On the other hand preservation is only possible via a more or less flexible accommodation to the change of overall circumstances. |
|
Sir Barry said that there was a good case for carrying out operations at more flexible times of the day. |
|
Wrap a small piece of florist's wire to each end of flexible stems of rosemary, then tie to make fragrant napkin rings. |
|
If several people in a unit or department want flexible schedules, it may not be feasible to accommodate all of them. |
|
The less we understand them, the more they look like a shaky, flexible and sleeky snake that changes every time we try to touch it. |
|
Private and family life is a flexible and elastic concept incapable of precise definition. |
|
While they may sound more elastic than their stiff competition, flexible packages also can be quite strong. |
|
In any case, we will know by tomorrow whether it's a wrap, or this flexible deadline remains elastic. |
|
By using flexible tooling in the body shop, we can send the cars down the same line. |
|
The design uses the farm steading model of barns arranged around a court to create a flexible storehouse of large multi-purpose halls. |
|
Refunds to passengers denied boarding will only go to those who have paid fully flexible fares. |
|
Connecting cover boards to the mull, rather than directly to the signatures themselves, allows for a strong but flexible backbone. |
|
A catheter is a thin, hollow, flexible tube that is gently pushed through the blood vessel towards the coronary arteries. |
|
Workers will be more productive, cooperative, flexible and their morale higher without unions. |
|
The Chamber Maid consists of a flexible steel cable, stout enough to be twisted and turned, but pliant enough to contort into the chamber. |
|
Transfer the mixture to a pastry bag fitted with a medium round tip and pipe into 12 flexible plastic dome molds. |
|
Immunological tests and flexible sigmoidoscopy should be evaluated as potential new tests in screening for colorectal cancer. |
|
Outside built up areas, the car can be driven on just two gears, fourth and fifth, so flexible is the engine. |
|
Many workers, particularly working moms, wanted flexible and reduced work times. |
|
This book reminds the reader that these connections are flexible and modifiable. |
|
|
He is very flexible throughout the shoulders, upper body and especially in the ankles. |
|
For the last 18 months or so we've been overpaying our flexible mortgage to get shot of it more quickly. |
|
In short the party of change must now show itself flexible enough to change its own central strategy. |
|
Over time the insulation on these very flexible wires degrades, allowing a small current to flow through the salty bilge water. |
|
However, their arms are very highly forked and branched, and even more flexible than those of brittle stars. |
|
It is a non-pneumatic wheel, made up of a rubber tread bonded to the hub through flexible spokes. |
|
The right side of the colon includes the cecum, ascending colon and proximal transverse colon and cannot be reached by flexible sigmoidoscopy. |
|
These conductive buffered Ni tapes can be employed as long flexible substrates for biaxially aligned high-temperature superconductors. |
|
Use barriers made of flexible polyethylene 30 to 40 millimeters thick and 22 to 28 inches deep. |
|
In addition, the printed circuit board comprises a flat flexible support on which the conductor tracks run from the stator to the rotor. |
|
The government policy is to extend flexible working rights to midlife carers of older people, which will help them with the work-life balance. |
|
By then, you may read the news on thin, flexible screens that unroll like window shades. |
|
By definition, flexible packaging encompasses packages and containers that are more bendable or pliant in their appearance. |
|
These materials are of increasing interest in microelectronics because they are inexpensive, flexible and easy to synthesize. |
|
The program flags possible tax deductions and includes a flexible spending calculator. |
|
Well, I switched to a flexible mortgage, because I'm self-employed and I can set my tax against my mortgage until I have to pay my tax bill. |
|
Tactically, however, he is extremely flexible and is beholden to no particular system, encouraging simple, open football. |
|
Many signs are noticeable at birth, such as low muscle tone, small nose, short fingers, and flexible joints. |
|
The upper is made from abrasion resistant action nubuck and has a flexible thermoplastic rubber toecap for durability. |
|
Fold the white sauce gently but thoroughly into the beaten egg whites, using a flexible spatula. |
