984 resultados para Maitland, Sir Peregrine
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Dealing with ancient manuscript or old printed texts often constitutes a difficult task, especially to philologists and editors, for two main reasons: the precarious state of preservation of the documents and the uncertainty regarding their origin, authenticity and authorship. These problems are aggravated by spurious versions, due to the publication of truncated works, poorly supervised miscellanies and non-authorised editions. Sir Robert Sidney’s literary text constitutes an exception amidst such vicissitudes, once the original corpus is wholly contained in a notebook exhibiting the organisation and unity conceived by the author himself. Today, there is no evidence that any loose poems, either autograph or copied by amanuenses, were in circulation among members of the Elizabethan court society. The notebook was kept in private collections for four centuries, which probably explains why it was so well preserved. In fact, only in 1984 would P.J. Croft’s fine edition bring the youngest Sidney’s Poems into light. In this work, I approach Croft’s perceptive, accurate philological study that eventually rescued from oblivion a remarkable piece both of the Elizabethan lyric poetry and of the English Renaissance, and, at the same time, look into Robert Sidney’s peculiar, careful and original formatting of his own autograph manuscript.
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The essay analises Sir Walter Raleigh's report (1595) of his search for Guiana, as well as his reflection on the New World and its inhabitants, which is, in many aspects, different from his contemporaries.
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Introdução – A perceção dos alunos acerca dos diferentes graus de Maitland quando estão a aprender a mobilizar a coluna vertebral não são conhecidas, no entanto esta informação ajudaria no desenvolvimento de estratégias de ensino/aprendizagem para que a sua aplicação seja segura e eficaz. Objetivo - Comparar a perceção dos diferentes graus na realização do movimento postero-anterior central, entre alunos e fisioterapeutas e alunos entre si. Métodos – No presente estudo observacional, analítico transversal, participaram 29 estudantes, divididos em três subgrupos, GA2 (n= 8); GA3 (n = 10) e GA4 (n = 11) e 12 fisioterapeutas. Todos os participantes realizaram num indivíduo assintomático, 5 oscilações, de cada grau, no segmento de L3. Para a recolha dos dados foi utilizado o sistema BioPlux research e para a sua análise o Software Acqknowledge, versão 3,9. O teste de Man-Whitney foi utilizado para determinar as diferenças entre alunos e fisioterapeutas na força, ritmo e amplitude dos 4 graus, e o teste Kruskal Wallis, para comparar os alunos dos diferentes anos, seguido dos testes Post Hoc de Dunn para analisar as variáveis amplitude e força entre os subgrupos. Resultados – Apenas se verificaram diferenças estatísticas entre os alunos e fisioterapeutas no que diz respeito à força na realização do grau IV (p=0,045) e entre os grupos GA2 e GA4 quanto à amplitude executada no grau I (p=0.018) e II (p=0.037) e na força aplicada no grau I (p=0.02) e III (p=0.031), nos quais os alunos do 2º ano realizaram menor amplitude e força que os do 4º ano. Conclusão -Verificaram-se diferenças na perceção da força no grau IV entre alunos e fisioterapeutas. Os alunos do 2º e 4º anos diferem entre si nos graus I e II quanto à amplitude e nos graus I e III quanto à força.
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Signal-to-interference ratio (SIR) performance of a multiband orthogonal frequency division multiplexing ultra-wideband system with residual timing offset is investigated. To do so, an exact mathematical derivation of the SIR of this system is derived. It becomes obvious that, unlike a cyclic prefixing based system, a zero padding based system is sensitive to residual timing offset.
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Tese apresentada para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários á obtenção do grau de Doutor em Línguas, Literaturas e Culturas, especialidade: Estudos Culturais
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The presence and importance of the sea as a factor that has helped shape the history of England since at least the Roman invasions of 55-54 BC (less successful, incidentally, than most of Caesar’s other military ventures ...) need no particular urging or demonstration. Nonetheless, a bird’s-eye view would necessarily survey the waves of invasions and settlements that, one after the other, came dashing over the centuries upon England’s shores; not to mention the requested invasion of 1688, Angles and Saxons, Scandinavians, Normans, they all crossed the whale’s path and cast anchor in England’s green and pleasant land. In the course of this retrospective voyage through the oceans of History, one would inevitably stop at the so-called ‘Discoveries’ of the 15th-16th centuries, meet their navigators, sailors and pirates extolled by Richard Hakluyt (1553?-1616), face an anonymous crowd of merchants and witness the huge expansion of trade, largely to the benefit of the ‘discovering’ countries as prescribed by the economic Gospel Adam Smith (1723-90) would later baptize as “mercantilism”.
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v.4(1935)