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The Origin of the Peculiarities of the Vietnamese Alphabet André-Georges Haudricourt
The origin of the peculiarities of the Vietnamese alphabet André-Georges Haudricourt To cite this version: André-Georges Haudricourt. The origin of the peculiarities of the Vietnamese alphabet. Mon-Khmer Studies, 2010, 39, pp.89-104. halshs-00918824v2 HAL Id: halshs-00918824 https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00918824v2 Submitted on 17 Dec 2013 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Published in Mon-Khmer Studies 39. 89–104 (2010). The origin of the peculiarities of the Vietnamese alphabet by André-Georges Haudricourt Translated by Alexis Michaud, LACITO-CNRS, France Originally published as: L’origine des particularités de l’alphabet vietnamien, Dân Việt Nam 3:61-68, 1949. Translator’s foreword André-Georges Haudricourt’s contribution to Southeast Asian studies is internationally acknowledged, witness the Haudricourt Festschrift (Suriya, Thomas and Suwilai 1985). However, many of Haudricourt’s works are not yet available to the English-reading public. A volume of the most important papers by André-Georges Haudricourt, translated by an international team of specialists, is currently in preparation. Its aim is to share with the English- speaking academic community Haudricourt’s seminal publications, many of which address issues in Southeast Asian languages, linguistics and social anthropology. -
21Ia'b;Q'c/Ablc (C/A)(C/B).__(C)(C/Ab)
ON THE q-ANALOG OF KUMMER’$ THEOREM AND APPLICATIONS GEORGE E. ANDREWS 1. Introduction. The q-analogs for Gauss’s summation of 2Fl[a, b; c; 1] and Saalschutz’s summation of 3F2[a, b, -n; c, a b c n 1; 1] are well known, namely, E. Heine [8; p. 107, Equation (6)] showed that (1.1) 21Ia’ b;q’c/ablc (c/a)(c/b).__(c)(c/ab) where - - and (a). (a; q), (1 -a)(1 -aq) (1 -aq-a), (a) (a; q),(R) lim,. (a),. (See also [12; p. 97, Equation (3.3.2.2)].) F. H. Jackson [9; p. 145] showed that b, q-"; q, (c/a),,(c/b). (c),,(c/ab), a2ia, c, abq/cq ql The q-analog of Dixon’s summation of 3F[a, b, c; 1 a b, 1 -[- a c; 1] was more difficult to find, and indeed only a partial analog is true; namely, W. N. Bailey [5] and F. tI. Jackson [10; p. 167, Equation (2)] proved that if a where n is a positive integer, then b, c; q, qa[ bc | (b/a),(c/a)(qa)(bca-). (1.3) 34 | ba-)-(ai (a- qa) bca-1), b,c There are three other well-known summations for the .F1 series, namely, Kummer’s theorem [12; p. 243, Equation (III. 5)] r(1%a-- b) (1.4) 2F[a, b; 1 a- b;--1] r(1 Gauss’s second theorem [12; p. 243, Equation III. 6)] Received December 23, 1972. The author ws partiMly supported by NtioaM Science Foundation Grat GP-23774. -
General Probability, II: Independence and Conditional Proba- Bility
Math 408, Actuarial Statistics I A.J. Hildebrand General Probability, II: Independence and conditional proba- bility Definitions and properties 1. Independence: A and B are called independent if they satisfy the product formula P (A ∩ B) = P (A)P (B). 2. Conditional probability: The conditional probability of A given B is denoted by P (A|B) and defined by the formula P (A ∩ B) P (A|B) = , P (B) provided P (B) > 0. (If P (B) = 0, the conditional probability is not defined.) 3. Independence of complements: If A and B are independent, then so are A and B0, A0 and B, and A0 and B0. 4. Connection between independence and conditional probability: If the con- ditional probability P (A|B) is equal to the ordinary (“unconditional”) probability P (A), then A and B are independent. Conversely, if A and B are independent, then P (A|B) = P (A) (assuming P (B) > 0). 5. Complement rule for conditional probabilities: P (A0|B) = 1 − P (A|B). That is, with respect to the first argument, A, the conditional probability P (A|B) satisfies the ordinary complement rule. 6. Multiplication rule: P (A ∩ B) = P (A|B)P (B) Some special cases • If P (A) = 0 or P (B) = 0 then A and B are independent. The same holds when P (A) = 1 or P (B) = 1. • If B = A or B = A0, A and B are not independent except in the above trivial case when P (A) or P (B) is 0 or 1. In other words, an event A which has probability strictly between 0 and 1 is not independent of itself or of its complement. -
