What's the difference between indivisible and integer?

Indivisible


Definition:

  • (a.) Not divisible; incapable of being divided, separated, or broken; not separable into parts.
  • (a.) Not capable of exact division, as one quantity by another; incommensurable.
  • (n.) That which is indivisible.
  • (n.) An infinitely small quantity which is assumed to admit of no further division.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The indivisibility and universality of the rule of law is the precondition for order, trust and social association on which all else is built.
  • (2) Christophe Lèguevaques, one of the lawyers who defended the legal challenge, said: “We are all Republicans according to the first article of the French constitution ... which states that France is an indivisible republic.
  • (3) Decisions about delivery programs to improve health status are characterized by indivisibilities or "lumpiness," interdependencies between case types with varying health output, high fixed costs, administrative constraints, and qualitative quity and political considerations.
  • (4) The perspective of multi-level analysis acknowledges the importance of both individual and environmental variables in determining health behaviors and outcomes at the level of the indivisible unit--the individual.
  • (5) Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister who has so often insisted that Jerusalem is “indivisible”, has found himself putting in place measures – at least temporarily – to effectively divide it.
  • (6) The indivisible triad of nutrition, health, and aging is the principal target for behavioral change at which health professionals can aim their resources during all phases of the life cycle.
  • (7) It is a huge, huge victory,” said Ezra Levin, Indivisible’s executive director.
  • (8) On the contrary, our country has steadily promoted a system of equal and indivisible security in the Euro-Atlantic area.
  • (9) Any economies due to indivisibilities are exhausted at a rather small practice size.
  • (10) The occasions on which reevaluation, re-establishment, readaptation, and rehabilitation in the true sense should be used are discussed, and the concept of both psychological and physical rehabilitation as an indivisible whole is underscored.
  • (11) He somehow managed to keep a straight face while insisting that the chaos and drama was good for Fifa and that Blatter could not be held responsible for the fallout at an organisation from which he has become indivisible over his 40 years.
  • (12) As a specifically anti-religious concept, laïcité , it is argued, guarantees the moral unity of the French nation – the République indivisible .
  • (13) A conflation has taken place in which the war in Iraq and the plight of the Palestinians has become somehow indivisible from the situation of Muslims in Britain.
  • (14) Moreover, freedom in America is indivisible from the freedom to practise one's religion.
  • (15) Indivisibilities in production may cause firms with extremely small output to experience higher average costs than their larger counterparts.
  • (16) The three priorities for the first phase are indivisible,” he said.
  • (17) They don't go anywhere, do anything, see anyone besides their neighbours, and the town itself doesn't change - an odd choice of set-up for a novelist, but one that permits her to make a suggestion: that it is people in their kitchens, devastating each other softly and for the most part without intent, that constitutes life at its most indivisible.
  • (18) That's the intention of the balaclavas – they're meant to be anonymous, indivisible, representative.
  • (19) We start from the belief that prosperity is indivisible; that growth, to be sustained, has to be shared; and that our global plan for recovery must have at its heart the needs and jobs of hard-working families, not just in developed countries but in emerging markets and the poorest countries of the world too; and must reflect the interests, not just of today's population, but of future generations too.
  • (20) Integrating mental health and primary medical services promotes available, coordinated, accessible, and less stigmatizing treatment by recognizing an indivisibility of the total person in illness and in health.

Integer


Definition:

  • (n.) A complete entity; a whole number, in contradistinction to a fraction or a mixed number.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Slope conductances, determinable for substates II, V and VI (4.8, 11.7 and 14.0, respectively), are also consistent with six conductance substates which are integer multiples of a smallest conductance (state I).
  • (2) It is clear from these measurements (1) that there is no primary kinetic isotope effect and hence that hydrogen abstraction is not rate determining to the exchange and (2) that only one (as the closest integer) methyl hydrogen exchanges per turnover.
  • (3) For the normal ears, the psychometric functions were nonmonotonic, showing minima for gap durations corresponding to integer multiples of the signal period (n ms, where n is a positive integer) and maxima for durations corresponding to (n - 0.5) ms. For the impaired ears, the psychometric functions showed only small (nonsignificant) nonmonotonicities.
  • (4) The molecular weight of izupeptin A was determined to be 1,475 by SI (secondary ion)-MS (integer molecular weight, 1,473), and it contains two chlorine atoms.
  • (5) The first study used binary integer programming with a sample of 2343 children evaluated with the DDST in Denver's Neighborhood Health Program.
  • (6) The insertion, which splits the original telomere and causes a significant reduction in the size of the telomeric structure, is shown to consist of an integer number of subtelomeric repeats typical of P.berghei, flanked on both sides by telomere-derived motifs.
  • (7) It was found that the duration of short pauses was a multiple integer of the mean interspike interval of surrounding discharges.
  • (8) The development of a method for dialysis planning serves as a platform to demonstrate the use of integer programming to support decision making.
  • (9) For systematic sectioning with a random start, it has been recently shown that V is unbiased when m, the ratio between projected object length and section distance, is an integer number (Cruz-Orive 1985).
  • (10) Among test integers 6 through 33, the number 30, approximating the 29.53-day lunar-synodic month, was consistently and statistically a best-fit multiple to the data.
  • (11) The results support those of simplified models in showing that drug toxicity to the host may be minimized when the dosing interval is an integer multiple of the average cycle time of the host susceptible cells.
  • (12) A formal approach to incorporating travel times into dialysis planning, based on the formulation and solution of a mixed-integer programming model, is presented.
  • (13) Each subject's data were analyzed by spectral analysis (based on the fast Fourier transform), which detected apparent LRC (rates within 1% of a single-digit integer ratio) in 12 (40%) of the 30 test settings.
  • (14) We also show how the two-dimensional distribution of the noise variance in a CT image is a weighted superposition of images obtained by backprojecting integer powers of the noiseless projection data corresponding to the scanned object.
  • (15) For the integer data, there were no significant differences in speech intelligibility for 8- to 16-bit conversion.
  • (16) A non-linear integer programming procedure is used to find reasonable solutions to this problem.
  • (17) We have combined these results into a Law of Mortality, based on a Weibull function containing only integer parameters and constants, which is valid for all human age-related disease mortality.
  • (18) For instance, eye movements were made across an integer and odd number of checks in order to mimic the pattern reversal.
  • (19) minimal nonrandomness) composition, admitting non-integer values of ni; the integer level with optimal integer composition; the noise level, represented by a typical random cain; and the real protein level.
  • (20) These models predict that toxicity to the host of cell-cycle-phase-specific drugs can be minimised if the dosing interval is an integer multiple of the average intermitotic interval of the susceptible host cells.