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Gaya Bahasa Ceramah Ustadz Zahro Wardi
Skripsi ini meneliti, (1) Bagaimana pilihan kata yang digunakan Ustadz Zahro Wardi dalam kajian fiqih jenazah di Pondok Pesantren Darussalam Dongko, Trenggalek?, (2) Bagaimana nada bahasa yang digunakan Ustadz Zahro Wardi dalam kajian fiqih jenazah di Pondok Pesantren Darussalam Dongko, Trenggalek?, (3) Bagaimana struktur kalimat yang digunakan Ustadz Zahro Wardi dalam kajian fiqih jenazah di Pondok Pesantren Darussalam Dongko, Trenggalek?. Peneliti menggunakan metode deskriptif kualitatif untuk memperoleh data. Selanjutnya peneliti melakukan observasi dengan mengamati video ceramah Ustadz Zahro Wardi dan dokumentasi profil. Kemudian data tersebut dianalisis menggunakan analisis Miles dan Huberman. Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa gaya bahasa ceramah Ustadz Zahro Wardi berdasarkan pilihan kata, yaitu gaya bahasa resmi, gaya bahasa tak resmi, gaya bahasa percakapan, ia dominan menggunakan gaya bahasa tak resmi dan gaya bahasa percakapan. Gaya bahasa berdasarkan nada suara Ustadz Zahro Wardi dominan menggunakan gaya bahasa nada sederhana, dan untuk gaya bahasa berdasarkan struktur kalimat, Ustadz Zahro Wardi lebih menonjolkan dalam menggunakan gaya bahasa klimaks. Berdasarkan penelitian ini diharapkan ada penelitian serupa yang berfokus terkait pengaruh gaya bahasa Ustadz Zahro Wardi kepada mad’u
Apodemus wardi
Apodemus wardi (Wroughton, 1908). J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., 18:282. TYPE LOCALITY: N India, Kashmir, Ladakh, Saspul. DISTRIBUTION: NC Nepal (Martens and Niethammer, 1972) through Kashmir, N Pakistan, and Afghanistan (Ellerman and Morrison-Scott, 1951) to NW Iran; limits unknown. SYNONYMS: bushengensis, pentax. COMMENTS: Subgenus Sylvaemus. Originally described as a subspecies of sylvaticus, then listed as a subspecies of A. flavicollis by Ellerman and Morrison-Scott (1951), arranged as a subspecies of A. sylvaticus by Corbet (1978c), and suspected to be a different species than the latter by Gemmeke and Niethammer (1982) based on biochemical analyses of Nepalese and Iranian samples (which were documented by Darviche et al, 1979). The form bushengensis from SW Xizang (Tibet) was described as a subspecies of A. sylvaticus (Feng et al., 1986), and we allocate it to wardi pending a revision of the W Chinese, N Indian, and E Russian Apodemus. The relationship between this species, A. peninsulae, A. uralensis, and European A. sylvaticus requires better definition. Marshall (in press) identifies the holotype of sublimis Blanford, 1879, from Ladakh, as an example of wardi; if correct, sublimis may be the oldest name for this entity.Published as part of Guy G. Musser & Michael D. Carleton, 1993, Order Rodentia - Family Muridae, pp. 501-755 in Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London :Smithsonian Institution Press on page 574, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735309
7° Mosquée Saghri Wardi
Franz Julius, Vollers Karl, Herz Max. 7° Mosquée Saghri Wardi. In: Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l'Art Arabe. Fascicule 11, exercice 1894, 1895. p. 16
3° Mosquée Saghri Wardi
Barois Julien, Grand Pierre, Sabri Saber, Scandar effendi Aziz, Herz Max. 3° Mosquée Saghri Wardi. In: Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l'Art Arabe. Fascicule 11, exercice 1894, 1895. p. 82
Eothenomys wardi
72. Ward’s Red-backed Vole Eothenomys wardi French: Campagnol de Ward / German: \Ward-Rotelmaus / Spanish: Topillo rojo de Ward Other common names: \Ward’'s Chinese Vole, Ward's Oriental Vole Taxonomy. Microtus (Anteliomys) ward: Thomas, 1912, “Chamutong [= Tra-mutang], Upper Salween drainage-area, W. of A-tun-tsi, [Yunnan, China]. 13,000’ [= 3962 m].” Eothenomys wardi is in the subgenus Anteliomys. In the past, it was mainly regarded as a synonym of E. chinensis, but molecular evidence supported specific status of E. wardi. Monotypic. Distribution. Known from less than ten localities in the Meili Snow (= Chamutong) Mts between Salween and Mekong river valleys, NW Yunnan (China). Descriptive notes. Head-body 90-108 mm, tail 43-56 mm; weight 22-39 g. Ward's Red-backed Vole is moderately large, with tail longer than ¢.50% of head-body length. Ears protrude above pelage. Females have two pairs of inguinal nipples. Fur is ¢.8 mm long, soft, gray-brown above and light gray below. Skull shows no peculiarities, being moderately deep. M? is complex, with five inner salient angles and long posterior cup. Habitat. Open and rocky mountain meadows and forests at elevations of 2400-4250 m. Food and Feeding. No information. Breeding. Breeding season of Ward’s Red-backed Vole is from early summer to late autumn. Activity patterns. No information. Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information. Status and Conservation. Classified as Near Threatened on The IUCN Red List. Justification for the ranking is the small distribution of less than 10,000 km?. Ward’s Red-backed Vole is close to being classified as Vulnerable due to its limited distribution, but there is no information on habitat conditions and possible threats. Bibliography. Kaneko (1996), Lunde (2008), Shenbrot & Krasnov (2005), Zeng Tao et al. (2013).Published as part of Don E. Wilson, Russell A. Mittermeier & Thomas E. Lacher, Jr, 2017, Cricetidae, pp. 204-535 in Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 7 Rodents II, Barcelona :Lynx Edicions on page 310, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.670714
Performance regulation in discrete event and hybrid dynamical systems using IPA
This paper considers a performance regulation technique for a class of timed discrete-event and hybrid dynamical systems, aimed at an output tracking of a given setpoint reference. The regulator, designed for simplicity and efficiency of computation, consists of a variable-gain integrator that yields effective tracking despite abrupt changes to the system. The gain is computed in real time by infinitesimal perturbation analysis, and the resultant control system displays wide stability margins as well as considerable robustness to modeling and computing errors. In particular, we consider errors resulting from approximations that are made to the controller’s gains in order to speed up their computations. Previous analysis was carried out under assumptions of differentiable sample-performance functions which serve to approximate a steady-state (expected-valued) function. We dispense with these two assumptions which often are unrealistic in time-varying systems. The paper proves convergence of the regulation technique and demonstrates the results on simulation examples
3° Mosquée Saghri Wardi à Saliba
Franz Julius, Vollers Karl, Herz Max. 3° Mosquée Saghri Wardi à Saliba. In: Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l'Art Arabe. Fascicule 11, exercice 1894, 1895. p. 14
Orectolobus wardi Whitley 1939
<i>Orectolobus wardi</i> Whitley, 1939a <p>Northern Wobbegong</p> <p> <i>Orectolobus wardi</i> Whitley, 1939a: 264. Holotype: AMS IA.7784. Type locality: Cape Keith, Melville Island, North Territory, Australia.</p> <p> <b>Local synonymy:</b> <i>Orectolobus ogilbyi—</i> Filewood, 1973: 9 (PNG). <i>Orectolobus wardi—</i> Kailola, 1987: 6 (Bristow Island reef, Western Province); Last & Stevens, 2009: 144 (southeastern PNG); White <i>et al.</i>, 2018: 64, figs (PNG). <b>PNG voucher material:</b> None.</p> <p> <b>Remarks:</b> First recorded from PNG by Filewood (1973) as <i>Orectolobus ogilbyi</i>; information provided in Filewood’s key (i.e. nasal tentacle simple, skin flaps very few and simple) confirm as this species. Subsequently recorded by Kailola (1987) from Bristow Island reef in Western Province (based on KFRS E.455, adult female, 28 Mar. 1973, which has been destroyed); possibly restricted to the very eastern portion of PNG in the Western Province. Specimens and associated genetic samples required to confirm it is conspecific with the northern Australian and Aru Island material.</p>Published as part of <i>White, William T. & Ko'Ou, Alfred, 2018, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of Papua New Guinea, pp. 1-82 in Zootaxa 4411 (1)</i> on page 17, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4411.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1221878">http://zenodo.org/record/1221878</a>
3° Okela wakf Mohamed Saghri Wardi
Grand Pierre, Herz Max. 3° Okela wakf Mohamed Saghri Wardi. In: Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l'Art Arabe. Fascicule 6, exercice 1889, 1890. pp. 95-96
4° Minaret de la mosquée Saghri Wardi
Ismaïl, Barois Julien, Sabri Saber, Herz Max. 4° Minaret de la mosquée Saghri Wardi. In: Comité de Conservation des Monuments de l'Art Arabe. Fascicule 10, exercice 1893, 1906. p. 75
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