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This volume contains 28 papers by renowned international experts on
the latest advances in structural reliability methods and
applications, engineering risk analysis and decision making, new
optimization techniques and various applications in civil
engineering. Moreover, several contributions focus on the
assessment and optimization of existing structural systems. All
contributions were presented at the 15th Working Conference of the
International Federation of Information Processing (IFIP) Working
Group 7.5 on Reliability and Optimization of Structural Systems,
held at the Oskar von Miller Forum in Munich, Germany, April 2010.
Working Group 7.5's purposes are to promote modern structural
system reliability and optimization theory and its applications, to
stimulate research, development and application of structural
system reliability and optimization theory, to assist and advance
research and development in these fields, to further the
dissemination and exchange of information on reliability and
optimization of structural systems, and to encourage education in
structural system reliability and optimization theory. This volume
is intended for structural and mechanical engineers working and
researching in structural optimization and risk/reliability
analysis, applied to structural and infrastructural systems.
This standard introductory textbook presents in systematic form an
account of current English practice. The introduction provides a
full scheme of sentence analysis. Part I contains a treatment of
syntactical phenomena based on the analysis of sentences; Part II
classifies the uses of forms. Cross-references indicate how the two
parts supplement one another.
This book, first published in 1970, is the reissue of the sixth
edition of C. T. Onions' standard introductory text-book, based on
the principles and requirements of the Grammatical Society. The
Introduction is designed to provide a full scheme of sentence
analysis. The rest of the book is arranged in two parts: Part I
offers a treatment of syntactical phenomena based on the analysis
of sentences, while Part II classifies the use of forms. This book
will be of interest to students of English language and
linguistics.
This standard introductory textbook presents in systematic form an
account of current English practice. The introduction provides a
full scheme of sentence analysis. Part I contains a treatment of
syntactical phenomena based on the analysis of sentences; Part II
classifies the uses of forms. Cross-references indicate how the two
parts supplement one another.
This book, first published in 1970, is the reissue of the sixth
edition of C. T. Onions' standard introductory text-book, based on
the principles and requirements of the Grammatical Society. The
Introduction is designed to provide a full scheme of sentence
analysis. The rest of the book is arranged in two parts: Part I
offers a treatment of syntactical phenomena based on the analysis
of sentences, while Part II classifies the use of forms. This book
will be of interest to students of English language and
linguistics.
Despite the many years which have passed since Sweet first
published his Anglo-Saxon Reader, it remains a particularly
appealing and useful anthology for the student of Old English. It
contains extracts from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and Bede's
Ecclesiastical History of the English People, as well as poems
(including part of Beowulf), riddles, charters and the Preface from
King Alfred's translation of Gregory's Pastoral Care. Although most
texts are in West Saxon, examples of Northumbrian, Mercian and
Kentish dialects have also been included.
A justly famous aid to the study of Shakespeare, this
glossary--originally compiled by C.T. Onions, an editor of the
Oxford English Dictionary--clarifies those words in Shakespeare
whose senses or connotations may be unfamiliar to the modern
reader, paying special attention to dialect forms, idioms, and
colloquial phrases. Original in its explanations and illuminating
in its definitions, the Glossary brings out the richness and
subtley found in Elizabethan English. Incorporating the many
advances made in the field since the last (revised) edition was
published in 1919, this volume reveals new facts about the meanings
of words in Shakespeare, alters previous interpretations, and
resolves earlier controversies. In addition, the book takes
advantage of two highly accurate, computer based concordances that
make every occurrence of each word immediately accessible for
investigation and comparison. A reference work without peer, the
Glossary is an essential source for students, scholars, playgoers
and readers of Shakespeare, and those interested in the history of
the English language.
The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology is the most
comprehensive dictionary of the English language ever published. It
is based on the original edition of the Oxford English Dictionary
but much augmented by further research on the etymology of English
and other languages. Providing a fascinating insight into the
development of English, it describes 38,000 words in 24,000
articles which include: current meanings of each word; date of
first recorded appearance in English; chronology of the development
of each word's senses; earliest written form in English; related
words in other languages; pronunciation.
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