3,213 research outputs found

    Analisis Perbandingan Semantik Pada Kata َيَحْكُمُ dan حُكْمٌ pada Surat Al-Maidah Terjemahan Depag Dengan H.B. Jassin

    Full text link
    This study discusses the comparative analysis of the meaning of the word يَحْكُمُ  and حُكْمٌ using the translation of the Ministry of Religion and H.B. jassin. And the method used is thelibrary research method. In Arabic the word law has no equivalent. Word translation يَحْكُمُ  and حُكْمٌ in the Qur'an of the Ministry of Religion with H.B. Jassin is quite accurate in terms of the Indonesian language level. Although there are slight differences between the translations of H.B. Jassin with the translation of the Ministry of Religion. H.B. translation Jassin is translated literally with a poetic nuance, while the MoRA translation is translated freely. Therefore, these two translations do not reduce the accuracy of the translation results. The author draws the conclusion, that the translation of H.B. Jassin and the Ministry of Religion in the Al-Qur'an letter al-Maidah in the first verse to the fiftieth verse are quite accurate in terms of the Indonesian language level

    Missing migrants and the right to identification

    No full text
    Building on the body of literature that calls for a human-rights-based approach to the tragic phenomenon of the loss of identities of migrants who go missing on their journeys, this article aims to provide a legal conceptualization of the ‘right to identification’ that may serve as the backbone of a normative framework defining state obligations regarding the missing in this context. It takes as a prompt the statement that ‘human beings have the right not to lose their identities after death’ in the preamble to Interpol Resolution No. AGN/65/RES/13 concerning disaster victim identification, and examines the rights to dignity and identity, including how they operate and interact with each other and with the right to truth. Recognizing that both the missing themselves and their loved ones may be regarded as victims of involuntary disappearance, a central argument here is that dignity is the right of the dead as well as the living, that dignity serves to protect identity as an integral aspect of personhood, and that the right to identification is exercisable by next of kin via the right to truth. The article’s final section outlines the state obligations incorporating identification, as derived from human rights and humanitarian law. The author hopes that this inquiry into the right to identification can spur further action on the part of states to fulfil their humanitarian duties

    Map of mud-volcanos in the Caspian Sea (Southern Bath)

    No full text
    Map (1:1000000) of mud vulcanos plus explanation, including a profile and some subsurface graphs

    Sorption of Sulfate and Retention of Cations in Forest Soils of Lien-Hua-Chi Watershed in Central Taiwan

    No full text
    In Taiwan, the average sulfate and nitrate deposited by acid rain as precipitation amount to 50 kg SO4 2 and 15–50 kg NO3 ha1 year1, respectively. The reactions of sulfate and nitrate with forest soils were not fully understood. Thus, we selected two forest pedons, namely the Dystrochrept and Hapludult of the Lien-Hua-Chi watershed in central Taiwan, to study their sorption and desorption of sulfate. Soil samples were leached with simulated acid rain solutions of various acidity and sulfate concentrations to assess their retention of cations and sulfate. The amounts of sorbed-SO4 2 of two pedons extracted with NaH2PO4 (0.016 M) solutions in the range 0.14–1.09 mmol kg1 soil were higher than that of native water-soluble sulfate (i.e., extracted with H2O), in the range 0.15–0.41 mmol kg1 soil. The amounts of native sorbed-SO4 2 of two pedons correlated significantly with the exchangeable Al (r =0.91). The sorption of sulfate did not fit well the Langmuir equation. The native sulfate contents of all tested pedons were near the maximum sulfate sorption capacity. The sulfate sorption capacity and the amount of released Al correlated well with increasing acidity of simulated acid rain added. Introducing solutions of various acidity and sulfate concentrations into the leaching solution flowing through the soil column resulted in sharp increases in amount of sulfate and aluminum released in percolates after several pore volumes were replaced. High clay and sesquioxide contents at soil depths of 30–50 cm (Bw horizon) and 50–80 cm (BC) of pedon 1 retained part of the sulfate added serving as the sulfate sink. Released K, Mg and Ca showed two periods of higher leaching pattern, having a trend similar to that the electrical conductivity (EC) pattern. After leaching of simulated acid rain through the soil column, the soil exchangeable cations were decreased. The tested soils possess an acid-buffering capacity in pedon 1. Pedon 1 is composed of high clay and sesquioxide contents and possesses greater buffer capacity than that of pedon 2

    Electron optics of the image ionoscope

    No full text
    aApplied Science

    Fuzzy decision making with control applications

    No full text
    Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc

    Predictive control based on black-box state-space models

    No full text
    Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc
    corecore