... permission.Reproduced with permission ofthe copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. The Natureand Scope of MarketingHunt, Shelby D.Journal of Marketing (pre-1986); Jul ... permission.Reproduced with permission ofthe copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.Reproduced with permission ofthe copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without ... Reproduced with permission ofthe copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.Reproduced with permission ofthe copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without...
... contempt and ridiculeinstead, further diminishing their rather uncertain standing within the group. Concerned both about losing and winning À thereby stoking the resentment of other competitors À they ... ofthe notion of socialphobia and its equivalents (mostly from the end of nineteenth centuryFrance) in the context of a rising interest in anxiety-related phenomena and the desire to give them ... thisend, they make themselves agreeable, smiling and nodding with interest and approval with those they know. When not preoccupied with them-selves, they can be well attuned to the needs of others and...
... the (door) the (ladder) the (planet) the (woman) her (arm) It she the (man) we the (air) It them their they the (plants) they they their the (man) the (controls) he I the ... analyses for the cohesive harmony ofthe text; to a summary ofthe context of situation ofthe text in terms ofthe three contextual parameters: field, tenor and mode. 2. The Context ofthe Chosen ... them there is a spaceship. There are two astronauts’ helmets, one in front of them andthe other at their back. They are holding a fruit in their hands. The woman is looking at the man. The...
... greater than the rate of decomposition. Therefore, thenatureofthe accumulated organic matter can then be used as a proxy to represent the composition ofthe former wetland communities at the site. ... estimate ofthe conversion of tun-dra to wetlands is most likely an underestimate. Nevertheless, global climate change will considerably increase the area of wetlands on the planet and these wetlands ... change because ofthe resistance of pollens and spores to decay, and their ubiquity and abundance (Traverse 2008 ) . Wetlands are excellent sources of pollen and spores and like macrofossils, palynomorph...
... in the Hall ofthe Casino at Mannheim, on the 11th of May, 1914. Every seat in the Hall was taken. "Professor Kraemer of Hohenheim opened the meeting; he dwelt on the usefulness of these ... during the course of which he asked them the names ofthe various trees. Among these was one of which no child could tell the name. Ilse, his constant companion, was also ofthe party, and she ... had rapped out the decimals with their left hoof, andthe units with their right. The next thing, therefore, was to make her understand the difference between "right" and "left."...
... oligomerization of STIM1occurs via the EF-SAM region. However, the refoldingprocess may not guarantee the natural conformation of the EF-SAM region. Furthermore, as both the EF-hand motif andthe SAM ... perturb the Ca2+-binding ability ofthe grafted EF-hand of STIM1.(B) Modelled structureofthe engineered protein with the grafted EF-hand Ca2+-binding motif (magenta) from STIM1. W32 and Y76 ... two termini ofthe inserted Ca2+-binding sites in the model structureofthe EF-hand of STIM1 is within15 A˚. Accordingly, a total of six glycine linkers is suffi-cient to enable the grafted...
... the large P6extension andthe last three nucleotides (AU XG) ofthe intron. The sizes ofthe intron (InDGb) and 5¢ exon (5E) are indicated. The arrowindicates cleavage ofthe pre-RNA at the ... 23S.5DGbpre-RNA, andthe binding of a minimum of n Mg2+ions leads to formation of the active complex, whereas binding of a minimum of mMn2+ions forms the inactive complex. The sizes of the active and ... Because of these and other properties of Cr.LSU, the tertiary structureofthe intron from23S.5DGbwas examined using Fe2+-EDTA cleavage. The ground-state structure shows evidence of an unusually...
... governs the size ofthe orbital (wave function) and deter-mines the energy ofthe orbital. The value of n corresponds to the number ofthe shellin the Bohr atomic theory andthe larger the n, the ... 2.11) andthe dimer of AlBr3(Fig. 2.7b) involving a lone pair on each of the bridging bromine atoms are examples ofthe operation ofthe octet rule (for the explanation ofthe charges on the ... ofthe pairing of two electrons, one from each ofthe bonded atoms, and the electron density ofthe shared pair is at a maximum between the bonded atoms. In the molecular orbital treatment, the...
... years through the development and use of a succession of live food organisms as feed for the developing larvae. The aim ofthe present manual was therefore to review and summarise the latest developments ... permission ofthe copyright owner. Applications for such permission, with a statement ofthe purpose and extent ofthe reproduction, should be addressed to the Director, Information Division, Food and ... 1.5.). Most ofthe criteria as identified from the viewpoint ofthe larva have already been discussed above with the exception ofthe criterion ‘purity’. One should not only consider the impurities...
... called the lorica. The shape ofthe lorica andthe profile ofthe spines and ornaments allow the determination ofthe different species and morphotypes (see 3.4.). The rotifer’s body is differentiated ... consisting ofthe head, trunk and foot (Fig. 3.1.). The head carries the rotatory organ or corona which is easily recognized by its annular ciliation and which is at the origin ofthe name ofthe ... fraction of 30 to 45% in (n-3) HUFA (Fig. 3.13). Moreoever, the lipid composition ofthe rotifers was also little affected by the composition ofthe diet. However, when the efficiency of DHA and...