demic


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demic

(ˈdɛmɪk)
adj
characteristic of or pertaining to a people or population
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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"The RTVM headed by Director Demic Pabalan and the team of DirectorJoyce Bernal are 100 percent ready.
The source said Radio TV Malacanang Director Demic Pabalan, Director Joyce Bernal, Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo, Undersecretary Melchor Quitain, Communications Secretary Martin Andanar, and former Special Assistant to the President but now Senator Bong Go assisted the Chief Executive during his practice at the Palace's Rizal Hall.
I interviewed him in 1992 shortly after his forecast that "we could virtually lose a generation of people." Lacey was good, sparky company as he led me around the meat counter of a big supermarkein Leeds, exclaiming loudly: "How oearth can peopl bring themselve to eat this muck?'' He believed thuman BSE ep demic would strik at about the turn o the century: "Ou current estimatis something between 25,000 and two-and-a-half million from about 1996.'' Yet for all his authority, scholarship and confidence, Richard Lacey's warning has not come true.
It is best then, to attempt to put this matter to rest by asking Jimmy Wales himself, the founder of Wikipedia, what he thinks of his site being used for aca- demic research.
In this essay, we discuss current data on the Bronze Age in this area, with a specific focus on these demic and cultural diffusions between Central Asia and the northwestern regions of the Indian subcontinent (figure 1).
The term demic refers to as the dispersal of population into and across an area that had been priory uninhabited by segregation mutation.
These "smears" were in fact engravings, each spelling out a prefix or suffix for describing intersections of the body, politics, and the environment: SOCIO-, -ROTIC, E-, -ZONE, POLY-, -TICAL, BIO-, and DEMIC. This installation, flexible fragmentation-compression process (all works 2018), established the material and topical framework of the show, which featured fourteen specially printed photographs mounted on variously colored rectangles of Plexiglas.
[1] Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Academic Medical Center, University of Amster dam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; [2] Laboratory Experimental Clinical Chemistry, Aca demic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; [3] Vesicle Observation Center, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; [4]Biological Nanochemistry Research Group, Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary; [5] Department of Biophysics and Radiation Biology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.
"The study of religion from an aca demic, non-devotional perspective in primary, middle and secondary school is critical for decreasing religious illiteracy and the bigotry and prejudice it fuels," the guidelines state.
Adisa Demic, Spokesperson for "Novi Put" Association has pointed out before the beginning of the Panel Discussion on Human Trafficking held in Mostar, that, on the basis on the data that the Association receives from the BiH Ministry of Security in this year, 48 people in BiH were registered as the victims of trafficking, adding that 'gray numbers' that are really far greater than the mentioned number are to be worried about.
[2] Not long afterwards, several massive, multidimensional, long-term clinical studies showed a relationship between A[beta] deposition in the brain and dementia using demic biomarker analysis.