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The present paper deals with the non-real eigenvalues for singular indefinite Sturm–Liouville problems. The lower bounds on non-real eigenvalues for this singular problem associated with a special separated boundary condition are obtained.
This unit continues work on the present subjunctive, this time focusing on the expression of hopes, feelings, evaluations and indications of influence or obligation in the main clause that trigger the subjunctive in the subordinate clause. Frequently, what is described in the subordinate clause has yet to happen or may not happen at all. Students are thus enabled to speak about what they hope, wish or imagine will happen and how to issue orders and negotiate prohibitions. A survey of definite, indefinite and relative pronouns and opportunities to practise them in individual and pair-work exercises foster greater flexibility in communication.
This unit continues work on the present subjunctive, this time focusing on the expression of hopes, feelings, evaluations and indications of influence or obligation in the main clause that trigger the subjunctive in the subordinate clause. Frequently, what is described in the subordinate clause has yet to happen or may not happen at all. Students are thus enabled to speak about what they hope, wish or imagine will happen and how to issue orders and negotiate prohibitions. A survey of definite, indefinite and relative pronouns and opportunities to practise them in individual and pair-work exercises foster greater flexibility in communication.
Chapter 2 delves into George Orwell’s use of the second-person pronoun in Down and Out in Paris and London published in 1933. It has been rarely noted in Orwell’s autobiographical essay and yet, alternating between the ‘I’ pronoun and the indefinite ‘one’, it uniquely brings the reader to more directly experience what other sentient beings living in deprivation are going through. A detailed quantitative as well as qualitative analysis is offered, classifying the different ‘you’ that pervade the text based on linguistic clues and contextual parameters, exposing all the plasticity of the pronoun. The results show that ‘you’ oscillates between specificity and genericity in a way subtly exploited by Orwell in his attempt at implicating the reader in re-living his experience as a tramp through writing about it.
The present paper deals with non-real eigenvalues of singular indefinite Sturm–Liouville problems with limit-circle type endpoints. A priori bounds and the existence of non-real eigenvalues of the problem associated with a special separated boundary condition are obtained.
Descartes believed the extended world did not terminate in a boundary: but why? After elucidating Descartes’s position in §1, suggesting his conception of the indefinite extension of the universe should be understood as actual but syncategorematic, we turn in §2 to his argument: any postulation of an outermost surface for the world will be self-defeating, because merely contemplating such a boundary will lead us to recognise the existence of further extension beyond it. In §3, we identify the fundamental assumption underlying this argument by comparing Descartes’s and Malebranche’s respective conceptions of the ontological status of modes of extension.
For the efficient numerical solution of indefinite linear systems arising from curl conforming edge element approximations of the time-harmonic Maxwell equation, we consider local multigrid methods (LMM) on adaptively refined meshes. The edge element discretization is done by the lowest order edge elements of Nédélec’s first family. The LMM features local hybrid Hiptmair smoothers of Jacobi and Gauss–Seidel type which are performed only on basis functions associated with newly created edges/nodal points or those edges/nodal points where the support of the corresponding basis function has changed during the refinement process. The adaptive mesh refinement is based on Dörfler marking for residual-type a posteriori error estimators and the newest vertex bisection strategy. Using the abstract Schwarz theory of multilevel iterative schemes, quasi-optimal convergence of the LMM is shown, i.e., the convergence rates are independent of mesh sizes and mesh levels provided the coarsest mesh is chosen sufficiently fine. The theoretical findings are illustrated by the results of some numerical examples.
Let Ω⊂ℝN be a smooth bounded domain and let f⁄≡0 be a possibly discontinuous and unbounded function. We give a necessary and sufficient condition on f for the existence of positive solutions for all λ>0 of Dirichlet periodic parabolic problems of the form Lu=h(x,t,u)+λf(x,t), where h is a nonnegative Carathéodory function that is sublinear at infinity. When this condition is not fulfilled, under some additional assumptions on h we characterize the set of λs for which the aforementioned problem possesses some positive solution. All results remain true for the corresponding elliptic problems.
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