Discrepant in a sentence as an adjective

And if you have ReportBuilder skills, you can really ID and find discrepant/fraudulent data.

Disclaimer; I've only read Anselm and Leibniz, and am just trying to piece together the discrepant sources around. Premise 1: There are many worlds.

Right, or "the current source code says not to do that, but some discrepant, previous, buggy build of the machine code made it into the product you actually bought."

If matching engines are, how are orders arriving from discrepant order entry gateways serialized? Those are systems problems, not clock problems.

I guess I'm too young to see how gay marriage is even controversial, but where's the frontier between bigotry and discrepant values? Is being anti-abortion bigotry & hate?

If the original author had wanted to keep this a secret he could've withheld his data and nobody would've been able to correct him, there simply would've been discrepant studies.

This will likely not work as generated stubs evolve in lockstep with protoc and runtime support libraries, and thus are not guaranteed to work across discrepant versions. Thus, stub code should be generated alongside the consumer/client.

It is possible that too small of a sample size may explain some of the discrepant results seen in stereology studies." Of course there's chance that her approach will confirm the current estimates for dolphins, and then the simple count of the neurons in the neocortex will be too simple explanation to be valid.

Add to these factors the turf wars between discrepant groups and tribes, alarming outbreaks of disease, which had no germ theory to explain let alone palliate them, and associated natural disasters and human tragedies. And yet, for all these millennia, heaven watched with indifference and then, and only in the last six thousand years at the very least, decided that it was time to intervene as well as redeem.

As it stands, market participants receive market data and fills from geographically discrepant trading venues, action it via their models, and update their resting orders accordingly. We invert that model by putting points-of-presence equipped with highly precise network timestamping infrastructure at all of the major financial data centers.

SAT scores can be used as ways to admit more privileged students, as they tend to have access to more test prep along with privileges such as extra time: > In 2010 three College Board researchers analyzed data from more than 150,000 students who took the SAT, and they found that the demographics of the two “discrepant” groups differed substantially. The students with the inflated SAT scores were more likely to be white or Asian than the students in the deflated-SAT group, and they were much more likely to be male.

For a crucial function of theories such as dark matter, dark energy and inflation, which each in its own way is tied to the big bang paradigm, is not to describe known empirical phenomena but rather to maintain the mathematical coherence of the framework itself while accounting for discrepant observations. Fundamentally, they are names for something that must exist insofar as the framework is assumed to be universally valid.”

What these disasters typically reveal is that the factors accounting for them usually had “long incubation periods, typified by rule violations, discrepant events that accumulated unnoticed, and cultural beliefs about hazards that together prevented interventions that might have staved off harmful outcomes”. Furthermore, it is especially striking how multiple rule violations and lapses can coalesce so as to enable a disaster's occurrence.

Not quite what you're talking about, but very much related is normalization of deviance: What these disasters typically reveal is that the factors accounting for them usually had “long incubation periods, typified by rule violations, discrepant events that accumulated unnoticed, and cultural beliefs about hazards that together prevented interventions that might have staved off harmful outcomes”. Furthermore, it is especially striking how multiple rule violations and lapses can coalesce so as to enable a disaster's occurrence.

Discrepant definitions

adjective

not compatible with other facts

See also: incompatible

adjective

not in agreement

See also: inconsistent

adjective

not in accord; "desires at variance with his duty"; "widely discrepant statements"

See also: dissonant