The Abkhaz separatist dispute also continues to absorb much of the government's attention. |
|
The conjugated double bonds of this structure allow the chlorophyll molecule to absorb energy from sunlight. |
|
It is a fact that most copy typists do not absorb the content of what they are typing. |
|
Corncob pipes are very light and absorb nicotine and tar, and so will also color as you smoke. |
|
The funds are private investment pools for the rich, who understand the risks and can comfortably absorb potential losses, they say. |
|
Since drywall is a porous material, it can absorb melted paraffin when immersed in it. |
|
Braising in wine or a highly-seasoned stock allows porous mushrooms to absorb other flavors. |
|
Coating a porous material like foam with this polymer makes it hydrophobic, so it won't absorb water. |
|
It was baked so hard it couldn't absorb the huge quantities of water that fell so quickly. |
|
During primary socialization we absorb basic knowledge about our society's values, norms, folkways, and mores. |
|
Draped over the bench like this the body takes the full force of recoil, with no flexibility to absorb the jolt. |
|
No longer do young people absorb information about their forebears from grandparents. |
|
The high levels of copper in crabmeat are vital since copper helps the body absorb vitamins and minerals. |
|
His bike had shock absorbers on the front forks to absorb bumps, her bicycle had none. |
|
Sally paced back and forth, trying to absorb all of the new sights and smells at once. |
|
Oil-controlling moisturizers, makeup primers and foundations with added powders can also help absorb oil. |
|
Found in certain brands of potato crisp, it works because the body cannot absorb it. |
|
Then they'll be far harder to work with and won't absorb the butter and cream, or will fail to crisp up in the oven. |
|
True black petals would absorb sun and heat so rapidly they'd be crisply cooked before they could open. |
|
This time, I wanted to sit back and absorb Paris like a true Frenchie in its various cafes. |
|
|
We know that electrons in any molecule can only absorb radiation at certain frequencies. |
|
On the front end the car manufacturer designed tiered crumple zones that absorb energy at different rates based on the type of steel used. |
|
Ireland does not have another manufacturing facility with a similar capacity to absorb glass cullet. |
|
As the samples become molten, the base metals, including the lead, vaporize or absorb into the cupels, leaving only the precious metal on top. |
|
To control the reactor control rods made of boron or cadmium are inserted near the fuel rod to absorb neutrons. |
|
Otherwise, what happens is that the edges become all fluffy and furry and the potatoes absorb too much water. |
|
Control rods are solid cylinders of metal constructed of some material that has an ability to absorb neutrons. |
|
The debate is fundamentally an argument about the flow of immigrants and whether it behooves us to try and dam it off or absorb it. |
|
Nitrogen is more soluble than helium and any preformed bubbles will quickly absorb nitrogen. |
|
Their fleshy leaves readily absorb and retain moisture because most of these plants are denizens of the desert. |
|
Small and medium enterprises absorb unemployment, feed families and other dependents, and are reliable taxpayers. |
|
The goal was to find a plant that could grow in dry desert conditions with little care, yet still absorb a significant amount of uranium. |
|
To absorb excess oil, sprinkle a bit of talc on a brush and work it through the hair from scalp to ends to produce a fresh, greaseless finish. |
|
Otherwise, they absorb too much water, diluting that intense strawberry flavor. |
|
I hop up to adjust the dimmer on the halogen lights, partly so we can absorb the honey glow and partly because of the novelty. |
|
Some of the complex nuclei then either spit out or absorb the odd proton, making nuclei of other elements. |
|
But for now the Kumbh is big enough, and the devotion intense enough, to absorb the encroachment of business. |
|
They absorb every bit of information that is given and take the time to enquire and question. |
|
Or is it only the last chapter of the long story of our ability to absorb foreigners, and draw new strength from their energy and enterprise? |
|
Morale, cohesion, esprit de corps and readiness plummeted as everyone addressed a new training cycle to absorb yet another batch of recruits. |
|
|
The large and explosively growing private sector has over the past generation expanded to absorb the masses. |
|
In these cases, Hunter proved beyond doubt the notion that lymphatic vessels alone absorb fats and fluids. |
|
Lice take much longer to succumb to Zyklon-B than humans do, who absorb it through their lungs and die in a matter of minutes. |
|
His program of defensiveness postulated Soviet possession of a defensive capability sufficient to absorb and repulse an enemy blow. |
|
According to George Lindsay, welwitschias also absorb moisture in the form of dense fog that flows over the Namib Desert. |
|
