Use "a posteriori" in a sentence

1. ‘A posteriori’ commitments

2. ‘EMITIDO A POSTERIORI

3. A posteriori checks

4. Apostatize (Thesaurus) apostate a posteriori

5. A priori or a posteriori?

6. • B. A Posteriori Internal Control

7. ES: ‘EXPEDIDO A POSTERIORI

8. The projects were finalised a posteriori.

9. A posteriori control of TIR Carnet holders.

10. 44, remedy or change this situation a posteriori.

11. Further a posteriori tests were also carried out

12. DGDDI: Systematic a posteriori verification of the declaration

13. an a posteriori verification system is being adopted;

14. A posteriori control of TIR Carnet holders. Exclusion and withdrawals

15. This is why we need a posteriori control and accountability.

16. Other instances of a posteriori necessary truths include: "H2O is water".

17. Should alternative statistical methods be considered? a priori? a posteriori?

18. It was not therefore strictly speaking a saisine a posteriori.

19. A posteriori selectivity system (for the analysis of customs and investigation documents);

20. Such conformity can be verified on a preventive basis or a posteriori.

21. Furthermore, it is not possible to submit a posteriori amended commercial invoices.

22. simplest system and the least costly to set up (a posteriori control).

23. All of that should be true both a priori and a posteriori .

24. A posteriori the court of auditors and regional audit bodies examine the accounts.

25. The difference between the two amounts will need to be adjusted a posteriori;

26. The Committee has always backed initiatives to simplify, a posteriori, the Community acquis

27. In the first one, integration is made a posteriori by trial and error.

28. Implementation of this constitutional provision may take place a priori or a posteriori.

29. (10) The difference between the two amounts will be adjusted a posteriori;

30. (b) Collection a posteriori of the amount required for an annual vignette

31. IN SUCH CASES IT MUST BEAR THE ENDORSEMENT " DELIVRE A POSTERIORI " OR " ISSUED RETROSPECTIVELY " .

32. In its view, the Commission cannot rectify a posteriori acts affected by the nullity.

33. IN SUCH CASES THEY MUST BEAR THE ENDORSEMENT " DELIVRE A POSTERIORI " OR " ISSUED RETROSPECTIVELY " .

34. (10) The difference between the two amounts will need to be adjusted a posteriori;

35. This aspect cannot be separated from the function of a posteriori knowledge in Wolff’s thinking.

36. Action at European level has been reactive, 'a posteriori', seeking to forestall even greater damage.

37. duplication of other existing mechanisms (the Ombudsman, the a posteriori judicial review, etc.),

38. Other checks are carried out on public authorities, a priori and a posteriori.

39. Implementation of this constitutional provision may take place a priori or a posteriori

40. Anglish is an a posteriori conlang which was created by Bryan Parry beginning in 2004

41. In opposition, the adaptive techniques take the a posteriori contents of the images into account.

42. ‘Countries and categories subject to the system of a posteriori statistical surveillance for direct imports

43. In such cases they must bear the endorsement "délivré a posteriori" or the endorsement "issued retrospectively".

44. The Chairperson asked whether children whose age had been determined a posteriori could obtain identity documents.

45. The ECVET mechanism constitutes a method. Europass registers a posteriori one or several European training pathways.

46. In such cases it must bear the endorsement " délivré a posteriori " or " issued retrospectively " .

47. These results obtained in a subgroup of patients a posteriori should be interpreted cautiously

48. Does the authority conduct a priori (initiating role) or a posteriori (disciplinary role) control?

49. In such cases they must bear the endorsement 'délivré a posteriori` or the endorsement 'issued retrospectively`.

50. These general provisions may already provide for the freezing — admittedly a posteriori — of assets and accounts.

51. The a posteriori errors in the quantitative yield forecasts are calculated from the final official data.

52. Furthermore, scrutiny will be exercised case by case, a posteriori, and with no respect for proper deadlines.

53. The results are based on a posteriori saturation criterial that measure the quality of the approximation solution.

54. Several States provided information on emergency procedures, whereby authorization could be given a posteriori under certain conditions.

55. In such cases they shall bear either the endorsement 'délivré a posteriori` or the endorsement 'issued retrospectively`.

56. IN SUCH CASES THEY SHALL BEAR EITHER THE ENDORSEMENT " DELIVRE A POSTERIORI " OR THE ENDORSEMENT " ISSUED RETROSPECTIVELY " .

57. Almost all games use a posteriori collision detection, and collisions are often resolved using very simple rules.

58. After Immanuel Kant, it is common in philosophy to call the knowledge thus gained a posteriori knowledge.

59. A crypt of the 11th century, dug a posteriori under the choir, also preserves frescos of the time.

60. A second level of control (a posteriori) is exercised once the entity has come into existence

61. A second level of control (a posteriori) is exercised once the entity has come into existence.

62. These general provisions may already provide for the freezing- admittedly a posteriori- of assets and accounts

63. With respect to the legality of their activities, this supervision should be exercised a posteriori only.

64. In such cases they must bear the endorsement 'delivré a posteriori` or the endorsement 'issued retrospectively`.

65. The probationary period therefore requires an objective a posteriori assessment to be made of the probationer.

66. Moreover, the Court of Auditors exercises control a posteriori over all the receipts and expenditure of the State.

67. In such cases they shall bear the endorsement ‘délivré a posteriori’ or ‘issued retrospectively’ or ‘expedido con posterioridad’.

68. involving businesses and other users in simplification upstream from regulation (SLIM committees a priori rather than a posteriori);

69. Accidental and causal regularities, singular and general causal propositions, a priori and a posteriori conceptualizations of causation are discussed.

70. Embodiments may utilize different Bayesian analysis techniques including the use of prior probability distributions and maximum a posteriori analyses.

71. We are not giving the Commission free rein, but providing it a posteriori with a measure of control.

72. In such cases they shall bear the endorsement ́délivré a posteriori' or ́issued retrospectively' or ́expedido con posterioridad'.

73. The prior, a posteriori, and updated information may be represented by joint probability distributions on channel gain and interference.

74. Should alternative statistical methods be considered? a priori? a posteriori? v. Should we ask for more quality data to rule out product failure? 4.

75. A posteriori evaluation of the priority projects should facilitate future revisions of the guidelines and of the list of priority projects and should help improve the a priori evaluation methods practised by the Member States

76. A posteriori evaluation of the priority projects should facilitate future revisions of the guidelines and of the list of priority projects and should help improve the a priori evaluation methods practised by the Member States.

77. On the basis of sequential samples — employing Bayes theorem, laid down in short — the a-priori probabilities can be transformed into a-posteriori probabilities and are used for a new operational decision, that will now be termed as a continuation decision.

78. ‘it is the oldest language spoken in Britain, with an unbroken history from Brythonic origins as part of the Celtic family of Indo-European languages from which most European languages derive.’ ‘Many are a posteriori languages, that is, variations on natural languages, like Brithenig (a mixture of the features of Brythonic and Romance

79. ‘it is the oldest language spoken in Britain, with an unbroken history from Brythonic origins as part of the Celtic family of Indo-European languages from which most European languages derive.’ ‘Many are a posteriori languages, that is, variations on natural languages, like Brithenig (a mixture of the features of Brythonic and Romance