|
|
Carefully fold the dry ingredients, in two batches, into the beaten egg whites with a flexible rubber spatula. |
|
They were really flexible when my college timetable changed in September and I started coming in on a Monday afternoon instead of a Friday. |
|
Design and supervision of flexible and semi-rigid pavements adjusted to traffic forecast is a key issue in road construction. |
|
Holiday clubs are marketed as a flexible alternative to timeshare, promising a lifetime of discounted luxury holidays anywhere in the world. |
|
This song not only demonstrates his flexible range, but also the melodiousness of his voice. |
|
Plus it's much more flexible by way of I'm not tied to a particular area for an undue amount of time. |
|
The stiff peduncle, in turn, functions as a rigid base for the flexible insertion of the caudal fin. |
|
What is needed is a more flexible health insurance system to meet the needs of the modern world. |
|
A flexible tube connected the bottoms of the two chambers during plant culture, but the tube was blocked during treatments. |
|
Blankets, in the form of batts or rolls, are flexible products made from mineral fibers. |
|
We have carried out a self-consistent field study of the fusion of membranes consisting of flexible block copolymers in a solvent of homopolymer. |
|
With lots of different exciting models to choose from, low riders and three-wheelers are unconventional offering you flexible options. |
|
The utility of flexible bronchoscopy in the setting of retained secretions is aimed at clearing thick mucous secretions and plugs. |
|
The sclerotized spermatheca is flexible and has muscle attachments between the base of the body of the spermatheca and its apex. |
|
Patients are placed under local or general anesthesia and the stricture is dilated using a flexible gastroscope and Savary bougies. |
|
Muscles, tendons and ligaments surrounding the spine form a strong, flexible and supportive structure. |
|
Seven years after simple, cheap, flexible portable pensions were mooted as a good idea for Irish consumers, they are finally in place. |
|
He recommends employees start preparing to telework three to six months prior to formally asking for a flexible work schedule. |
|
Most of the nationalised and private banks today offer flexible repayment schedules for purchase of pre-owned cars. |
|
The aerodynamic forces generated by rigid and flexible geometrically scaled hawkmoth wings were measured. |
|
|
The trainees were flexible with unanticipated occurrences or unexpected changes. |
|
Then the connector was flanged onto the newly installed flexible pipe end termination which will mate with the male hub connection structure. |
|
This is a thin film that's been coated onto a flexible plastic material backed by a strong glue. |
|
Thankfully an eardrum is a flexible tissue stretched taut over the inner ear. |
|
The shop is located close to its target market in downtown Calgary and holds flexible hours for its clients' convenience. |
|
A flexible tape measure is the only tool to accurately measure the human body's curves and contours. |
|
English prides itself on being the magpie language, freely picking up foreign words to incorporate into its flexible vocabulary. |
|
Our recent combat operations reinforce the requirements for units and echelons that are flexible and tailorable. |
|
It's also possible that an Apatosaurus tail had a highly flexible extension, equivalent to a bullwhip's popper. |
|
Therefore, the most successful programs were those that were attuned to the future and flexible enough to respond quickly. |
|
The fins are very flexible and potentially useful for supporting the body on land, as in lungfish and tetrapods. |
|
Army careers were flexible in the 19th century, and there is no reason why Hervey should not stay in the saddle almost till Crimea. |
|
Their simulations suggest that the more flexible structures have fewer associated water molecules and counterions. |
|
One-and-a-half litres of diesel engine is more than enough for this flexible runaround. |
|
Can you assure the House that this is not a test run for flexible hours of work, to prove that it will not work? |
|
Film noir has thus far managed to escape the conformity trap, remaining a flexible forum for dark ruminations. |
|
They enable more people to invest in property, but in a much more flexible manner than the traditional route of becoming a landlord. |
|
With long-distance travel people can be far more flexible about exactly when they travel and they can book in advance. |
|