Nightlife is non-existent, but it's a great spot to relax, and absorb equal amounts of Greek sunlight and fresh Aegean air. |
|
None could speak English, only Yiddish, and they never tried to learn the language, absorb the local culture or integrate with their hosts. |
|
And they should be put into a box with some bags with chemicals that absorb leftover water. |
|
The flames licked his face as he covered his face with his forearms and knelt to absorb the shock. |
|
Substantive stone pillars absorb that heat, radiating it out throughout the night. |
|
Instead, place them inside an airtight bag, and put in a crushed aspirin to absorb the odor. |
|
By the end of May the nearly saturated soil in the mountains could absorb little additional moisture. |
|
Bark, wood chips or sawdust work, but avoid stone or brick chips because they absorb and reflect heat. |
|
Mangroves live on tide-drenched seashores because, unlike most trees, the vinelike roots absorb air through their pores. |
|
The resistor will absorb some of the voltage across it when we place it in series with the resistor. |
|
It is estimated that women absorb up to two kilograms of chemicals through toiletries and cosmetics every year. |
|
Wouldn't a friendship be better if it could absorb the energy of teasing and laugh a big belly laugh? |
|
Tumors often use more energy than healthy tissues do and may absorb more of a radioactive tracer, which allows the tumors to appear on the scan. |
|
Electrons in the mineral absorb the energy from the activator and become excited. |
|
Preformed silicone heel pads designed to absorb shock and distribute weight can provide significant pain relief. |
|
|
I sat like a stunned mullet trying to absorb that this entire event to raise money is centred on the celebration of my life. |
|
For those who still aren't convinced, stop for a minute, look around and take the time to absorb all that this great campus has to offer. |
|
The gallbladder stores bile, used to emulsify beneficial fats so the body can absorb them. |
|
The capacity of stock markets to absorb external shocks should not surprise us. |
|
They are almost certainly unsafe, as they cannot absorb the shock of an impact, even at slow speeds. |
|
Instead of traditional foam lining, the helmet uses padding to absorb the shock of a blow to the head. |
|
He crumpled to the floor to absorb the shock of the impact and whipped around with his flashlight as the horde closed rapidly. |
|
These are designed to absorb the energy of recoil gradually, avoiding violent shock or movement of the carriage. |
|
I landed in the ditch with a thump, as the shocks tried to absorb the impact. |
|
Combination skin looks best with new advanced formulations designed to moisturize dry parts and absorb oil in shiny areas. |
|
Their high energy and simplicity make them easy to absorb and enjoy, but also bring them to the brink of monotony. |
|
Rugs and mats will absorb the moisture, reducing the risk of a slip and fall injury further in the home. |
|
On the other hand, unshaded paved areas absorb and store the sun's heat, making them undesirable next to your house. |
|
You absorb the mostly unwritten and untaught rules for what to call people as you exit toddlerhood and proceed toward adulthood. |
|
I snuggled even closer to his warm body, trying to absorb the heat into my cold one. |
|
These materials readily absorb solar energy, including the infrared portion of sunlight. |
|
To get the right effect, rooms must have areas that absorb sound and reflect it. |
|
The role of the velamen is to absorb moisture from the ambient atmosphere, and, may be, to protect from cold or heat. |
|
Over watering turns the velamen brown and mushy and the roots lose their ability to absorb water. |
|
Where Fichte in particular was happy to absorb the object into the subject, Kant preferred inconsistency to such a move. |
|
|
Green roofs absorb storm water and filter polluted runoff before it ends up in our lakes. |
|
Then if the carts are built heavy, even heavier wheel brackets are needed to absorb this pounding. |
|
With highlife, African music had proved its resilience and ability to absorb and synthesise foreign influences. |
|
Borrowers, reveling in their lower monthly payments, blithely absorb the overcharges. |
|
Salts are hygroscopic, meaning they absorb ambient humidity to keep the road surface moist and hold fine particles together. |
|
Cystic fibrosis, chronic liver disease, and celiac disease are conditions that limit the body's ability to absorb nutrients. |
|
Your children will absorb your fear, rather than what you are trying to say, and will be ill-prepared to cope with a crisis. |
|
The very sound of the word triggers associations with rubber bumpers or lips, objects that create contact, absorb impact. |
|
There will also be indirect costs to consumers because these companies will be unable to fully absorb another rise to their overheads. |
|
Opt for cotton, linen and other natural fibers that help absorb moisture and allow your body to breathe. |
|
A porous paper may absorb a lot of the ink and as a result, the colors may be lighter. |
