• And it's interesting because there really is a big disjunction between what some states do and some don't.

    NPR: Slate's Jurisprudence: Moussaoui's Insanity Defense

  • What to make of this curious disjunction between France's politics and its economics?

    ECONOMIST: Something odd in France

  • This reflects a strange disjunction between the optimism of the top-tier boomers--venture capitalists, academics and the self-described progressives--and the realities facing most Californians.

    FORBES: New Geographer

  • But there's a disjunction between what goes on in parliament day to day and what the coalition wants to tell the electorate they're doing to get the economy moving.

    BBC: Side-by-side, but looking apart?

  • But investors' cold feet also might have something to do with what behavioral economists call the "disjunction effect, " the idea that people don't think one step ahead when making decisions because they're waiting for more information.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Thus, when Ted takes her out on a boat, she jumps over the side for a swim, and we cut not in a jagged disjunction but with a smooth and watery ease to Martha and a bunch of others leaping into a secluded pool, their bare white limbs writhing like fish in the black water.

    NEWYORKER: Family Farm

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