After the election, Merkel could start to encourage more union locals to negotiate more flexible arrangements with their bosses. |
|
The Modernist obsession with control is superseded by a more responsive, flexible armature for different sorts of activities. |
|
|
The sturgeon tail behaves mechanically as an extremely flexible sheet with flexible dorsal and ventral lobes following the central tail region. |
|
Crime is flexible and criminals would soon find a way of dealing with greater surveillance. |
|
He's a lithe, flexible performer who plays at high speed and never seems to fatigue. |
|
These flexible batteries can be rolled up, fit into corners, or embedded in thin plastic cards. |
|
The two domains are connected by a stretch of unstructured amino acids which functions as a flexible linker. |
|
I am flexible and open in my thinking and in my approach to different situations and I am comfortable with ambiguity. |
|
It's a smooth and flexible motor that pulls strongly from low revs right round to the limiter cutting in at 7200 rpm. |
|
No apology for failure to deliver on costly contracts or to adopt more flexible and consumer-friendly policies. |
|
This indicates that the bargaining model in Italy is not rigid, but flexible and adaptable. |
|
By using flexible fabrics instead of conventional rigid molds, concrete elements can vary in volume according to structural requirements. |
|
The cabin has plenty of storage spaces, but the door pockets would be much more useful with flexible sides instead of rigid ones. |
|
Among them are lidding film for rigid cups, flexible pouches for pet foods and beverage pouches for juices. |
|
This is the flexible or efficient use of balance, leverage, and movement in the performance of Judo throws and other skills. |
|
The proposed plans would allow employers to reduce overtime payments, revise pension plans and impose more flexible work hours. |
|
To enhance investment returns investors need to be flexible when it comes to rebalancing their portfolios. |
|
The primary pipe is a flexible annularly corrugated pipe made from stainless steel which is flexible and nearly impermeable to fuels. |
|
The cold rolling process required that the steel be annealed or softened to keep the metal flexible and not brittle. |
|
An effective staffing plan is flexible and responsive to short-term and long-term patient and organizational demands. |
|
What is required is a flexible approach, responsive to the dictates of the facts, case by case. |
|
Be flexible and responsive to quick change by being informed about the marketplace and current events. |
|
|
Once a system of school choice is established, it should remain flexible and responsive to parental demand. |
|
An angiogram uses X-rays and a contrast dye that is injected into the heart via a thin, flexible tube inserted in the arm or leg. |
|
Thankfully, according to Corinne, keeping flexible also doesn't mean following a painfully angelic diet. |
|
Buffalo horns are also more flexible and resilient than cattle horns and provide thicker strips. |
|
Because of the high protein content of bone, it is flexible and resilient as well as hard. |
|
Air can pass through the foam easily, resulting in a soft, resilient, flexible material. |
|
Laser resection can be carried out under either local or general anesthesia with a flexible or rigid bronchoscope. |
|
Smart investments are flexible and functional enough to move with you over time, or alternatively, to be resalable. |
|
It's flexible polymer clay that hardens into rigid plastic after a spell in your kitchen oven. |
|
Wiztec applications are flexible and allow each company to customise the application to suit their own requirements. |
|
It turns out that the protein, gp 120, is extremely flexible and difficult for antibodies to latch on to. |
|
A zakuski party can be a flexible mix of homemade and purchased dishes, depending on how much time you want to spend. |
|
It must have a flexible structure that can expand and change, in much the same way that an amoeba adapts to its environment. |
|
As with the cap, the loop is fairly flexible but after some tugging and pulling with the lanyard in place, the loop never tore. |
|
These boutique funds tend to be more flexible in their investments, searching for absolute, not relative, return. |
|
Benches are more flexible than stools or individual seats because you can squeeze in more people along them. |
|
The school principal allocates resources and allows for flexible scheduling to provide time for teacher collaboration. |
|
Cost effective, powerful, flexible and, most of all, accessible, SMP is an all-round, excellent media production tool. |
|
