Examples of using Weldon in English and their translations into Tagalog
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What were the questions which Weldon asked Pearson?
Weldon married Florence Tebb, from Burstow in Surrey, on 13 March 1883.
He was taught mathematics by Henrici who impressed Weldon more than any of his other lecturers;
Weldon asked the questions that drove Pearson to some of his most significant contributions.
In a paper which he published in 1894 Some remarks on variation in plants andanimals which arose from the work of the Royal Society Committee, Weldon wrote.
In the Easter vacation of 1906 Weldon was staying with his wife in an inn at Woolstone when he contracted pneumonia.
It was written after William Bateson, a pioneer in genetics,had been highly critical of one of Pearson's papers submitted to the Royal Society. Weldon wrote.
After he was married Weldon took all his holidays with his wife in places where they could study marine biology.
The importance for science of the intense personal friendship which soon sprang up between Pearson and Weldon, then both in their early thirties, can scarcely be exaggerated.
Through Weldon and Galton 's book, Pearson became interested in developing mathematical methods for studying the processes of heredity and evolution.
Realising that his mathematical skills were somewhat less than he wished, Weldon read widely studying, in particular, the leading works by the French mathematicians on the calculus of probability.
Weldon, in a letter to Pearson on 16 November 1900, suggested solving the problem of getting such papers published by setting up their own journal.
The debate, which was conducted before a large andsomewhat agitated audience, resolved itself into a dialectical duel between the president of the section and professor Weldon, and developed quite a considerable amount of heat.
He had been awarded the Weldon prize and medal in 1935, mainly for his work with Neyman, but despite having Neyman as a colleague, Pearson's efforts began to be directed towards revising his father's two volume work Tables for Statisticians and Biometricians.
Mr William Bateson, as president of Section D for that year, had devoted his address to a vindication of Mendelian principles in regard to heredity and variation, andsubsequent discussion on the same subject provoked from professor Weldon and Professor Karl Pearson some rather severe criticism, to which Mr Bateson replied.

