basic transformationの例文
- One of his proudest achievements is " the basic transformation of Somerville.
- Thus the generative power of even the most basic transformations is both unpredictable and inevitable.
- The new possibilities leave broadcasters and regulators confronting a basic transformation in the television industry.
- She gains a new basic transformation sequence for each of the five major story arcs.
- For example, the basic transformation equations become
- Skocpol asserts that Social Revolutions are rapid and basic transformations of a society's state and class structures.
- The basic transformations of neo-Riemannian theory, discussed below, all associate changes in direction with the switch from major to minor.
- More basic transformations alter DNA to XNA and add new nucleic bases, and design proteins that contain synthetic amino acids.
- Given power [ the Labour Party ] will seek, as no other Party will seek, the basic transformation of our society.
- But how do I find the transformations that belong to a given matrix, which means finding the angle of rotation, scale factor and so on for the basic transformations?
- In other words : how to decompose a matrix into the basic transformations mentioned in said paragraph . Preceding talk ) 16 : 01, 17 September 2011 ( UTC)
- As the terminal holds the vectors ( and points ) in internal memory, the system is able to make basic transformations-scaling, rotation, etc .-in realtime without interacting with the computer or language.
- The ambassador said that instead of giving orders, the United States is now engaging in dialogue with Syria . " What happened is a basic transformation, " Mustapha told the pan-Arab satellite television Al-Arabiya.
- "What really bothers me is that Al is supporting a candidate who is so fundamentally opposed to the basic transformation that Bill Clinton brought to this party in 1992, " moving it to a more middle-of-the-road stance on economic policy and other areas, he said.
- Particularly Skocpol's " States and Social Revolutions " became one of the most widely recognized works of the third generation; Skocpol defined revolution as " rapid, basic transformations of society's state and class structures [ . . . ] accompanied and in part carried through by class-based revolts from below ", attributing revolutions to a conjunction of multiple conflicts involving state, elites and the lower classes.