The wringer with its flexible rubber rollers is electrically driven and swings effortlessly into 8 different positions. |
|
Films are the type of flexible plastic used in plastic bags or food wrap, only much thicker. |
|
|
This could mean more flexible schedules, a compressed workweek or a part-time working schedule. |
|
In this very tight job market, more and more employers are agreeing to reduced hour workweeks and more flexible work schedules. |
|
Moves were taken to establish more flexible workforces through changes to numbers employed, forms of work organisation and pay policies. |
|
If workfare replaces welfare, wages will become more flexible enabling EU labor markets to absorb immigrants more efficiently. |
|
Wrap flexible but sturdy wire around one stake, up to the top of the post and staple it there. |
|
An alarm can be set to go off once, daily, weekly, monthly or annually, with very flexible scheduling. |
|
You'll find the best prices on airfares if you can be flexible about dates and time. |
|
They string hundreds of meters of flexible fencing to catch windblown flurries. |
|
As analysts, we must always be flexible and agile enough to be able to handle the new issues. |
|
The Economist cited the readiness of the German trade unions to accept lower wages, longer working hours and more flexible conditions of work. |
|
So, if art has to survive through the ages, it must be free, flexible and able to adapt itself to changing tastes. |
|
Second, in most basal ray-finned fishes such as sturgeon and trout a single dorsal fin is present and is supported by flexible fin rays. |
|
The human mind is very flexible and will find ways to justify just about anything. |
|
Prospective adopters need not be perfect, but do need to be open-minded, honest, flexible and see the process from the child's perspective. |
|
These flexible wings also blend successive passes and radius the outside edges of the skate lane to prevent ski tips from catching. |
|
The human immune system is a remarkably flexible and adaptive piece of technology. |
|
They must be flexible and adaptable to ever-changing schedules and situations. |
|
Compared to hard law it can be more flexible and adaptable to a fast changing technical and political environment. |
|
Approaches to TB control should be flexible and adaptable to local needs and circumstances. |
|
Aviation experts have designed durable new radial tyres that burst into lighter, more flexible fragments if a blowout occurs. |
|
|
The winning companies will use their share of the funding for things like job-shares, flexible working locations and hours. |
|
To maximise performance in the 21st century states require flexible economies, competitive tax rates and an acquisitive, dynamic private sector. |
|
Not only can flexible people bend over more easily to pick up something off the floor, but they're also less likely to suffer achy joints. |
|
In contrast, the flexible protein structures in a bobtail squid's platelets can quickly change configuration. |
|
The hide of the Javan rhinoceros is characterized by large plates of hard tissue joined by thinner, more flexible layers of skin. |
|
If you'd rather be fluid, flexible and unruffled than frustrated, flustered and furious, don't get too rigidly attached to particular structures or specific results. |
|
A flexible health insurance plan gives patients more choice about doctors and coverage. |
|
For example, to build flexible career and promotional tracks which do not conflict with biology. |
|
Therefore, two flute end mills are superior in softer more flexible materials and four or more flute cutters are generally preferred in very hard or abrasive materials. |
|
Modular units will allow for a plug and play capability, which will enable the Army to provide the flexible mix of capabilities needed by warfighters. |
|
Work must also be restructured in such a way that it accommodates caregiving, through a shorter workweek and more flexible scheduling, for example. |
|
All tended to welcome worker requests for flexible hours and job-sharing. |
|
The pinning structure is a rotary feeder which includes a plurality of flexible bristles extending radially from a roller into engagement with the acceleration belt. |
|
If someone is less flexible or unwell, more emphasis would be placed on working the energy lines with acupressure rather than stretching the body. |
|
They see explanation and prediction not as deductive exercises but rather as exercises in flexible ad hocery that require stitching together diverse sources of information. |
|
But religions and ideologies are the opposite of flexible and compromising. |
|
