0 present participle of collapse --
1 to fall down suddenly because of pressure or having no strength or support: --
2 (of people and business) to suddenly be unable to continue or work correctly: --
Theatrical themes emerge again, too: a failing marriage being 'a drama whose theatre was the collapsing household' (p. 215).
To determine the order, we introduce concepts of risks of collapsing a stack by picking, and the ease of manipulator operations.
No significant difference in lexical productivity was found between girls and boys collapsing ages (t(22) 1 for types and for tokens).
What collapsing and grouping should be made may well vary according to what is being studied.
Typically, collapsing from a free arc will generate a long band, and we will tacitly replace it by a single band.
Minimal entropy and collapsing with curvature bounded from below.
However, after two years police support began to falter, and by mid-1943 many police forces were at collapsing point.
These results, in conjunction with the short-term learning results, suggest that collapsing across experiments is warranted and that no problematic differences between experiments exist.