Nuclear Data Library for Incident Proton Energies to 150 Mev
LA-UR-00-1067 Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. 7Li(p,n) Nuclear Data Library for Incident Proton Title: Energies to 150 MeV Author(s): S. G. Mashnik, M. B. Chadwick, P. G. Young, R. E. MacFarlane, and L. S. Waters Submitted to: http://lib-www.lanl.gov/la-pubs/00393814.pdf Los Alamos National Laboratory, an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer, is operated by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract W-7405-ENG-36. By acceptance of this article, the publisher recognizes that the U.S. Government retains a nonexclusive, royalty- free license to publish or reproduce the published form of this contribution, or to allow others to do so, for U.S. Government purposes. Los Alamos National Laboratory requests that the publisher identify this article as work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy. Los Alamos National Laboratory strongly supports academic freedom and a researcher's right to publish; as an institution, however, the Laboratory does not endorse the viewpoint of a publication or guarantee its technical correctness. FORM 836 (10/96) Li(p,n) Nuclear Data Library for Incident Proton Energies to 150 MeV S. G. Mashnik, M. B. Chadwick, P. G. Young, R. E. MacFarlane, and L. S. Waters Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545 Abstract Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory are considering the possibility of using the Low Energy Demonstration Accelerator (LEDA), constructed at LANSCE for the Ac- celerator Production of Tritium program (APT), as a neutron source. Evaluated nuclear data are needed for the p+ ¡ Li reaction, to predict neutron production from thin and thick lithium targets. -
Grading System the Grades of A, B, C, D and P Are Passing Grades
Grading System The grades of A, B, C, D and P are passing grades. Grades of F and U are failing grades. R and I are interim grades. Grades of W and X are final grades carrying no credit. Individual instructors determine criteria for letter grade assignments described in individual course syllabi. Explanation of Grades The quality of performance in any academic course is reported by a letter grade, assigned by the instructor. These grades denote the character of study and are assigned quality points as follows: A Excellent 4 grade points per credit B Good 3 grade points per credit C Average 2 grade points per credit D Poor 1 grade point per credit F Failure 0 grade points per credit I Incomplete No credit, used for verifiable, unavoidable reasons. Requirements for satisfactory completion are established through student/faculty consultation. Courses for which the grade of I (incomplete) is awarded must be completed by the end of the subsequent semester or another grade (A, B, C, D, F, W, P, R, S and U) is awarded by the instructor based upon completed course work. In the case of I grades earned at the end of the spring semester, students have through the end of the following fall semester to complete the requirements. In exceptional cases, extensions of time needed to complete course work for I grades may be granted beyond the subsequent semester, with the written approval of the vice president of learning. An I grade can change to a W grade only under documented mitigating circumstances. The vice president of learning must approve the grade change. -
Wednesday, October 10, 2018 Schedule-At-A-Glance