Being a flexible sort, I quickly adjusted to the new policy. |
|
A flexible test device positioner gives a range of phone angles from the starting touch position to 15 degrees or any position within a range of 30 degrees. |
|
A healthy body is one that is strong, flexible and aerobically fit. |
|
Walls that slide on tracks, platform floors, and pivoting panels are some of the devices used to reapportion the space while maintaining its flexible nature. |
|
|
The company, which was a novice to the home loan business only a year ago, has put the wind up traditional lenders with the success of its simple and flexible loan. |
|
The need for airdrops and tactical flight requires good low airspeed flight and the aircraft also has long range and high cruise speed for rapid and flexible deployment. |
|
The open atrium acoustically separates this curved form from the main rectilinear block that houses the National Library collections in a flexible framework of levels. |
|
Redundancies and lower manning levels have called forth the need for more flexible job descriptions so that fewer employees can cover all the previous jobs. |
|
Of course, the first prerequisite is to have a flexible and relaxed body. |
|
Since most alpine and arctic birds are ground nesters, they require some snow-free ground to initiate laying, and thus must be flexible in reproductive timing. |
|
Nothing in the world is more flexible and yielding than water. |
|
Perimeter circuits, for water, steam, and gas supplies, allow for flexible laboratory replanning and there are no suspended ceilings, to simplify maintenance. |
|
The critical skills needed to build a leading-edge career include the ability to be flexible and adaptable and to have a commitment to lifelong learning. |
|
However, when working with a flexible design, users can easily control line length and text size by resizing the browser window and using the text zoom feature. |
|
Rather than sticking to your own stable skills, you should be flexible and polyvalent, and you should do this on your own responsibility, autonomously. |
|
Opportunities for efficiency of scale are greatest with this type of structure, but, obviously, it is the least flexible and least responsive to local conditions. |
|
A key element in this regard is the presence of farm enterprises that are flexible and responsive to the rapidly changing opportunities in today's economy. |
|
The system was supposed to replace the box-ticking, legalistic approach that dogged predecessors with a more flexible approach based on high-level principles. |
|
The joints had to be as strong and flexible as the pipes themselves, and able to stand the stress of being coiled with the pipes onto large drums. |
|
You need to be well organised and flexible to ensure that you meet your deadlines and have good communication skills, as you will be liaising with both guests and suppliers. |
|
Some futurists have said that we'll need to be more inventive, creative, and flexible to handle the tasks, flow and rhythm of life in this century and beyond. |
|
Designers are flexible and intuitive rather than rigid and exacting. |
|
Stretching and keeping your body flexible and limber is so important especially as we age so when we reach for something we don't pull our back out or pull a muscle. |
|
Weisberg writes about the Europeans that were flexible enough to accept Fascism as the new reality. |
|
|
This flexible attitude to national sovereignty is, of course, no recent phenomenon. |
|
Why, then, has the flip-flopper label attached itself so much more firmly to Romney than to the equally flexible Gingrich? |
|
Most Paleozoic crinoids lived attached to the sea-floor by a flexible stem, which may be either cemented to the sea-floor, or have a root-like system buried into the sediment. |
|
Wear shoes with soft leather tops and flexible crepe or foam rubber soles. |
|
Analysts said her hint that the taper could be flexible suggests less of a determination to push ahead with policy tightening than was evident a few months ago. |
|
Ampb peptides are a new class of molecules where the photoisomerizable dye azobenzene is linked to the peptide moiety via a flexible methylene spacer. |
|
Toy Soldiers Having flexible hamstrings is crucial for skiing and snowboarding, says Morin. |
|
Then there are those who prefer a more flexible feast, offering haggis ravioli then Scotch trifle with mango, and there's scarcely a poem to be heard or a kilt to be seen. |
|
These feet are long, thin, flexible tentacles ending in tiny suction cups. |
|
He details daily routines, the flexible yet morally grounded leadership style of a gifted Scoutmaster, and the often ribald creativity of camp games and songs. |
