, Bellum Catilinae and Bellum Jugurthinum. |
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One can consult compendial monographs for further information. |
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He authored two monographs and edited or coedited six anthologies. |
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Among the some 200 new or revised monographs are ones on buspirone, linezolid, didanosine, ribavirin, dronedarone, protease inhibitors, and oxycodone and rifamcyins. |
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