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Sociologya principle, ideal, goal, or movement to which a person or group is dedicated: the Socialist cause; the human rights cause. The provisional number of weekly deaths registered in England and Wales is published online by the Office for National Statistics ( ONS). Data interpretation and further information Excess mortality is calculated as the observed minus the expected number of deaths in weeks above threshold. Inherited from Old French cause, borrowed from Classical Latin causa. Compare chose, an inherited doublet. Your sentence mixes the plural rooms with the singular factor, making it hard for you to figure out which form the verb cause(s) should take. (This isn’t necessarily ungrammatical, but sometimes this can make a sentence sound odd.)

cause”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC. The union made common cause with the government in an effort to keep the factory from leaving town.

This weekly mortality surveillance aims to detect and report acute significant weekly excess mortality above normal seasonal levels in a timely fashion. Excess mortality is defined as a significant (above the upper 2 z-score threshold) number of deaths reported over that expected for a given point in the year, allowing for weekly variation in the number of deaths. A z-score is a statistical measure of how many standard deviations above the baseline threshold the number of deaths were. For example, a z-score of 2 means that the number of deaths were 2 standard deviations above the baseline threshold. Aristotelianism. ]any of the four things necessary for the movement or the coming into being of a thing, namely a material ( material cause,) something to act upon it ( efficient cause,) a form taken by the movement or development ( formal cause,) and a goal or purpose ( final cause.) Affect me [with revulsion] like the smell of a cheap cigar left smoldering in an ashtray —Jonathan Valin The change [in living accommodations] would be like going from Purgatory to Paradise —Louisa May Alcott

The COVID-19 pandemic period from March 2020 to March 2022 is excluded from the baseline thresholds calculation. Excess mortality triggers further investigation of spikes and informs any public health responses. It [forcing an old priest into retirement] was just like ripping an old tree out of the ground —W. P. Kinsella From Middle English cause (also with the sense of “a thing”), borrowed from Old French cause ( “ a cause, a thing ” ), borrowed from Latin causa ( “ reason, sake, cause ” ), from Proto-Italic *kaussā, which is of unknown origin. See accuse, excuse, recuse, ruse. Displaced native Old English intinga. work together for the same end: They made common cause with neighboring countries and succeeded in reducing tariffs. Russian: причиня́ть (ru) ( pričinjátʹ ), производи́ть (ru) ( proizvodítʹ ), заставля́ть (ru) ( zastavljátʹ ), вызыва́ть (ru) ( vyzyvátʹ )a person or thing that acts, happens, or exists in such a way that some specific thing happens as a result; Cause she won't be taking anything good. Because they'll be doing rough and tumble stuff - English Only forum

Without probable cause, much less a warrant, the police were unable to search the suspect's car, where they were sure he kept some drugs. In England, statistically significant excess mortality by week of death above the 2 z-score threshold was not seen overall in week 43 of 2023, nor in any region. A statistically significant excess was seen in the 5 to 14 years age group only. This was after correcting General Register Office ( GRO) disaggregate data for reporting delay with the standardised EuroMOMO algorithm (Figure 1). The aim is not to assess general mortality trends or precisely estimate the excess attributable to different factors, although some end-of-winter estimates and more in-depth analyses (by age, geography, and so on) are undertaken.

Mandarin: (please verify) 使 (zh) ( shǐ ), (please verify) 使得 (zh) ( shǐde ), (please verify) 令 (zh) ( lìng ), (please verify) 惹 (zh) ( rě ) In the devolved administrations, no statistically significant excess all-cause mortality for all ages was observed in Northern Ireland, Scotland or Wales in week 43. A blast of Prince [music] … ) hit me like a feather boa with a length of lead pipe in it —Jonathan Valin

La camicia macchiata di sangue diede agli inquirenti la prova di colpevolezza per arrestare il sospetto assassino.

Noun Weather is the number one cause of power outages, according to Climate Central. — Jim Foerster, Forbes, 13 Nov. 2023 The Texas law enforcement agencies that did not find cause to charge Barnes have no involvement in the trial, despite the case pertaining to allegations from their state. — Jared Kofsky, ABC News, 13 Nov. 2023 South China Morning Post AROUND THE WATERCOOLER Flexible work could decrease risk for the No. 1 cause of death in America, new Harvard research finds by Trey Willams Recession? — Alan Murray, Fortune, 13 Nov. 2023 In a new study in Nature Communications, the researchers identify the likely cause: a type of bacterium called Bisgaard taxon 45. — Will Sullivan, Smithsonian Magazine, 13 Nov. 2023 In meetings of the G-7 and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Washington should also offer analysis of the causes, extent and spillover implications of a slowing Chinese economy. — Daniel H. Rosen, Foreign Affairs, 13 Nov. 2023 When the government did not, the group began staging protests and disruptions to call attention to their cause—from climbing on oil tankers to interrupting the British Academy Film Awards (BAFTAs) red carpet event. — Mallory Moench, TIME, 11 Nov. 2023 Walter Cunningham, the Last Surviving Apollo 7 Astronaut, Dead at 90: 'True Hero' Has a disruptive effect … like a torpedo coming down Main Street —Anon politician on Gramm-Rudman Law, February, 1986 cause”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language ], 2012. cause oblique singular, f ( oblique plural causes, nominative singular cause, nominative plural causes)

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