|
Or at the very least, he needs to find other performers like her who emphasize his obvious strengths in character creation and flexible but serious thematics. |
|
This hearing aid device has a body that can be attached to an eyeglasses bow has a channel therein for acceptance of a flexible eyeglasses bow end piece. |
|
Asbestos is the name of a group of minerals that occur naturally as masses of strong, flexible fibers that can be separated into thin threads and woven. |
|
A more flexible labour market is basic to our recent economic success. |
|
In the evolution of vertebrates, long bodies with continuously flexible notochords and segmental muscles existed before the appearance of segmental vertebrae. |
|
These are breathable, flexible self-adhesive polyurethane pads that help flatten raised scars and give the scars a more natural appearance in terms of color and texture. |
|
They face the challenge of being flexible and adaptable to the patterns that occur and recur through the constant evolution of the aviation business. |
|
Six flexible fuel tanks with a capacity of 2,020 litres are self-sealing in the event of leakage following a crash or being pierced by projectiles. |
|
This paper Crighton studied the sound wave associated with a turbulent fluid flow over a discontinuous surface formed by two semi-infinite flexible planes. |
|
Rigid, semi-rigid and flexible shoe inserts all can be used. |
|
|
The price for being flexible has traditionally meant a lower standard of living but Payne is raising the benchmark for what defines prefabricated, mobile housing. |
|
Its general manager says the flexible displays are far more advanced than other bendy screens in terms of size, resolution and the complexity of the organic electronics used. |
|
We have got to be prepared to be flexible and move with the times. |
|
There were a lot of sexually discriminatory comments as regards female lawyers who became pregnant and tried to find out more about flexible working. |
|
Jazz creates a shareable universe, as reader, characters, and narrator together shape the plot, and an endlessly flexible language, as the story gets told and retold. |
|
The fourth and fifth fingers run from the leading edge to the trailing edge of the wing, and stretched across all the fingers is a thin, flexible skin. |
|
El Zomor said the Islamists had become more flexible on key issues and that mediated communication with the army is ongoing. |
|
That means that the kind of ministries we take on are flexible depending on the needs of society. |
|
Over many recent decades, both Keynesians and monetarists have generally at one time or another favored both fixed and flexible exchange rate regimes. |
|
Persons with at least one positive stool card were offered further diagnostic testing that most commonly included barium enema, flexible sigmoidoscopy or full colonoscopy. |
|
We propose a flexible class of skew-symmetric distributions for which the probability density function has the form of a product of a symmetric density and a skewing function. |
|
This is achieved by the presence of flexible mechanisms that interact in multidimensional networks of regulation at many levels of cellular activities. |
|
The assembly plant is not only launching a new truck but is the first of Ford's assembly facilities to incorporate the new flexible manufacturing system in the body shop. |
|
Tooth shape ranges from widely spaced and pointy unicuspids in zooplanktivorous and insectivorous species to closely packed and flexible tricuspids in algal scrapers. |
|
By contrast, the people he namechecks are far more flexible actors. |
|
She gave few concrete details about the forthcoming gadgets, saying only that the smartwatch would run on Android and would not have a flexible display. |
|
Higher-end, value-added flexible packaging is taking market share away from cardboard packaging and low-end commodity films. |
|
Adamowski says the TIR program makes sense because it is standards-based and flexible to meet teacher needs. |
|
Leavitt said one of the advantages that BCS brought to the table was competitive funding with flexible terms. |
|
Mr Hawkins said, 'We foresee that TLS will be a flexible operation, providing services completely tailored to its clients' requirements. |
|
|
As the market leader in high performance and flexible Token Ring connectivity, Madge Networks will continue to innovate with new products. |
|
Traditionally, tolylene diisocyanate has been used for the production of flexible slabstock foams for the last 40 years or so. |
|
