Results 21 to 30 of about 1,208 (260)
Real strongly monolithic characters of finite groups
Abstract In this paper, we are interested in the real-valued strongly monolithic characters of finite groups. We give some criteria for solvability and normal p -complements of finite groups by their real-valued strongly monolithic characters.
Temha Erkoc, Demir Ömer
exaly +2 more sources
Ethnicity and the performance of identity
This essay looks into the novels of two Indonesian women writers, Perempuan Kembang Jepun (Lan Fang 2009) and Dimsum terakhir (Clara Ng 2006), which depict the struggles of the major female characters in negotiating their "hybrid" identities amidst the ...
Manneke Budiman
doaj +3 more sources
On the codegrees of strongly monolithic characters of finite groups
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017 ...
Erkoç, Temha, Yılmaztürk, Utku
core +2 more sources
A Study On the Kernels of Irreducible Characters of Finite Groups
Let G be a finite group and χ∈Irr(G), where Irr(G) denotes the set of all irreducible characters of G. The kernel of χ is defined by ker(χ)={ g∈G ┤| χ(g)=χ(1)}, where χ(1) is the character degree of χ. The irreducible character χ of G is called as
Temha Erkoç, Burcu Çınarcı
doaj +1 more source
The study is aimed to develop a monolithic controlled matrix transdermal patches containing Metoclopramide as a model drug by solvent casting method.
Zunaira Sarwar +5 more
doaj +1 more source
This paper examines how participants in mediated political discourse use short narratives strategically to account for discursive action by contextualising and re-contextualising their discursive selves, particular discursive acts and their intended and ...
Anita Fetzer
doaj +1 more source
The Neoliberal Nostrum: Spatial Fix in Ian McEwan’s Solar
Ian McEwan’s Solar has been the subject of many a debate, mostly due to its controversial representation of climate change’s cause and the solution offered for the global disaster.
Seyed Mohammad Marandi +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Ploughing the Field: YA in Translation
In agricultural terminology, ‘monoculture’ describes the cultivation of a single crop, to the exclusion of others. In YA, fictional monoculturalism can lead, at best, to monotonous stories in which the same (white, able, cisgender, heterosexual, and ...
Emily Corbett, Leah Phillips
doaj +1 more source
A Comparative Study of the Novel Kharej Al-Jasad from the Efaf Al-Batayeneh and Kowli Kenar -e- Atash by Moniro Ravanipour; Based on Feminist elements [PDF]
1.Introduction In the field of contemporary Arabic and Persian literature, Afaf al-Batayneh and Moniro Ravanipour are two well-known figures who have sought to identify women by creating various works of fiction.
Vahab Moradian +2 more
doaj +1 more source

