Results 151 to 160 of about 55,332 (185)
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Philosophia, 1975
AbstractAims to reconcile a unified semantic account of conditional statements with an apparent contrast between the logics of indicative and ”subjunctive” conditionals. The difference between the two kinds of conditionals is explained in terms of different constraints imposed on the contexts relative to which the different forms of conditionals are ...
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AbstractAims to reconcile a unified semantic account of conditional statements with an apparent contrast between the logics of indicative and ”subjunctive” conditionals. The difference between the two kinds of conditionals is explained in terms of different constraints imposed on the contexts relative to which the different forms of conditionals are ...
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Nursing Management, 2010
The NHS Institute has developed a series of online workshops to provide support and guidance for senior clinical and managerial leaders on implementing the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement's Better Care, Better Value indicators. The content is provided by national experts on these indicators and the workshops are open to anyone in the NHS ...
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The NHS Institute has developed a series of online workshops to provide support and guidance for senior clinical and managerial leaders on implementing the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement's Better Care, Better Value indicators. The content is provided by national experts on these indicators and the workshops are open to anyone in the NHS ...
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Measuring: indicators - scales - indices - interpretations
2011This comprehensive Handbook serves as an excellent reference manual providing answers to virtually every conceivable question that can arise during the planning and implementation process of an evaluation.
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Dialogue and Universalism, 1995
Examples of indicative conditionals are ‘If it rained, then the match was cancelled’ and ‘If Alex plays, Carlton will win’. The contrast is with subjunctive or counterfactual conditionals, such as ‘If it had rained, then the match would have been cancelled’, and categoricals, such as ‘It will rain’.
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Examples of indicative conditionals are ‘If it rained, then the match was cancelled’ and ‘If Alex plays, Carlton will win’. The contrast is with subjunctive or counterfactual conditionals, such as ‘If it had rained, then the match would have been cancelled’, and categoricals, such as ‘It will rain’.
openaire +1 more source

