Thrifty White Pharmacy has been able to hone its pharmacy workflow and develop innovative medication programs for patients with the help of an automated image verification and collation system from TCGRx.
įirst released by MusicMasters between 19 as single or double CDs, the five concerts collated here in a packaged set of six discs span the Ellington band's activities between 19. Watch how tapered cups are collated in high-speed and slo-mo. In addition to folding, stitching and trimming collated output into a finished booklet, the system verifies the integrity of individual booklets.
Ĭollated strip nails for 20-degree full round-head framing nailers are typically held together by rigid plastic strips that can transform into mini projectiles and pile up underfoot like so many ball bearings. We ranked Europe's 10 Most Idyllic Places To Live by collating the top picks of a panel of six experts in the fields of travel and relocation, including Charles Smith, UK manager of Sotheby's International. While chocolate bar s are usually grouped with the aid of grouping chains or race-track collators, this machine uses four-axis robots to complete the process. In bookbinding, the examination of the folded sections (signatures) of a book for the purpose of discovering omissions or misplacements of sections. The process is usual in the case of all valuable books, especially old ones, it being a highly probable assumption that any book in hand is imperfect. In bibliog., detailed comparison of a book with a perfect copy, usually by specifying, by signature-marks or other indications, the number of leaves (blank as well as printed) and detachable plates or maps, present or absent, in the copy examined, as compared with a perfect copy. In civil and Scots law, the real or supposed return of a former advancement to the mass of a decedent's property, made by one heir, that the property may be equitably divided among all the heirs hotch-pot. When the patron of a church is not a bishop, he presents his clerk for admission, and the bishop institutes him but if the bishop of the diocese is the patron, his presentation and institution are one act, and are called collation. In canon law, the presentation of a clergyman to a benefice by a bishop, who is the ordinary of the benefice, and who at the same time has the benefice in his own gift or patronage, or by neglect of the patron has acquired the patron's rights. The act of conferring or bestowing a gift. It was not a commentary, although it might contain a general analysis of the Book of the Sentences (see sentence) and might begin and end with a text of Scripture.Ī repast a meal: a term originally applied to the refection partaken of by monks in monasteries after the reading of the lives of the saints. In the medieval universities, a sort of theological lecture laying down certain propositions without necessarily proving them. Benedict.Ī contribution something to which each of several participators contributes. The act of reading and conversing on the lives of the saints, or the Scriptures: a practice instituted in monasteries by St. The act of collating, or bringing together and comparing a comparison of one thing with another of a like kind especially, the comparison of manuscripts or editions of books or of records or statistics.Ī compilation specifically, a collection of the lives of the fathers of the church. (Scots Law) The right which an heir has of throwing the whole heritable and movable estates of the deceased into one mass, and sharing it equally with others who are of the same degree of kindred.
(Law) The report of the act made by the proper officers. Law) The presentation of a clergyman to a benefice by a bishop, who has it in his own gift. (Print) The gathering and examination of sheets preparatory to binding. (Law) The act of comparing the copy of any paper with its original to ascertain its conformity. The act of collating or comparing a comparison of one copy er thing (as of a book, or manuscript) with another of a like kind comparison, in general. (Eccles) A collection of the Lives of the Fathers or other devout work read daily in monasteries.