basic outcomeの例文
- Once the war started, the basic outcome seems, in this account, almost foreordained.
- Beyond the basic outcome, the justices have a variety of philosophical routes they could follow in ruling on Proposition 187.
- And even though only about 40 percent of the votes have been counted, no one expects the basic outcome to change.
- The following table shows the basic outcomes of PIE consonants in some of the most important daughter languages for the purposes of reconstruction.
- The basic outcome of the RfC is clear and it is that the current pending-changes trial should come to an end.
- While that is not the same as " proof by repetition, " it has the same basic outcome wearing down other editors.
- "You get big stars doing live-action films, and if it's a flop, their appearance doesn't alter the basic outcome ."
- This same basic outcome also means that response to on-call ground attack missions will be more rapid, as, on average, an aircraft will be closer to the action if there are more aircraft in the air.
- As usual, a third-party candidate for president, Ross Perot of the Reform Party, had little effect on the basic outcome, although his nine percent of the total probably prevented President Clinton from reaching his goal of 51 percent of the vote.
- In " Gubisch Maschinenfabrik v Palumbo " ( 1987 ) ( Hartley : 1988 ) and " The Tatry v The Maciej Rataj " ( 1994 ), the test is whether the factual basis of the claim and the laws to be applied are the same with a view to obtaining the same basic outcome.
- It is a basic outcome of Lanchester's laws, or the salvo combat model, that a larger number of less-sophisticated units will tend to be successful over a smaller number of more advanced ones; the damage dealt is based on the square of the number of units firing, while the quality of those units has only a linear effect on the outcome.
- What 140.180 is saying is that he believes that you can still have social constructs that impose a de facto morality, if you are looking for certain types of aims and value certain types of individual states ( e . g . if you respect individuals'and groups'desires for certain basic outcomes, which historically is a big " if " amongst human societies ).