0 present participle of deliver --
1 to take goods, letters, parcels, etc. to people's houses or places of work: --
3 to achieve or produce something that has been promised: --
5 to save someone from a painful or bad experience: --
Therefore, the paraphraser is at risk of delivering the message in exactly the same form as it was phrased in the input.
Information from two separate sources can influence a response without the processes delivering that information necessarily influencing each other.
Surely there are other ways of delivering a compelling experience to a participant other than emulating his/her natural milieu.
The crucial corollary of this is that if the performers are delivering text without characterization, then the production itself can offer a similar refusal.
Nothing human can deliver people from the dangers that threaten, who seem to think of nothing less than delivering themselves.
Nevertheless, improved inter-professional relationships do not necessarily signify close operational-level collaboration in delivering services.
A high-valence politician would be expected to be more successful in delivering on policy promises than a low-valence politician.
Such a large value of energy can definitely not be possible with cavity dumped oscillators, especially delivering pulses of 10- 20 femtosecond (fs).