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Transwave is known for its heavy use of TB-303 based effects.
Base men that use them to so base effect!
While comparing inflation measures for various periods one has to take into consideration the base effect as well.
Headline inflation is likely to start rising over the next few months as the base effect from energy prices expires.
"Inflation is set to fall sharply over the next few months, largely reflecting energy base effects.
Alternatively, resonance based effects may be employed at fixed frequencies.
The upward pressure from unfavourable oil price base effects and sterling's past depreciation should wane.
But suddenly I thought about the base effects of the deeds of the monster who had ravished her virginity.
The fall in factory gate inflation not only reflects helpful base effects but also lower pressures from input cots over recent months.
"In addition, favourable base effects should bring inflation down as oil and commodity prices rose sharply in late 2010 and early 2011."
Low base effect in business and economics is the tendency of a small absolute change from a low initial amount to be translated into a large percentage change.
"Inflation is expected to fall further in September due to further base effects caused by large increases in food and household energy bills at the same time last year.
These plug-ins include both software based effects using the RTAS format and software based instruments (Virtual Instruments).
Consumer price inflation has fallen to 1.1% in September - the lowest in five years - reflecting base effects from last year's spike when CPI inflation peaked at 5.2%.
We suspect inflation will continue to fall through the rest of the year as the base effects from the VAT hike fade and sterling strength and moderating petrol prices feed through.
Although digital special effects became more popular in the 1990s, Cleve continued using physical based effects and received an Emmy nomination for his work on Yo Gabba Gabba.
September will probably prove the floor in annual consumer price inflation as oil prices fell back very sharply in the final months of 2008 and early 2009, which means that base effects will be unfavourable over the coming months.
"Consumer price inflation is likely to fall further to close to 1.0% in September, but this will probably prove to be the floor as inflation will come under upward pressure from the final months of this year from unfavourable base effects.
"However, we expect inflation to ease back thereafter as base effects become less unfavourable and underlying pressures are contained by substantial excess capacity, muted recovery, wage moderation and the need for retailers to price competitively in the face of still relatively limited consumer spending."
Looking ahead, it is likely that inflation has now troughed and as base effects wear off, inflation is expected to edge up in the coming months, while the reversal of the VAT cut will cause inflation to spike temporarily in December to January.
We expect eurozone consumer price inflation to be back below 2.0% before mid-2012 as weakened economic activity and high and rising unemployment reduce underlying price pressures and base effects become increasingly favourable due to the waning impact of the sharp increases in oil and commodity prices in late-2010/early-2011.
In line with other recent Bank statements, they say that inflation is likely to rise in the short term becauses of a planned reversal of last year's VAT cut and "base effects" (that is, measuring current prices against point in time, or "base", when they were falling rapidly.
The Base effect relates to inflation in the corresponding period of the previous year, if the inflation rate was too low in the corresponding period of the previous year, even a smaller rise in the Price Index will arithmetically give a high rate of inflation now.
While annual HICP inflation eased to 2.0% in the first half of 2005, mainly reflecting base effects, HICP inflation rates accelerated to levels significantly above 2% in the second half, reaching a peak of 2.6% in September, mainly on the back of substantial increases in energy prices.
We expect inflation for the remaining months of this year to hover around this level of 2%, then early next year, mainly due to base effects, to fall significantly below the 2% limit and then, later on next year and in 2005, to climb back somewhat in a direction that will bring it close to 2%.