Wednesday, October 10, 2018 Schedule-at-a-Glance 6:30 am – 7:10 am ONSITE REGISTRATION/NETWORKING – LOBBY – TEXAS WOMAN’S Continental Breakfast UNIVERSITY 7:10am – 7:30am ACHE-SETC Welcome & Opening Session Paul C. O’Sullivan, FACHE, President, ACHE-SETC Todd A. Caliva, FACHE, President, Educational Foundation of the SETC Opening Session Speaker: Major General (Ret.) Mary Saunders, Executive Director, Institute for Women’s Leadership, Texas Woman’s University, Denton, TX 7:30am – 9:00 ACHE F2F Panel Discussion (1.5 CEUs) #1: Leadership Development for Developing Leaders Moderator: Deborah L. Smith, PhD, RT(R), MBB, MCF, Jonah Strategy Consultant, Mentor/Coach – Aurora, CO Panelists: Ashley McClellan, FACHE, President/CEO, Woman's Hospital of Texas – Houston, Texas Judy Le, President, TakeRoot Leadership – Houston, TX J. Bryan Bennett, Executive Director, Healthcare Center of Excellence, Chicago, IL 9:00am = 9:15 BREAK 9:15am – 10:45 ACHE F2F Panel Discussion (1.5 CEUs) #2: Successfully Leading Change in Healthcare Organizations Moderator: Jack Buckley, FACHE, Executive-in-Residence, Texas A&M MHA Program – College Station, TX Panelists: Deborah L. Smith, PhD, RT(R), MBB, MCF, Strategy Consultant, Mentor/Coach – Aurora, Colorado Carla Braxton, MD, Chief Quality Officer, Houston Methodist, West/Houston Methodist St, Catherine, Katy, TX Troy Villarreal, FACHE, President, HCA Gulf Coast Division, Houston, TX 10:45am – 11:00 BREAK 11:00am – 12Noon Breakout Sessions W1A-1E – 60 Minute Concurrent Sessions W1A – Special Topic – Guest Speaker -
P-EBT for the 2020 – 2021 School Year
P-EBT for the 2020 – 2021 school year OVERVIEW The Maine Department of Health and Human Services, Office for Family Independence, has been approved by the Food and Nutrition Service to issue Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) benefits to qualified children. Children from ages 0 – 5 will receive P-EBT benefits retroactively on a month-by-month basis from October 2020 through June 2021 if they were both in a SNAP eligible household and one school in their county was not utilizing a predominately in-person learning model. Children who were eligible for the USDA National School Lunch and School Breakfast Program will receive benefits retroactively from September 2020 through June 2021 on a month-by-month basis if their school was utilizing a predominately hybrid or fully remote learning model. The benefit for fully remote learning models is ~ $119 per child per month. The benefit for a hybrid learning model is ~ $59 per child per month. Issuance of P- EBT benefits began June 16 th for the months of October through December. Benefits for January through March 2021 were issued July 15 th . Current and recent SNAP recipients will receive P-EBT on their EBT card. P-EBT benefits for other children will be sent to each child on a P-EBT card. • All EBT and P-EBT cards are currently taking 10 - 14 days to get to recipients due to postal delays. • More details are available at https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/ofi/programs-services/food- supplement which will be updated as more information (such as issuance dates) becomes available. -
1:30 Pm TMC Executive Offices Council Members Present
VOLUNTEER SERVICES COUNCIL September 26, 2017 12 – 1:30 p.m. TMC Executive Offices Council Members Present: Courtney Hoyt, Harris Health System Jessica Segal, Harris Health System Estelle Luckenbach, San Jose Clinic Marion Schoeffield, Harris County Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program Millicent Lacy, Texas Children’s Hospital Ian Todd, Harris Health System Sarah King, Ronald McDonald House Houston Helen Villaseñor, Shriner’s Hospital for Children Cheronda Rutherford, Houston Methodist Hospital Kellye Moran, LifeGift Organ Donation Center Jacquelyn Jones, Memorial Hermann Mayra Cantu, Memorial Hermann Irma Almaguer, TIRR Memorial Hermann Frankie Duenes, Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center Guests Present: Esmerelda Soria- Mabin Armand Viscarri TMC Members Present: Carter Fitts, Marketing Associate Tatum Boatwright, Marketing Manager Shelby Wolfenberger, Office Manager MEETING HIGHLIGHTS: I. Welcome & Introductions: