tend (original) (raw)

What one tends to get, perhaps inevitably, is how productions achieve meaning for a particular scholar or scholars.

Any such regulation tends to attract attention to the possibility of a divergence between belief and acceptance as 17.

I call the relevant facts "law-determining practices" rather than "legal decisions" because the term "decisions" tends to suggest judicial decisions in particular.

Especially in less developed countries, research on ageing still tends to prejudge people's priorities and to focus narrowly on material outcomes.

If central powers tended to do the same for opposite reasons, their attitude towards non-bureaucratic opinion alternated between indifference and hostility.

On the other hand, people who have studied neural network models have tended to neglect symbol manipulation.

Controls tended to give functional attributes for objects and perceptual attributes for animals and vegetables.

There is now powerful experimental evidence that this tends to promote and maintain cooperation.

The proportion of cooperative choices tends to decrease as group size increases but remains substantial even in large groups.

The problem is that in focusing on an inherited internal mechanism, the role of learning over an organism's lifetime tends to get ignored.

Our target article had two major themes, and commentators tended to focus on one or the other.

Most of the research reviewed in the preceding nine categories tends to favor the 2-gen over the 1-gen model.

Diseases are consequently a potentially important contributor to yield collapse, especially as rapeseed area has tended to increase.

The difference between antecedent and consequent is high and consequent probability is high; thus there tends to be a rule for all the antecedents.

In addition to the milking, the izinceku also tended to the king's oxen and fetched water for the king in gourds.

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