|
With closely related animals that can interbreed, it's not unusual for the dominant species to absorb the other, Trinkaus says. |
|
It covers large areas quickly and the plants absorb nutrients through the roots and the leaves. |
|
But they are not on the field or trying to absorb some of the Homeric playbooks around the league. |
|
Overtaken by events, he began pressing for guarantees that NATO would not absorb East Germany or expand eastwards. |
|
Once you absorb the delightfully twisted story, further viewings will reveal the carefully nuanced comedic background. |
|
Potassium carbonate is deliquescent, which means that it will absorb water from the air. |
|
Cholesterol can mix with glycerides and phospholipids and it can apparently endow lipid mixtures with the ability to absorb water. |
|
Tyres absorb severe punishment in the rough conditions and high temperatures. |
|
It's also an animal that can absorb a tremendous amount of punishment before it dies. |
|
|
The entirety of it is sensory overload, more than one can absorb in any one viewing. |
|
I was standing there dumbly trying to absorb the enormity of what I had witnessed when it struck me that I had a family to worry about. |
|
Particulates and dust in Earth's atmosphere along the line of sight tend to absorb blue light more effectively than red light. |
|
The ability of the brain to absorb or produce chemicals such as dopamine or serotonin is what leads to the illness. |
|
We should absorb successful foreign experiences and arrange and plan investments in infrastructure industries integratedly. |
|
Their stomachs could not absorb the uncooked and insalubrious food which they were given. |
|
Because of this microstructure, the abalone shell can absorb a great deal of energy without failing. |
|
Trees absorb the siren wails, clanging of trash cans, and other sounds of urban life. |
|
The gases, especially carbon dioxide and methane, absorb the Earth's heat radiation and thus warm the surface, just as a blanket traps body heat. |
|
The study found that, as temperatures increase, plants absorb less carbon dioxide while microorganisms in the soil release more and more of it. |
|
A better alternative is indoor plants, which absorb carbon dioxide and emit oxygen. |
|
They do not absorb dirt or liquids, and their surfaces are much less conducive to bacterial growth than paper bills. |
|
Whether they realise it or not, they actually absorb ideas, moods, opinions and even goals from those around them. |
|
One can always absorb the ideas and relevant theory and then update the information later. |
|
The very best students in our classes probably do absorb key ideas and concepts from lectures. |
|
You must have the ability to persuade and inspire our friends to communicate and convince, to listen, to absorb the ideas of others. |
|
Still, the law has yet to fully catch up with that position, or even fully incorporate and absorb the evidence on which it was based. |
|
Analysts must fully absorb cultural information, an area in which the intelligence community rarely excels. |
|
There are limits to a toddler's abilities to absorb new experiences, he says. |
|
Michael understood that he would never fully absorb the French experience if language were a barrier. |
|
|
To a certain extent, all through life we absorb information we understand, or about which we care, and filter the rest. |
|
Would one authority cover the enlarged area, or would there be a tug of war between the existing parks over who would absorb the added area? |
|
Bosses said that it could absorb the 14 per cent of mail transported by train on the roads without extra journeys. |
|
Second, there is a debate over whether Australia can absorb large numbers of people. |
|
Too often, remedial actions tend to absorb resources to the detriment of preventive measures. |
|
China is among the fastest growing economies in the world, with considerable capacity to absorb surplus labor. |
|
Will these be paid a hefty consultation fee, which will absorb the contentious surplus which started the kerfuffle? |
|
However, success in this area will take a long time and absorb substantial resources. |
|
The home market is expected to absorb around 25 per cent of the total expected output of four million lambs this year. |
|
These soft surfaces also absorb sound and give a feeling of privileged privacy. |
|
It is easy to install and secure because of its weight Also, many types absorb sound and thereby add to the sound control of the room. |
|
Its configuration helps absorb some impact in order to reduce injury to a pedestrian who is hit. |
|
In an open office, its acoustic function is to absorb sound and reduce the reflection of sounds back down into the office space. |
|
The polyurethane material also adds support and cushioning to help absorb impact. |
|
Larger entities can absorb this type of cost better, because they are spread over a much wider range of companies. |
|
Not only will it absorb the impact of feet and noise, it will reduce wear and tear on the rug and make vacuuming easier. |
|