Frankie Duenes, Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center • The meeting commenced shortly after noon with everyone going around the table and introducing themselves. We started off on an uplifting note sharing a few stories about our community coming together during Hurricane Harvey. II. Volunteer Workshop Planning: • The council will be hosting their second annual volunteer services workshop on October 24th from 8:30am-2:00pm at Ben Taub Hospital. • This half-day program will provide all attendees with three informational sessions that relate to volunteering. Lunch will be provided and the opportunity to tour the facility will conclude the program. We hope to see you all there! • The planned agenda is as follows: • 8:30 - 9 a.m. Check in and Coffee/Drinks • 9 - 9:45 a.m. - Session 1: Empathetic Communication – Harris Health Team • 10 - 10:45 a.m. -
Casa De Amigos: Where Dreams Become Realities Connie Myer 26 Middle East Mosaic: an Egyptian Pope Harold S
SEPTEMBER 1979 "Mission Means" entries 11111 New Series Vol. XXXX No. 1 • Whole Series Vol. LXVIX No. 8 • September 1979 3 Mission Memo 7 Editorials 8 Mission Means .. 9 Promises to Keep Nancy Veglahn 11 Call and Response Velma Mitchell 13 That of God in Every Man Dorothy A. Stickel! 13 Poem: Senility 15 A Selection of Posters 20 Mission on Friendship Square Natalie Barber 22 Casa de Amigos: Where Dreams Become Realities Connie Myer 26 Middle East Mosaic: An Egyptian Pope Harold S. Vogelaar 29 Bob Nakata Organizes the Home Folks Alex Vergara 33 The Cross Over Kujyo Community Jack Mcintosh 35 A New Kind of Hispanic Church Charley Lerrigo 37 Kamala Edwards Goes Home Ruth Dinkins Rowan 38 Recruiting Blacks for the Ministry Dwight Stewart 39 A Report to Our Readers Beverly J. Chain 41 Special Report: Faith, Science and the Future Arthur J. Moore 43 Books 44 Letters 45 The Moving Finger Writes COVER Detail from "Mission Means Mending Mankind," Poster by Irene Roderick, Austin, Texas Editor, Arthur J. Moore; Managing Editor, Charles E. Brewster Associate Editor, Ellen Clark; Art Director, Roger C. Sadler Administrative Assistant, Florence J. Mitchell 475 Riverside Drive, New York, New York 10027 Published Monthly (bimonthly, July-August) by the Board of Global Ministries of the United Methodist Church, Education and Cultivation Division, in association with the United Presbyterian Church, USA. Second-class Mail Privileges Authorized at New York, N.Y. Additional Entry at Nashville, Tennessee. Copyright 1979 by Board of Global Ministries of the United Methodist Church. No part of New World Outlook may be reproduced in any form without written permission from Editors. -
Proposal for Generation Panel for Latin Script Label Generation Ruleset for the Root Zone
Generation Panel for Latin Script Label Generation Ruleset for the Root Zone Proposal for Generation Panel for Latin Script Label Generation Ruleset for the Root Zone Table of Contents 1. General Information 2 1.1 Use of Latin Script characters in domain names 3 1.2 Target Script for the Proposed Generation Panel 4 1.2.1 Diacritics 5 1.3 Countries with significant user communities using Latin script 6 2. Proposed Initial Composition of the Panel and Relationship with Past Work or Working Groups 7 3. Work Plan 13 3.1 Suggested Timeline with Significant Milestones 13 3.2 Sources for funding travel and logistics 16 3.3 Need for ICANN provided advisors 17 4. References 17 1 Generation Panel for Latin Script Label Generation Ruleset for the Root Zone 1. General Information The Latin script1 or Roman script is a major writing system of the world today, and the most widely used in terms of number of languages and number of speakers, with circa 70% of the world’s readers and writers making use of this script2 (Wikipedia). Historically, it is derived from the Greek alphabet, as is the Cyrillic script. The Greek alphabet is in turn derived from the Phoenician alphabet which dates to the mid-11th century BC and is itself based on older scripts. This explains why Latin, Cyrillic and Greek share some letters, which may become relevant to the ruleset in the form of cross-script variants. The Latin alphabet itself originated in Italy in the 7th Century BC. The original alphabet contained 21 upper case only letters: A, B, C, D, E, F, Z, H, I, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, V and X. -
