Adjudication table for yield

#agrs AV EK JT SC multi adj sentence
0 10.s 10.a 1.s 9.f 10.a,10.s 10.a For the flood to yield up its riches , two things were required : a competent engineer and plenty of capital .
1 6.a 3 4 4 6.a,3,4 4 Systematic mutation of each base in a double met box operator also yields consistent results ( T. McNally , personal communication ) .
1 8.a 8 7.a 7.a 8.a,7.a 7.a On dry ground thickets of willow , birch and alder alternate and mingle with moss and grass meadows ; in the hollows are moss mires of Sphagnum and Hypnum spp. , yielding to sedges , cotton grass , pendent grass and mare 's tails Hippuris vulgaris spp. in the wetlands .
1 1 10 1.a 10 10 10 A comparable dry desert area of the arctic might yield a similar selection of cryptogams , but there would probably be up to a dozen species of flowering plants scattered among them .
2 3.a 3 3 3.a 3.a,3 3 And an elaborate ritual of key presses , in a strict order , is needed to get a key to yield the result you demand .
2 6 4 6 4 4,6 4 Fourteen cycles of solvent flattening with 60% solvent , followed by 21 with 55% , yielded the final 3Å map , and a further 21 cycles with 50% solvent , yielded a definitive 4Å map .
2 1 10 1 10 10 10 For much of the year they appear barren ; with summer moisture the dried-out cushions and patches of vegetation burst into life , yielding arctic poppies , avens , moss campions , saxifrages -- flowers familiar from the arctic desert , here abundant enough to provide a scattering of colourful , threadbare mats .
2 6 10 6 10 6,10 10 Larger rocks would yield molten material and brecchias .
3 9.s 9 9 9 9.s,9 9.s At the end of the lease the tenant must yield up the premises , together with all buildings , fixtures , trees , and plants thereon , including even what he has himself added ; but to some extent this rule is relaxed in favour of trade and agricultural fixtures ; and a right to remove tenants ' fixtures may be given by the terms of the lease .
3 x 1 1 1 x x The emphasis is more on milk than meat and yields average 4,400kg at 3.7 per cent butterfat .
3 4 3 4 4 4,3 4 But the interpretations have actually constructed the elements , albeit with some empirical evidence , and a different interpretation may yield different elements and a different type of structure .
3 4 3 4 4 4,3 4 But , despite this fragmentation , strong shared assumptions exist about the character of the discipline overall and we shall risk claiming that they yield only three distinctive approaches .
3 4 4 u 4 4 4 Then &xgr; is given by ( 7 ) as &formula; , and the reader may check that this yields &formula; .
3 4 4 11 4 4 4 This is evidently the most general form of C. Postmultiplication by A yields B in the form &formula; .
3 3 1 3 3 3 3 My goal is to identify the types of agreement which are most likely to yield positive net social benefits .
3 4 3 4 4 4 4 Carefully constructed random samples may yield such an accurate response .
3 4 4 3 4 4 4 Radar studies also yielded a more accurate value of the mass of Venus by determining with great accuracy the distances between the Earth , Venus and Mercury , and hence establishing with great accuracy the variations in the orbital elements of these planets .
3 11 4 4 4 11,4 11 The third moment measures the symmetry of the distribution about the mean and yields a value which is the cube of the skewness :
6 7 7 7 7 7 7 Whatever the discussion 's outcome Margaret Thatcher will not yield , so that the Commonwealth may again be forced to take decisions from which Britain will dissent .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 ` The barley yielded more than 4t/acre last year , and I 'm told it could be even higher this year , ' said Mr Robertson .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 Ernst , García-Díaz and Hauser ( 1987 a ) have shown that an Ehlers transformation ( 12.13 ) applied to the Ernst function of the Nutku-Halil solution ( 13.3 ) , together with a simple coordinate transformation , yields a non-colinear generalization of the Ferrari Ibañez soliton solution that was described in Section 10.4 but only with even integer values of the parameter &agr; .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Often a German settler , realising that his farm was too poor to yield the one-sixth levy required to keep his purchase , would offer instead free labour on the lord 's demesne .
6 7 7 7 7 7 7 Alone in the Council , Cranmer refused to sign the document altering the succession , until finally he yielded to the plea of his dying godson .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Finally , if you are already subscribing to company AVCs , before investing in a new plan check on your present level of contributions and the benefits that these are expected to yield .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Yields on long-dated bonds are at their lowest in two decades : the benchmark 30-year Treasury bond now yields less than 7% , compared with 9% three years ago .