That way, your joints are better prepared to absorb impacts from a variety of angles. |
|
For instance, ceiling tiles that absorb sounds and reduce noise levels can cost about the same as materials that are less sound-absorbent. |
|
It's more important for a race bike to actively absorb washboard and roots so riders can stay seated, powering the pedals to the finish line. |
|
Potato growers in Prince Edward Island are being asked to absorb some short-term pain for what hopefully will be a long-term upswing in prices. |
|
|
It is dehumidified and leaves the unit in a slightly warm state to absorb water vapour again. |
|
The spots of liquids, absorb immediately with kitchen paper and rub softly with distilled water and soft detergent. |
|
The bank's capital base had been insufficient to absorb heavy losses, in part because of regulatory lenience. |
|
Polarizing filters polarize light and can absorb polarized light if suitably oriented. |
|
Political leaders of all stripes tend to underrate Australia's capacity to absorb outsiders. |
|
Modern industrial development cannot absorb this superabundance of manpower, so these people cram themselves into shantytowns. |
|
For a DC or L load, a diode should be connected in parallel the load to absorb the counter electromotive force of the load. |
|
Thus, although the earth material is able to absorb a great quantity of moisture, desorption is carried out relatively slowly. |
|
Administration of activated carbon in water can help absorb chemical remaining in the stomach. |
|
They had a pennon below the tip which served to absorb the blood, preventing it from running down the lance and making it slippery. |
|
A folded cloth, gauze pad or toilet paper placed on the back of the bedpan will absorb any moisture and keep the cast clean and dry. |
|
Meditation: The ability to absorb oneself in deep thought for a long period of time. |
|
Greenhouse gases are atmospheric gases that absorb and emit thermal radiation. |
|
Many parasitic fungi absorb food from the host cells through the hyphal walls appressed against the cell walls of the host's internal tissues. |
|
The spacer bar also has desiccant in it to absorb all the moisture remaining inside the glazing unit after it had been sealed. |
|
Compression pads in the heel and forepart of the outsole compress under pressure to absorb shock and stress. |
|
What saddens me is that you absorb each one of its articles as though they were the gospel truth. |
|
Frizz-prone hair tries to absorb moisture from the air, making it expand and look frazzled. |
|
They determine whether black or white pieces of cardboard absorb or reflect light. |
|
The burning of fossil fuels and biomass has also resulted in emissions of aerosols that absorb and emit heat, and reflect light. |
|
|
It can produce strong pulse light at specific wavelength to irradiate hairs, and the hair and hair follicles will selectively absorb the light. |
|
Fluorescence quenching is used on samples that absorb shortwave UV at 254 nm. |
|
However you absorb the ancient magic of the Grampians, we guarantee it won't wear off overnight. |
|
Indeed, the darker regions absorb more the solar energy, they warm up more and therefore emit a larger infra-red flux. |
|
Pigmentation abnormalities, spider veins and rosacea, which absorb the light, are damaged until they fade from view. |
|
This meant women could absorb information from men but were unable to inscribe their own reality. |
|
Maccabi remained unflustered, though and, perhaps mindful of early-season rustiness, continued to absorb pressure. |
|
Is Europe prepared to absorb the shock induced by its indissoluble link with the US market? |
|
By their astringency, tannins absorb the excessive intestinal mucus, precipitate protein and help to reduce stool frequency. |
|
It is best to give people time to absorb messages and mull over what the ECD movement could mean to their and their children's lives. |
|
And it's certainly not interested in making its exports expensive enough to slow down a rip-roaring economy that needs to absorb 10 million new workers a year. |
|
However, before one appends a signature on the memorandum of understanding, one ought to know how to absorb those shocks in the interim before profits start flowing. |
|
On the flip side, when insurers fail to meet their benchmarks the government helps absorb those costs. |
|
These absorber elements generally absorb heat from the external air and insolation. |
|
This almighty oxygen jet equipment can make the skin absorb more oxygen, thus rejuvenating and activating the skin. |
|
The plant will not be able to absorb enough nutrients and it is therefore better to repot it in a larger container. |
|
MacKendrick says sprayer tracks are full of resting water, the ground too saturated to absorb any more. |
|
Children are particularly affected, as they absorb important quantities of lead through outdoor games, contaminated food and breast-feeding. |
|
These specific panels use vacuum tube collectors to absorb sunlight and collect heat. |
|