Defining Z in Q 75
Annals of Mathematics 183 (2016), 73{93 http://dx.doi.org/10.4007/annals.2016.183.1.2 Defining Z in Q By Jochen Koenigsmann Abstract We show that Z is definable in Q by a universal first-order formula in the language of rings. We also present an 89-formula for Z in Q with just one universal quantifier. We exhibit new diophantine subsets of Q like the complement of the image of the norm map under a quadratic extension, and we give an elementary proof for the fact that the set of nonsquares is diophantine. 1. Z is universally definable in Q Hilbert's 10th problem was to find a general algorithm for deciding, given n any n and any polynomial f 2 Z[x1; : : : ; xn], whether or not f has a zero in Z . Building on earlier work by Martin Davis, Hilary Putnam and Julia Robinson, Yuri Matiyasevich proved in 1970 that there can be no such algorithm. In particular, the existential first-order theory Th9(Z) of Z (in the language of rings Lring := f+; ·; 0; 1g) is undecidable. Hilbert's 10th problem over Q, i.e., the question whether Th9(Q) is decidable, is still open. If one had an existential (or diophantine) definition of Z in Q (i.e., a definition by an existential first-order Lring-formula), then Th9(Z) would be interpretable in Th9(Q), and the answer would, by Matiyasevich's Theorem, again be no. But it is still open whether Z is existentially definable in Q. The earliest first-order definition of Z in Q, which is due to Julia Robinson ([Rob49]), can be expressed by an 898-formula of the shape φ(t): 8x18x29y1 · · · 9y78z1 · · · 8z6 f(t; x1; x2; y1; : : : ; y7; z1; : : : ; z6) = 0 for some f 2 Z[t; x1; x2; y1; : : : ; y7; z1; : : : ; z6]; i.e., for any t 2 Q, t 2 Z if and only if φ(t) holds in Q: The research on this paper started while the author enjoyed the hospitality of the Max- Planck-Institut Bonn. -
Agendas May Be Obtained in Advance of the Court Meeting in the Office of Coordination
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC MEETING August 7, 2015 Notice is hereby given that a meeting of the Commissioners Court of Harris County, Texas, will be held on Tuesday, August 11, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. in the Courtroom of the Commissioners Court of Harris County, Texas, on the ninth floor of the Harris County Administration Building, 1001 Preston Avenue, Houston, Texas, for the purpose of considering and taking action on matters brought before the Court. Agendas may be obtained in advance of the court meeting in the Office of Coordination & Budget, Suite 938, Administration Building, 1001 Preston Avenue, Houston, Texas, in the Commissioners Court Courtroom on the day of the meeting, or via the internet at www.harriscountytx.gov/agenda. Stan Stanart, County Clerk and Ex-Officio Clerk of Commissioners Court of Harris County, Texas Olga Z. Mauzy, Director Commissioners Court Records HARRIS COUNTY, TEXAS 1001 Preston, Suite 938 Houston, Texas 77002-1817 (713) 755-5113 COMMISSIONERS COURT Ed Emmett El Franco Lee Jack Morman Steve Radack R. Jack Cagle County Judge Commissioner, Precinct 1 Commissioner, Precinct 2 Commissioner, Precinct 3 Commissioner, Precinct 4 No. 15.14 A G E N D A August 11, 2015 10:00 a.m. Opening prayer by Reverend Deacon Iakovos Varcados of Saint Basil the Great Greek Orthodox Church in Houston. I. Departments 15. District Courts 16. Travel & Training 1. Public Infrastructure a. Out of Texas a. County Engineer b. In Texas 1. Construction Programs 17. Grants 2. Engineering 18. Fiscal Services & Purchasing 3. Right of Way a. Auditor b. Flood Control District b.