The final sentence read literally refers to heat released by oceanic activity under the influence of solar radiation and atmospheric circulations such as jet streams. However, the term “global warming” can taken by some to mean planetary higher temperatures due to humans burning hydrocarbons. The ...
The final sentence read literally refers to heat released by oceanic activity under the influence of solar radiation and atmospheric circulations such as jet streams. However, the term “global warming” can taken by some to mean planetary higher temperatures due to humans burning hydrocarbons. The ...
Examples of language scaffolds include modelling through providing language samples, anticipatory guides, advance organisers (Walqui, 2006), and the use of visual cues, word walls, and sentence starters (Villegas et al., 2018). Such scaffolds are typically ‘designed-in’ (i.e., pre-planned),...
— Grove Karl Gilbert Concluding sentence of Address (11 Dec 1895) as President of the Geological Society, 'The Origin of Hypotheses, illustrated by the Discussion of a Topographical Problem', printed as Presidential Address of Grove Karl Gilbert (1896), 24. Also collected in Science (1896), ...
Probability “means degree of belief (as actually held by someone, on the ground of his whole knowledge, experience, information) regarding the truth of a sentence, or event E (a fully specified ‘single’ event or sentence, whose truth or falsity is, for whatever reason, unknown to the ...
He might have originated this specific wording, but as this full sentence shows, Hudson was quoting a proverb. Many sources simply attribute the quote to him. Yet, in fact, the expression goes back to at least 1607, for it appears in Thomas Walkington, 'To the Reader', The Optick Glasse...
Liège is a medieval city in the Wallonic part of Belgium. It said to have a huge bishop’s palace, a statue of Charlemagne, an old tradition of wooden puppets dating to Charlemagne period, and a younger university, founded 200 years ago. ...
Think of one-sentence answers to the following while you prepare or drive to your event: Who, What, When, Why. Who: Who is hosting the event? What: What kinds of people are going? When: When is it, and what’s the schedule? Why: Why do you want to have great conversations? This...
It meant looking at every single sentence to see if every word was truly necessary. The process was kind of fun and became a little like a game or puzzle. I’m still overly wordy at times but now I’m better at slashing in the later drafts. Then there was that time our paper kept...
This can be debunked in one sentence: there is no such thing as an unnatural radio frequency. All radio frequencies are natural. There, we’re done. Oh, you want a demonstration? Well, fair enough. This is a science blog, after all. Here’s some food for thought: David Avocado is ...