Examples of Sawada in a sentence
Yamada R, Tanaka T, Unoki M, Nagai T, Sawada T, Ohnishi Y, Tsunoda T, Yukioka M, Maeda A, Suzuki K, Tateishi H, Ochi T, Nakamura Y, Yamamoto K.
The Target resolved to appoint Kotaro Sawada, a director, as the new president and representative director and the chief executive officer of the Target at a meeting of the board of directors held on the same day.
Sawada et al., Genomic landscape of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma in a Japanese population.
Sato W, Kochiyama T, Uono S, Yoshimura S, Kubota Y, Sawada R, et al.
POB: Hama, Syria a.k.a: (1) AL-MOUSA, Jaez, Sawada, al-Hammoud (2) AL-MOUSA, Jayez, al-Hammoud Position: Governor of Hasaka, appointed by Bashar al-Assad Other Information: (UK Sanctions List Ref):SYR0114 (UK Statement of Reasons):Governor of Hasaka, appointed by Bashar al-Assad; he is associated with Bashar al-Assad.
Figure 1 These private banks, which had close ties with their affiliated industrial firms, had some distinctive features (Okazaki, Sawada and Yokoyama 2005; Okazaki, Sawada and Wang 2007).
Those most involved in that effort were Daiyo Sawada (External Evaluator), Michael Piburn (Internal Evaluator), Bryce Bartley and Russell Benford (Biology), Apple Bloom and Matt Isom (Mathematics), Kathleen Falconer (Physics), Eugene Judson (Beginning Teacher Evaluation), and Jeff Turley (Field Experiences).
Our experience has been that these items have richly intuitive meaning to mathematics and science educators .Further information about the underlying conceptual and theoretical basis of the RTOP, as well as reliability and validity data and norms by grade-level and context, can be found in the Reformed Teaching Observation Protocol MANUAL (Sawada & Piburn, 2000).
Inoue, Matsumoto and Sawada (2007) show that even after completion of their service obligation, the share of Jichi graduates practicing in rural areas is significantly higher (Figure 14).
Furthermore, there were several negative macroeconomic shocks during this time that contributed to the financial crisis, such as the collapse of the asset bubble in 1920 and the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 (Kato 1957; Okazaki, Sawada and Yokoyama 2005; Okazaki, Sawada and Wang 2007; Okazaki, Okubo and Strobl 2019).