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2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 168-177
Author(s):  
Habib Adjie

A Notary Deed, if made with a Notary deed, must still be based on the provisions of Article 38 Notary Position Act as a formal requirement that must be fulfilled so that the deed is legally valid. If the deed is not implemented by Article 38 Assignment of Mortgage Rights, there has a sanction based on the provisions of Article 41 Notary Position Act. It is emphasised that the violation of the provisions of Article 38 Notary Position Act will result in the deed only having the value of evidentiary power as an underhand. Such a deed has its position degraded from an authentic deed to have the value of evidentiary power as an underhand deed following the provisions of Article 1869 of the Civil Code. So that the Sharia Banking deed made with a Notary deed is substantially under Sharia Principles and normatively per Article 38; especially paragraph (2) of the Notary Position Act. For Sharia banking, it can be done by transfer. Including the provisions of the opening sentence on the contents of the deed or a separate sheet of paper.


Author(s):  
S. M. Abdullah Al Shuaeb ◽  
Md. Kamruzzaman ◽  
Mohammad Hazrat Ali

Extracting the needed portion from a bounded region is an important task in image processing. Editing a map and extracting a region from the map is challenging. It is useful in some contexts to have a region in a separate sheet. In this image processing, we have used the Flood Fill algorithm to extract a region from the image map. To achieve that goal, we had worked in our study to separate a bounded region on a map. Usually, a scanned map may contain a lot of useless information. So we have to process the image to remove useless information from the map. We had quantized the image to a binary one. In the second phase, we have applied a gray color to separate the desired position from a map. Our main objective of the study to extract a bounded region from mapping an image that contains useless information and removes it. We have experimented with several maps and it works successfully.


2002 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 693-701
Author(s):  
Abdullah Shakir

Abstract This study investigates the effect of schematic knowledge on the appropriateness and communicative acceptability of the translation rendered of four ambiguous contextless texts. The four texts (a road sign and three advertisements) were translated in two separate sessions by twenty-eight students pursuing a B.A. in English language and literature. In the first session, the students were provided with the texts decontextualized: while in the second they were provided with the same texts in the contexts they usually occur in. In the two sessions the students were asked to explain in a separate sheet why thev translated each text in the way they did. Two notions, closely related to the translating process, are discussed in the analysis of the translation provided. These notions are "reference" and "representation". The analysis has shown that the student translators resorted to referential strategies in the process of translating when they were aware of the relevant contextual dimensions of the target text. Their translations in this case retained the registral, rhetorical, and formal characteristics of the types of texts they translated. The analysis has also shown that when unaware of the pertinent contextual dimensions of the text, the student translators resorted to representational (introspective) strategies whereby contexts and world realities deriving from experiences and worlds other than those intended by the SL text producer were created, and the translations bore rhetorical, registral, and syntactic features relevant to the contexts and world realities the translators created.


Among the Hooke manuscripts held in the Library of Trinity College, Cambridge, is an undated document of four pages, entitled (on a separate sheet): XVI Philosophicall Scribbles’. We shall offer here an edition of this hitherto unpublished document; its contents will be discussed and compared with Hooke’s published theories of the soul, mind action and memory in his ‘Lectures of light’ (I); and some consideration will be given to the general adequacy of Hooke’s epistemology, as revealed in the ‘Scribbles’ and the ‘Lectures of light’, and its place in history. A transcription of the ‘Philosophicall scribbles’ reads as follows: It has pleased y e al wise contriuer of y e Universe to send man into the world almost/ready tempered,/like a peice of soft wax to receiue those impressions and stamps, which he has though[t] it most conuenient to receiue, though altogether unfit for/some/other perhaps, which his infinite wisdom saw good to w th hold. Those stamps are only of five kinds. And are generally comprisd under one name, to wit The Objects of Sense, /and this ? is calld the common sense,/But this is only that passiue facully [ sic ] w ch this lump or mass of bodys come furnished w th all, w ch is much y e same w th what y e bodys of almost all animalls are as well if not in a better manner endowed.


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