6 6 6 6 6 6 6 The modelled processes are photolysis of O 3 to produce O ( 1 D ) , reaction of O ( 1 D ) with H 2 O to yield OH , reaction of OH with CO , CH 4 and O 3 , reaction of H with O 2 to produce HO 2 , reaction of HO 2 with O 3 , NO and itself , and removal of H 2 O 2 by photolysis and dry deposition .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 Specific lysis was calculated by the standard formula and values in the absence of peptide subtracted to yield the values shown .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Furthermore , older people may have savings or investments which will yield income .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 Other calculations based on similar data yield an estimate of £135,000 ( Roll 1986 ) .
6 3 3 3 3 3 3 They yielded ample results .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 Given the laws of optics and the initial conditions , it is now possible to perform deductions yielding an explanation of the formation of a rainbow visible to the observer .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 This is a paradoxical fact for those empiricists who think that new theories are derived from the facts in some way , but it is quite comprehensible when it is realized that precise experimentation can only be carried out if one has a precise theory capable of yielding predictions in the form of precise observation statements .
6 8 8 8 8 8 8 The private right must usually yield to the greater public interest .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 Briefly , they represent a sort of propositional machine , such that if " arguments of the appropriate type are " inserted " into them -- the term " argument now to be understood in the sense of any object-naming symbol -- they yield significant , true or false , propositions .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 ` Flying planes can be dangerous ' is the type-sentence of semantic ambiguity because it can yield both a passive and an active interpretation , and here a variation is used to demonstrate the danger of paying too much attention to public opinion .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Since the use of depreciable assets yields revenues , some proportion of the cost of those assets must be allocated to the operating statement .
6 12 12 12 12 12 12 ( b ) Both matrix and fibril may deform elastically and yield at the same strain .
6 7 7 7 7 7 7 Iraq , it said , would not yield before arrogance and terrorism , and called upon the Security Council to use the same criterion for dealing with all the problems of the region .
6 7 7 7 7 7 7 In November there had already been press reports to the effect that UN Secretary-General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar had yielded to Moroccan arguments for a broadening of the criteria for inclusion on the list of voters .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 To be equivalent to this , an investment in a two-year bond has to yield the same amount , implying that the current two-year rate is rs 2 = 7 per cent : 100(1.07) 2 = 114.49 .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 In the case of a ` long ' share ( in which the security is purchased and held ) , each lp in the share price above the purchase price ( S ) yields 1p of profit ( ignoring transactions costs for the moment ) .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Research is in progress to modify crop plants genetically to make them yield more than one product .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 Although such answers may not seem entirely convincing today , principally because of the insights which Darwin and Freud have given us into ourselves , it is nevertheless true that an approach to the problem based on evolution and psychoanalysis would yield analogous , if different , answers .
6 7 7 7 7 7 7 From the late 1470s pressure had been put on merchants outside London to join the company there , and after some resistance they had to yield ( 64 , pp.153-60 , 172-6 ) .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Table 16.1 shows how the market price and the market rate of interest vary with each other for a bond yielding £5 per year .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 Plantations outyield by almost 10 times managed ` natural ' forest and these pines have a long fibre suitable for pulp , but hardwoods , notably Eucalyptus spp. yield higher total amounts of dry matter , and the most productive may yield up to twice that of the best pines .
6 1 1 1 1 1 1 The Gabon holdings cover four million acres and already yield 9,000 barrels of oil -- worth about $162,000 -- a day .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 A realistic linguistics of literary texts which yields interpretations of this sort is incompatible with the institution of literature as it presently stands .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 The FIS and IS in this passage can equally be understood as " narrative report of speech act " ( NRSA ) ( Leech and Short 1981 : 323--4 ) which is a mode of speech summary less faithful than FIS and IS to the actual verbal structure of the original ; and the ambiguity is amplified by the suggestion in the third sentence that Rousseau 's text autonomously " yields " information without intervention from a critic -- a sentence which could also be considered as a form of NRSA .
6 4 4 4 4 4 4 The condition is conveniently expressed by where Taking the square root of both sides of equation ( 9.50 ) , the quadratic equation is obtained which has roots or , since only positive pulsatances have physical meaning Substituting for k from equation ( 9.48 ) , these pulsatances are and imposing condition ( 9.51 ) establishes that the pulsatance range corresponding to is In this range of pulsatance , the attenuation constant is zero , but from equation ( 9.15 ) there is a phase shift per section given by In the range which corresponds to pulsatances satisfying and , where and are the critical pulsatances defined in condition ( 9.52 ) , the phase shift is but there is attenuation characterised by an attenuation constant &agr; where Perhaps surprisingly , condition ( 9.52 ) yields the simple relationship