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" E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to... "
Higher Geometry and Trigonometry: Being the Third Part of a Series on ... - Page 122
by Nathan Scholfield - 1845 - 232 pages
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Isolation and Paradox: Defining The Public in Modern Political Analysis

Frank Rusciano - Political Science - 1989 - 200 pages
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Cycles and Rays

Gena Hahn, Gert Sabidussi, Robert Woodrow - Mathematics - 1989 - 282 pages
...a configuration (1) and is hamiltonian or A, B, and C have cardinality at least 2 and the only arcs from A to B, from B to C and from C to A are respectively (a,-,&;), (6,-,c,-) and (c,-,a,-) for « = 1,2. Let us assume that we are in this...
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Using ANSI C in UNIX

Werner Feibel - C (Computer program language) - 1990 - 664 pages
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The Craft of Sociology: Epistemological Preliminaries

Pierre Bourdieu, Jean-Claude Chamboredon, Jean-Claude Passeron - Sociology - 1991 - 296 pages
...terms of this model, then, the process of embourgeoisement takes the form of a threefold movement: from (A) to (B), from (B) to (C), and from (C) to (D). Through using a model of this kind it thus becomes possible to reduce the thesis of embourgeoisement...
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How to Prove It: A Structured Approach

Daniel J. Velleman - Computers - 1994 - 324 pages
...(a, d) because (a, b), (b, c), and (c, d) were all elements of B. In other words, you could go by bus from a to b, from b to c, and from c to d. In fact, it should be clear now that for any two cities x and y, if there is a way to get from x...
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Handbook of Combinatorics

Ronald L. Graham, Martin Grotschel, Martin Grötschel, László Lovász - Computers - 2003 - 1130 pages
...called terminals. The three-terminal problem consists of finding (altogether three) arc-disjoint paths from a to b, from b to c and from c to a. Clearly, this is a special case of the three arc-disjoint paths problem but Ibaraki and Poljak observed...
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Chaos Theory in the Social Sciences: Foundations and Applications

L. Douglas Kiel, Euel W. Elliott - Business & Economics - 1997 - 364 pages
...are such that no equilibrium exists, then the majority-rule social choice function creates a mapping from a to b, from b to c, and from c to a. As in the example of the logistic function, the existence of regions that feed back into previous regions...
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Class: Critical Concepts, Volume 4

John Scott - Class consciousness - 1996 - 446 pages
...terms of this model, then, the process of embourgeoisement takes the form of a threefold movement: from (A) to (B), from (B) to (C), and from (C) to (D). Through using a model of this kind it thus becomes possible to reduce the thesis of embourgeoisement...
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