Mackenzie may waive or absorb operating expenses at its discretion and stop waiving or absorbing such expenses at any time without notice. |
|
|
If the air is at 100 percent relative humidity, the brine solution can continue to absorb water from the air indefinitely. |
|
Dilute with water and mop up, or absorb with an inert dry material and place in an appropriate waste disposal container. |
|
Here is the icing on the cake: semi-active suspensions will absorb ground variations in real time, thus enhancing passengers' comfort. |
|
Crumple zones help absorb impact energy before it reaches the passenger compartment. |
|
It's like wrapping ourselves up in cotton batten in order to absorb the blows. |
|
Once the whirl massage has stopped, give your body the chance to absorb the tanked up energy. |
|
The design of this revolutionary timepiece, which melds sports standards with luxury, can absorb both shocks and extreme accelerations. |
|
No one wants to absorb the cost if someone in a group backs out. |
|
Shop on Rundle Mall, absorb café and high culture along North Terrace and enjoy the sea breeze in Glenelg. |
|
It has a high capacity to absorb water, which is related to its moisturizing properties. |
|
These contain checker bricks stacked in such a way that they absorb heat from furnace off-gases as they are directed through the chamber. |
|
Photographic emulsions can absorb humidity in excess and stick together or stick to other materials in contact with them. |
|
The rattan sticks in the decorative glass bottle absorb the perfume and then slowly release the delicate scents. |
|
Every time you do it you should decide the scope you are going to absorb and to which point of bifurcation you are going to make the absorption. |
|
The only way to do it now, until we learn more is to absorb it in the heart, to absorb it and take it to a point of bifurcation. |
|
A light coating of Stomahesive® Powder can help absorb moisture, helping to prevent and protect denuded or weeping skin. |
|
Delving into individual history allows us to absorb history as first person singular. |
|
Many species of plants have the ability to absorb metals such as zinc, selenium and nickel from the soil and to concentrate them in their tissues. |
|
In Honduras, for instance, it has been estimated that repetition and dropout costs absorb 20 per cent of the primary education budget. |
|
The long plantar ligament is the strongest and acts as a trampoline to absorb shock and support body weight. |
|
|
Accomplishing these tasks will absorb nearly 53 hours of your staff's valuable time. |
|
These absorb the light focused on them by the eye's lens, and convert the light into electrical nerve signals. |
|
The test, conducted over a two years horizon, focused mainly on the ability of banks to absorb possible shocks from credit and market risks. |
|
It is also worth noting that the soil's ability to absorb carbon and convert it into useful humus has not yet been fully exploited. |
|
The new growth rate was not enough to absorb the expansion of the active population. |
|
Employers are concerned about having to absorb the costs of managing an older work force. |
|
If the printer billed the studio-Alleluia at the time-directly, then the studio would absorb the invoice and re-invoice Groupaction. |
|
For example, medicines should not be left or stored where cattle can access them and accidentally ingest or absorb products. |
|
When mycorrhizal fungi colonize the plant's root system, they create a network that increases the plant's capacity to absorb water and nutrients. |
|
Dimensional properties: Styrenes show excellent dimensional stability as they absorb very little water. |
|
This special plastic material can neither absorb water nor creak under load. |
|
Europe needs to improve its capacity to anticipate, trigger and absorb economic and social change. |
|
If you think, I have enough in sighing, then you absorb stuff like I have enough. |
|
Don't we all need time to absorb and understand such complex contradictions? |
|
They have to get rid of that stuff somewhere, so where else other than put it on land that will absorb the water? |
|
The ability to absorb such shocks is particularly important in view of the economy's relatively high degree of specialisation. |
|
Every effort will be made to absorb these additional requirements in the respective bienniums. |
|
These foundations were rarely damp-proofed and have a high mortar content, which can absorb water from the soil. |
|
Most temporary refuges are in developing countries which cannot absorb large numbers of displaced persons. |
|
If a participant defaults, its own collateral will first be used to absorb its losses. |
|
|
They are required to absorb increasing quantities of more complex information in shorter amounts of time. |
|
You should only invest if you have the capacity to absorb a loss of some or all of your investment. |
|
Our users simply do not have the requisite income to absorb these levels of increase. |
|
A very simple answer would probably be to absorb the shock of impact. |
|
