But any archived SEP entry is citable.
Only one entry per Entrant will be accepted.
Entry for children aged 3 and younger is free at all times.
It can be a multiple-choice question with buttons, a free-form fill-in-the-blank text entry, an entry in which the user needs to assign a star rating, a date entry, and more.
To gain free entry, each child must be a badge holder with a valid badge card.
Further coverage can be found in the SEP entry on the experience and perception of time.
Yet, this entry will accomplish something other than what that entry does.
As of the December 2012 update, the credited authors for this entry are Olimpia Lombardi and Dennis Dieks.
Some of the material from Section 4 of this entry is also presented in Section 3 of that entry.
Any excess entry will be disregarded so please ensure your entry does not run over the maximum length.
The author would like to acknowledge the work of Antony Honoré and John Gardner on the previous entry in the SEP on this entry.
Likewise, in Prior’s tense logic (see the entry Arthur Prior), quantification over times is confined to the metalanguage (see the entry time).
To make the citation process easier, each entry has an “Author and Citation Info” link in the box of menu items located at the top left corner of the entry.
Thanks to Henry Laycock, author of the original SEP entry for ‘Object’; we learned much from his entry, especially his research into primary sources on the topic.
I am also indebted to an anonymous referee who made many comments, suggestions, and corrections on an earlier draft of the 2014 entry and two referees for this entry who did the same.
A full evaluation of externalist versions of foundationalism is far beyond the scope of this entry (see the entry on internalist and externalist conceptions of epistemic justification).
To get the current citation information for the Donald Davidson entry or any other entry, please go to the entry and click on the “Author and Citation Info” link in the menu list located in the box at the top left corner of each entry.
• By submitting an entry, you agree that The Economist may at its sole discretion edit, adapt, abridge or translate the entry for the purposes listed in these terms and conditions (even if you don’t win we may, for example, publish your entry or excerpts from it as a runner-up in the Competition).
By submitting an Entry, you represent and warrant that you own the full rights to the Entry and have obtained any and all necessary consents, permissions, approvals and licenses to submit the Entry and comply with all of these Official Rules, and that the submitted Entry is your sole original work, has not been previously published, released or distributed, and does not infringe any third-party rights or violate any laws or regulations.
One may distinguish three rough degrees of difficulty in entering an industry: blockaded entry, which allows established sellers to set monopolistic prices, if they wish, without attracting entry; impeded entry, which allows established sellers to raise their selling prices above minimal average costs, but not as high as a monopolist’s price, without attracting new sellers; and easy entry, which does not permit established sellers to raise their prices at all above minimal average costs without attracting new entrants.
Entry
noun communication
- an item inserted in a written record
noun act
- the act of beginning something new
noun possession
- a written record of a commercial transaction
noun communication
- something (manuscripts or architectural plans and models or estimates or works of art of all genres etc.) submitted for the judgment of others (as in a competition)
noun artifact
- something that provides access (to get in or get out)
noun act
- the act of entering
On this page, there are 20 sentence examples for Entry. They are all from high-quality sources and constantly processed by lengusa's machine learning routines.
Grid-Flow technology
Just use the " " button to fragment sentence examples and start your learning flow.
Example output from one of your searches:
One may distinguish three rough degrees of difficulty in entering an industry blockaded entry which allows established sellers to set monopolistic prices if they wish without attracting entry impeded entry which allows established sellers to raise their selling prices above minimal average costs but not as high as a monopolists price without attracting new sellers and easy entry which does not permit established sellers to raise their prices at all above minimal average costs without attracting new entrants