Features include 3x optical zoom, a split screen, seamless switchovers and a flexible gooseneck design. |
|
Vacuum bag moulding uses a flexible film to enclose the part and seal it from outside air. |
|
Both combine functionality with design in flexible spring steel and silicone, and are heat-resistant to 450 degrees. |
|
On the lower side is a rigid mould and on the upper side is a flexible membrane made from silicone or an extruded polymer film such as nylon. |
|
In downsized or delayered companies, flexible working arrangements may result in some employees taking on more in order for others to do less. |
|
Ropes have tensile strength and so can be used for dragging and lifting, but are too flexible to provide compressive strength. |
|
At that point, the animal was anesthetized, and tracheoscopy was performed with a flexible 56-cm bronchoscope. |
|
Our Global Customers require a secure, reliable and flexible platform for managing their SSA Solutions. |
|
It is less prone to kinking than twisted rope and, depending on the material, very flexible and therefore easy to handle and knot. |
|
By switching to Apex flexible vinyl compound, says American Granby, it improved the durability of its torque arrestor. |
|
The NASA Paresev Rogallo flexible wing was originally developed to investigate alternative methods of recovering spacecraft. |
|
Always combine these with light from other sources, such as wall lights, downlighters, uplighters and standard lamps to create a flexible system. |
|
Several airlines began enacting flexible rebooking policies Thursday for passengers scheduled to fly into the storm's path. |
|
The humeral diaphysis is prepared with flexible reamers to allow for a 1 mm to 2 mm cement mantle around the humeral stem. |
|
Siloxanes have very flexible backbones and correspondingly low glass transition temperatures. |
|
The Beneventan rite appears to have been less complete, less systematic, and more liturgically flexible than the Roman rite. |
|
Switzerland has a more flexible job market than neighbouring countries and the unemployment rate is very low. |
|
A more flexible view of kinship was formulated in British social anthropology. |
|
|
Table 1 shows some areas where SAS state machines are more flexible than their FC equivalents. |
|
The new situation demanded a more flexible command over the state, especially during the conflicts with Turkic, Baltic and German peoples. |
|
In Latin, the endings of nouns, verbs, adjectives, and pronouns allow for extremely flexible order in most situations. |
|
Austin argues that Webster's dictionaries helped redefine Americanism in an era of highly flexible cultural identity. |
|
The extended range features two new, unique designs, including a flexible tip laser probe and a steerable laser probe. |
|
During her time abroad, Sanger also saw a more flexible diaphragm in a Dutch clinic, which she thought was a better form of contraceptive. |
|
The procedures in a court of equity were much more flexible than the courts at common law. |
|
Whereas tradition is supposed to be invariable, they are seen as more flexible and subject to innovation and change. |
|
As such the right to property is regarded as a more flexible right than other human rights. |
|
The company informed that GasBox is installed in a modular container and is an autonomous and flexible stirling engine unit. |
|
Card clothing is made from a sturdy flexible backing in which closely spaced wire pins are embedded. |
|
Movable type allowed for much more flexible processes than hand copying or block printing. |
|
Silicoat is a one-part, flexible conformal coating designed to protect printed circuit boards and other electrical assemblies. |
|
Nontoxic calcium and zinc stabilizers for food-contact PVC, especially for rigid or flexible compounds, available in solids, pastes and liquids. |
|
Hydropower is a flexible source of electricity since stations can be ramped up and down very quickly to adapt to changing energy demands. |
|
This powerful but flexible tool even allowed less well-born individuals to bring forward their concerns. |
|
Some advocate making the transition to a Breton model, where competitions are more flexible and with fewer restrictions. |
|
Neuropath features a highly flexible and visible tip that allows for ready vascular access, while maintaining good stability. |
|
Shamrock Automation designs and manufactures automatic ladlers, flexible robotic pouring systems and ingot loading systems. |
|
When bagged in this way, the lower mold is a rigid structure and the upper surface of the part is formed by the flexible membrane vacuum bag. |
|
|