Grasses readily absorb silica in the form of silicic acid from the soil, and most silica is accumulated in the aerial parts as amorphous hydrated silica. |
|
Cotton socks absorb moisture and keep feet drier than nylon socks. |
|
These gases, including carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, absorb heat more readily than do the main constituents of our atmosphere, oxygen and nitrogen. |
|
But the bondholders don't absorb nearly as much money as payrolls and retiree benefits. |
|
He could calmly ingest what was being said, absorb it, then reach over for the phone, call Jim, and find out what was happening, and what he should do. |
|
When these particles are suspended in water, some of these interlayers absorb the positive ions that exist in the specimen leading to expanding these layers. |
|
Trees could be engineered to grow in polluted landfills and absorb poisons, or even be designed to capture more carbon dioxide, diminishing global warming. |
|
He had just begun to make a critique of the Hegelianism in which he had been trained as a student and to absorb the materialist ideas of Ludwig Feuerbach. |
|
They reduce the impact of ocean waves and absorb floodwaters. |
|
The villi in celiac patients have collapsed and fail to absorb nutrients. |
|
We find from Mrs. Fairfax that Mr. Rochester is often changeful and abrupt because of his nature, and also because of family troubles which absorb him painfully. |
|
Most masonry materials are porous and will absorb large amounts of water. |
|
The lead suited the hosts style of play and they proceeded to absorb their opponents pressure before launching rapid counter-attacks of their own. |
|
In any event, potential disruptions can be dealt with easily by having participants in the system hold sufficient capital to absorb losses or forbidding daylight overdrafts. |
|
He cited the same reasons that many other catchers have for why they will squat on every pitch, sweat in all that gear and absorb foul tips and baserunners. |
|
On the other hand, even tenuous cirrus clouds absorb significant amounts of thermal infrared radiation emitted by the ground and the lower atmosphere. |
|
|
Similar reinforced plinths were developed by the Getty museums in Los Angeles to absorb the seismic movements there. |
|
It gave me license to pore over raw tape, again and again, to absorb the subtle clues of human behavior. |
|
An incandescent black light bulb is similar to a normal household light bulb, but it uses light filters to absorb the light from the heated filament. |
|
And combined with a passenger safety cell, surrounded by crumple zones, and structural cross members to absorb impact, it all helps to make the car a more enticing package. |
|
Braided line is less likely to absorb moisture than plain-laid line. |
|
My fishcakes are not breaded or crumbed, so they absorb less fat in the pan, especially if you use a non-stick one and wipe it out with butter paper for flavour. |
|
It deals with simple ignorance and benightedness, an incompleteness of education, a widespread failure to absorb knowledge. |
|
In an up-period, there is an embarrassment of riches, too much to absorb and consume, a feeling of plenitude that seems to extend into any foreseeable future. |
|
Listening to the tape, it seems that the controller takes a few seconds to absorb the scale of the calamity after the bird strike. |
|
If oil or grease is spilled on porch or patio cement, apply an absorbent powder such as fuller's earth, cornmeal, or sawdust to absorb as much oil as possible immediately. |
|
Outside, the traffic hurtles by but the vast number of shrubs and trees lining the courtyard absorb the sound and look spectacular in their autumnal foliage. |
|
The 14th duke wanted a house that was big enough to absorb the world-famous Hamilton Palace collection but that was small enough for a family home. |
|
On Friday, the heads of the two banks announced they had agreed to merge their banks by forming a new entity that will absorb the two banks by June next year. |
|
If you find yourself devoid of both deodorants and cruciferous vegetables, baking soda and cornstarch can work in a pinch to kill bacteria and absorb perspiration. |
|
Not only does this serve to strengthen the car in a crash, but it also allows the car to absorb heavy impacts in jumps and fast driving over rough terrain. |
|
Believe it or not, these are ironies we can learn a lot from, a useful exercise when the culture of consumption dulls us down as we absorb the season's greetings. |
|
The new town development also had to absorb an overwhelmingly large number of refugees from very different areas of the German East and Southeast. |
|
These are strips of collagenous seaweed placed in a closed cervix, where they absorb moisture and swell, dilating the cervix and hastening the onset of labor. |
|
As they absorb moisture, they swell, gradually dilating the cervix. |
|
By 1788, debt service alone would absorb fifty percent of annual revenue. |
|
|
It seems inevitable, with hindsight, that this accelerating urge to know, to understand, to absorb facts, would lead to the establishment of a major organisation. |
