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time span Beispielsätze
time span
1. The instruments of the technical analysis are universal and applicable to any Forex sector, any currency and any time span
2. applied for the chart plotting the bigger is a time span to analyze price movements and to determine
3. are aiming for a lot of traffic over a short time span – we expect most of the traffic will arrive within 3
4. large surge, whereas an article will bring in a steady stream of visitors over a long time span
5. There are some things that are more immediate because you are in a physical existence and there are some things that a greater time span is considered when implementing your thoughts
6. I further asked, what was the time span between the two
7. Within the time span of the “twinkling of an eye,” some of us will immediately, and
8. Once again the time span could not be predicted and
9. occurring over an undeclared time span prior to the tribulation proper
10. it will actually last more than the twenty-four hour time span we call a day
11. This man has raped, and molested over twenty boys in time span of ten years
12. time span in which they had lived shoulder to shoulder with little
13. This time span was characterized by religions founded upon
14. This is the very same time span for the purported and unverifiable lifetime and activities of the
15. my actions and the actions of others during those very specific time spans
16. “plagues” and “curses” have been occurring during this specific time span
17. When time span completes then association with friends ends
18. If you go down through the generations listed from Adam to the present you get a time span of roughly 6000 years, give or take a few
19. trendlines that measure a relatively short time span
20. Moreover detoxification can also refer to the time span in which a person's body undergoes withdrawal that then leads to the return of homeostasis
21. later part of the night for a time span of few hours
22. in a short time span of your attention
23. In contrast, bearish crowds form and dissolve over relatively short time spans, and the market mistakes they cause are for the most part of comparatively short duration
24. For example, when Lindsay refers to a “top,” is he referring to the targeted, final top of the advance, or is he referring to the top from which we measure the origin point of the 107-day count? Is the final “top” he refers to an absolute high in price or is this top the time span of the ±5-day window that encompasses the intraday high? These are all concepts that are simple to understand but need to be differentiated and labeled in order to understand and apply the Lindsay Timing Model
25. This table is a collection of time spans found throughout Lindsay’s writing
26. Some time spans appear to have been altered slightly by Lindsay as time passed
27. The other is called the Basic Movements and is composed of the Standard Time Spans
28. The Standard Time Spans are not as accurate as the counts from the Middle Section (when they occur) but much more so than long-term intervals
29. The principal time spans are called “basic” and last anywhere from 10 months to three years
30. ’ Standard Time Spans have remained the same for 190 years
31. Standard Time Spans have been traced back to 1861 in detail and all the way back to 1798
32. They are not identical, of course—they vary within certain limits because they are modified by short-term time spans (i
33. The counts that make up each category of time spans (long basic advance, short basic decline, etc
34. The Basic Movements method is based on this phenomenon of time spans
35. While its count varies as much as the other Standard Time Spans, it is interesting how often the 221- to 224-day count appears
36. The time spans for both advances and declines are divided into four groups
37. If the elapsed time agrees closely with one of the Standard Time Spans, it is accepted without question as a basic low
38. Once a Basic Movement (advance or decline) persists for longer than the extreme of that particular Standard Time Span, it should be assumed that it will continue until the next time span
39. For example, if the current movement is a decline, then it must end in time for the next bull market high (15 years after a low) to arrive after a Standard Time Span
40. That is, the current decline must end soon enough for a basic advance (using the Standard Time Spans) to run its typical duration and be completed in the targeted time span of a 15-year interval
41. If the time span originates at a low, the result will be a high
42. Combining Standard Time Spans with Counts from the Middle Section
43. “Whenever an equidistance from a Middle Section has coincided with one of the time spans listed [in Tables 12
44. The Standard Time Spans can be used alone, but it is much more accurate to combine them with the counts from the Middle Section and with the long-term intervals
45. The Standard Time Spans are more reliable than counts from the Middle Section, but the latter, if computed accurately, are much more exact
46. The Standard Time Spans are often useful, even essential, in deciding whether to count from point C or E in a Middle Section
47. To sum up the matter: Most market movements have always followed the Standard Time Spans: short, mean, long, extended
48. Taking full advantage of the time span and counting to September 1965 would still mean a decline of only about 8 months from a possible high the previous December
49. That time span is much too long for a basic advance using the Standard Time Spans
50. Here is another example of always needing to compare the count from the Middle Section with the Standard Time Spans