Hang gliders most often have flexible wings given shape by a frame, though some have rigid wings. |
|
The product is flexible enough to adhere strongly to wood surfaces, and imbues them with the water-repellent properties typical of silicones. |
|
In particular mozzarella, cheddar and string cheese makers depend on good extended texture to provide retailers flexible lead times. |
|
All Kay systems rely on a true strobe light source providing superior image quality for both rigid and flexible endoscopy. |
|
The memory subsystem of the TIGER 32 EVM is very flexible with two banks of memory, all zero wait state. |
|
The flexible antenna was inserted subdermally, extending toward the head of the snake. |
|
Although all dental traumatologists agree that for avulsions short term flexible splinting is advisable there is controversy for root fractures. |
|
By developing a flexible work force plan a company can protect itself from the costs that arise in an upstaffing situation. |
|
However, flexible solar cells, drawing attention as one of next-generation solar cells, are bendable or twistable. |
|
Mark uv absorbers include substituted benzo-phenones for rigid and flexible PVC, polyolefins, and other resins. |
|
The flexible curriculum is set by the Ministry of Education and the Education Board. |
|
Using this technique, we have succeeded in fabricating RF ID tags on flexible substrates entirely by printing. |
|
Have a plan but be flexible and adjust to emerging realities. |
|
Employment regulations are relatively flexible and the labour market is one of the freest in the world. |
|
As delight scatters in scalar glist, their helms in the sun massed flexible laminae, really, the reason. |
|
He had the rough magnanimity of the old English vein, mellowed into tenderness and dashed with a flexible and spinous humor. |
|
Yeats, and Thomas Hardy, his poems are highly structured but flexible verse forms. |
|
Requirements include listening skills, tolerance, ability to be nonjudgmental, consistent, flexible and patient. |
|
The flexible membrane can be a reusable silicone material or an extruded polymer film. |
|
I have used this technique to build very flexible code generators, softcoded calculation engines for users, and much more. |
|
|
In birds, there is a variable number of cervical vertebrae, which often form the only truly flexible part of the spine. |
|
A known loop is a snarelike loop that is passed through an endoscope's working channel via a flexible delivery catheter. |
|
One of the few exceptions is the African pancake tortoise, which has a flat, flexible shell that allows it to hide in rock crevices. |
|
Under his system, patterned after the French, the army corps became a more mobile, flexible command. |
|
From trays to flexible silicone moulds, we provide bakeware in a large variety of shapes, colours and sizes. |
|
The high strength, flexible transmission shaft eliminates the universal joint and small parts, rubber boots and other failure-prone components. |
|
The MEMS transducer is a condenser microphone with a flexible poly-Si membrane and a rigid reference electrode manufactured on SOI substrate. |
|
A more flexible and portable model would ease exit from and reentrance into the profession and enable it to more effectively compete for talent. |
|
Its steam tube isn't as flexible or easy to detach, but it is easier to fill and empty the tank, thanks to a big screw cap. |
|
Spatula applicators, with a flexible stainless steel blade, are used to apply filler. |
|
They are designed to be flexible and quickly adaptable for differing operations. |
|
The thinness of the nano-scale coating makes it possible for the liquid glass to be used on a variety of flexible substrates, such as textiles. |
|
Retrocessions are a key element in the provision of flexible compensation schemes. |
|
For the wealthy, this band was often a thin and flexible band of burnished gold, silver or findruine. |
|
Many have a rough sticky texture, which together with a robust but flexible body, helps it to withstand strong water currents. |
|
Proposals for change to the RTR flexible work arrangements were made before it came into force and have continued with increasing urgency. |
|
Young ice is not as flexible as nilas, but tends to break under wave action. |
|
When the vacuum is reapplied in the chamber the flexible rubber inflation relaxes and opens up, preparing for the next squeezing cycle. |
|
With a strategy of low-wage mass production overseas and flexible high-tech manufacturing at home, they should remain globally competitive. |
|
A thin, flexible tube with a tiny camera on the end is used to look inside the large bowel. |
|