|
Molecules absorb radiation at characteristic wavelengths that excite one or more of their rotational, vibrational or electronic degrees of freedom. |
|
The whole idea is that nature needs a method for rapidly ridding itself of dysfunctional species that overpopulate and absorb resources too rapidly. |
|
The poor southern state, often beset by its own natural disasters, had beds, meals and an emergency plan that helped it absorb a 2.5 percent jump in its population. |
|
Deflation will not subside until growth is sufficient to absorb the remaining excesses in production capacity, which may be greater than the official data show. |
|
It digests its food by climbing onto its prey and extruding its stomach over the coral colony, releasing digestive enzymes to then absorb the liquified tissue. |
|
Oceans absorb carbon, helping maintain equilibrium in the earth's atmosphere. |
|
You can digest and absorb the nutrients and pass the body waste only when you take liquid. |
|
As compensation, human body would absorb a lesser amount of oxygen as pressure drops. |
|
Not prankishness: simply a characteristic way of aiding an actor unconsciously to absorb a film's topic, without diagrams. |
|
Seeing the sights on horseback allows visitors to absorb a unique landscape. |
|
When a light ray meets an object, the object can absorb the ray in part or in full. |
|
And now the anemic Republican establishment, covetous of the Tea Party's passion, is moving to absorb it, not admonish it. |
|
Natalia Taravkova, with the academism of classic painting, invents living forms that softly absorb us. |
|
After full deployment, the airbag can absorb a significant amount of force as the full weight of an unbelted occupant makes impact. |
|
These granules absorb water and give it off as the plants need it. |
|
Spill or Leak: Evacuate area, absorb spilled liquid with commercial, nonflammable absorbent i.e. sand, vermiculite. |
|
Meanwhile, pan fry the four pieces of foie gras and put them to one side on a piece of kitchen towel to absorb the excess fat. |
|
Cars have crumple zones programmed to crumple up and absorb the energy of a crash, so how can you program a helmet to do that? |
|
In addition, four rubber dampers are used to hold the disc drive block in place and to absorb mechanical shocks. |
|
|
As an overworked beat reporter, I could absorb those arguments, and the opposite ones, and simply plow on in search of new facts. |
|
Even after a person has become unconscious, the stomach lining continues to absorb alcohol, and blood-alcohol levels can be lethal. |
|
To demonstrate our commitment to our customers we have decided to effectively go halves and absorb the remaining cost. |
|
Clean out the Hay Pick Up of all dirt, earth, material, excess grease or any other foreign substance which may absorb water thus causing rust. |
|
Studies have shown that if you have tea with meals, your body will not absorb iron very well. |
|
You know how hard it is to absorb information when you're tired. |
|
Add oxygenating plants which will absorb much of the available carbon dioxide. |
|
This is not a negligible amount, and we are attempting to measure out this aid to suit the local capacity to absorb it. |
|
Furthermore, through many traditions, we know also that by the air of our breathing, we absorb cosmical particles coming from the troposphere. |
|
A suspension of 30 to 50 grams of activated charcoal can be given for smaller amounts or to absorb remaining toxicant. |
|
In the evenings, in the afterglow of sunset, when parrots darted across the sky, her face would absorb light and slowly become luminous like the moon. |
|
The metal cooking pot is black so as to absorb more of the Sun's energy. |
|
Sit in front: Although it's much more visible to the prof if you're nodding off during a lecture when you're right in front of him or her, you'll absorb and understand much more when you're up close. |
|
Their security is continually threatened and the surrounding countries are unable to absorb the surplus in demands for lodging, medical care, and education that their situation has provoked. |
|
At the same time, we must be wary of sidelining all other items on the political agenda and of allowing the elections to absorb all or most of the energy and resources of international and Afghan actors alike. |
|
You can absorb more information if you are concentrating on listening and understanding than if you are being defensive and focusing on your response. |
|
The foodstuff is chilled by direct contact with the cryogenic liquids, which absorb the heat from the foodstuff and evaporate or sublime, thereby cooling it down. |
|
Through my wanderings, in my desire to observe everything, to absorb everything, abhorring the exclusion of the wretched people of this earth, the people who roam the planet, equalized by their suffering. |
|
Despite the presence of a gut, trematodes seem able to absorb glucose and certain other materials through the metabolically active tegument covering the body surface. |
|
Can it absorb the current or l visitors without adverse effects? |
|