Results 151 to 160 of about 117,861 (199)
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Athletic identity and disordered eating in obligatory and non-obligatory runners

Journal of Sports Sciences, 2011
Athletic identity is the extent to which an individual identifies with being an athlete. Strong "running" role identity may contribute to increased restrictive dieting behaviours, potentially placing such individuals at risk for eating disorders. In this study, we examined differences in eating and exercise behaviours/attitudes and athletic identity in
Jennifer I, Gapin, Steven J, Petruzzello
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The Obligatory Exerciser

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 2005
A small group of patients are overly committed to their exercise routines, possibly to the detriment of their physical and psychological well-being. The concept of obligatory exercise is difficult to define, and its prevalence has not been extensively studied.
John, Draeger   +2 more
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Obligatory and Non-Obligatory Control

2000
In chapter 2 we capitalized on a distinction within the category of Obligatory Control (OC), namely that between Exhaustive and Partial Control. In this we turn our attention to the distinction between Obligatory and Non-Obligatory Control. Specifically, we will address the following questions: (1) a. Distribution:Wheredo OC and NOC obtain?
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OBLIGATORY PRECAUTIONS AGAINST INFECTION

Bioethics, 2005
ABSTRACTIf we have a duty not to infect others, how far does it go? This question is often discussed with respect to HIV transmission, but reflection on other diseases like influenza raises a number of interesting theoretical issues. I argue that a duty to avoid infection not only yields requirements for persons who know they carry a disease, but also ...
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Obligatory Implicatures and Grammaticality

2012
The paper explores some puzzling data on number agreement with disjunctive noun phrases in Russian. Specifically, it is shown that plural agreement can be blocked as a result of scalar implicature calculation. More generally, I propose that a sentence can be judged ungrammatical when it has scalar implicatures that contradict each other and that cannot
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The Obligatory Indian

Dialectical Anthropology, 2011
Anthropologists are prone to convolution, and one reason is our penchant for thriving on category errors. One such error dates back to Columbus?that the first human inhabitants of the Western Hemisphere were Indians. This was an appealing misapprehension of a wide spectrum of people that has become essential to how other category errors?such as the ...
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“Obligatory Technologies”

Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2012
The ideas of technological determinism and the autonomy of technology are long-standing and widespread. This article explores why the use of certain technologies is perceived to be obligatory, thus fueling the fatalism of technological determinism and undermining our sense of freedom vis-à-vis the use of technologies.
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Not obligatory

Asia-Pacific Language Variation, 2015
This is the first quantitative study of bound pronoun variation in an Australian language. Bound pronouns in Gurindji and Bilinarra (Ngumpin-Yapa, Pama-Nyungan) are obligatory for first and second persons, categorically absent for the third person minimal, and used 73% of the time to cross-reference third person non-minimal referents and minimal third ...
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Imperatives as Obligatory and Permitted Actions

2003
We present a dynamic deontic model for the interpretation of imperative sentences in terms of Obligation (O) and Permission (P). Under the view that imperatives prescribe actions and unlike the so-called "standard solution" (Huntley [10]) these operators act over actions rather that over statements.
Miguel Pérez-Ramírez, Chris Fox
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The Effeminate Passive Obligatory Homosexual

Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry, 1958
Introduction The Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Mo., receives all effeminate homosexuals who are incarcerated in the Federal prison system, so that they may receive psychiatric supervision and custodial control. Their effeminacy makes it impossible for them to live in regular prisons because of (1) the danger of their being ...
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