Roughly half the persons with food allergies are sensitive to these or tree nuts, such as walnuts, cashews, and almonds. |
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If it's not sensitive information could anyone please tell me where to find wallcreeper at any site in the Pyrenees? |
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They are very lathery, and the high content of oils makes them suitable for sensitive skin. |
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Those who are sensitive, nervous and anxious, with a reserved nature, are prone. |
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All the patients had bacilli sensitive to streptomycin, isoniazid and rifampicin initially. |
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In men, serum thyroid hormones were sensitive to marginal changes in energy intake and expenditure. |
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Where the injury to the claimant is caused as a result of his especially sensitive activity, no claim will lie. |
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Tests have shown that a sensitive thermal imaging technique which spots heat coming off the face can detect liars. |
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She kept writing and continued to ignore him until she felt him softly kiss the side of her neck, his breath fanning the sensitive area there. |
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Chinese patients are reportedly more sensitive than Caucasians to the anticoagulant effect of warfarin. |
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Bacteria that causes eye infections is sensitive to the antibacterial action of honey. |
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Abu Mustafa, whose antennae were particularly sensitive, said he didn't think it was a wonderful idea. |
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We are sensitive also to the values that ensure that our nation, a mosaic of diverse cultures and faiths, survives and thrives. |
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Ray had to cover her mouth and nose, trying to prevent herself from retching as the smell reached her sensitive nostrils. |
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The magnitude of the observed anisotropic flow effect is sensitive to the degree of thermalization at the collision's earliest moments. |
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Of course he's probably lying, but any sensitive, caring American would recognize this as an anguished cry for help. |
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Left-handers seem to be more acutely sensitive and responsive to novelty than right handers. |
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They are metabolically active and extremely sensitive and responsive to rapid changes in the microenvironment about the leaf. |
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You need management that can oversee the dollars and cents responsibly while remaining sensitive to the artistic process. |
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He could be distant, private, sensitive, fiery, but he was a man also governed by impressive kindness and responsibleness. |
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It necessitates a little leap of the imagination to find the sensitive soul buried within this solid, expensively suited figure. |
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India cannot afford a prime minister who shoots his mouth off on sensitive issues and then issues tedious clarifications two days later. |
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Although not all areas are highly detailed, some images are very high resolution, and some show sensitive locations in various countries. |
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The warning comes at a highly sensitive time for Labour MSPs, who are going through a rapid process of reselection this month. |
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This is a wonderful and sensitive synthesis of Kabbalah, focusing on the mysticism of the Zohar and its later manifestations. |
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Clowns are, in a sense, anarchic, but they also have to be sensitive as to where they create anarchy and chaos. |
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The test is more sensitive, quicker, and more reproducible than older methods. |
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As a replicase, Pol is highly sensitive to template defects and misinserts nucleotides only extremely rarely. |
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He believes the more sensitive approach to lateness may have a long-term impact on attendance. |
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It incorporates a flight path of about 40 cm from repeller to a discrete dynode-type detector that is both sensitive and durable. |
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But a country can hardly expect amity and friendship from others while continuing to provoke their most sensitive spots. |
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And even if they keep the world guessing, ambiguities are often put to work in dealing with sensitive matters. |
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Was he not actually the sensitive, caring pet I knew and loved, but rather a cruel, remorseless murderer? |
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Still, counterterrorism agencies remain reluctant to share sensitive information or cooperate on prosecutions. |
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In my late teens, a sensitive young painter, I felt the need for some personal space. |
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That said, it's worth bearing in mind that annual profits of fund managers can be very sensitive to year-on-year performance of the stock market. |
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Landowners can apply for restriction orders for 28 days over the year to keep walkers out of their fields at sensitive times like lambing. |
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Both make allusive abstract forms that can suggest seedpods, cells or constellations, and both work in a generous scale with a sensitive touch. |
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Although blood in the stool suggests invasive disease, fever is not a sensitive indicator of dysentery. |
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A more sensitive version of the weekly publication that contained material from communications intercepts was called the Situation Summary. |
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If allergens in the air are an asthma trigger, pollutants can make the lungs even more sensitive to them. |
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Fortunately, there is some sensitive writing to balance this kind of lachrymosity. |
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Reef managers created a system of zoning that regulates activities in different places that are sensitive to different pressures. |
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The DPPIV enzyme is also highly sensitive to mercury and organophosphate xenobiotics. |
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A sensitive Geiger-Muller counter registers no activity on the surface of a uranium print or on the outside of a bottle of toner. |
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The case has exposed a number of worrying concerns about the handling of such a sensitive inquiry. |
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The information was so militarily sensitive that the weather reports were encoded before being transmitted. |
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I just think that people have gotten more sensitive to needing a work-life balance. |
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These people are highly sensitive to carbohydrates and can't seem to lose any weight unless they severely reduce their carb intake. |
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Students create sensitive rubbings of textural walls, bricks, decorative woodwork, stucco and stones. |
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Restoration of the seventeenth-century grade II building is complete following sensitive redevelopment which began early this decade. |
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The government delayed publication of Cory's reports until March this year and redacted the most sensitive sections. |
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She nearly leaps with joy feeling a faint wisp of his breath upon her sensitive skin. |
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Even now I am very sensitive when something isn't tuned in properly on the wireless. |
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Computers containing sensitive information are supposed to be wiped free of data before being sold on. |
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You are sensitive and caring in loving personal relationships and can expect reciprocation from your partner. |
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It is feared that this may cause serious risks in that spies or terrorists could use it to recce sensitive British sites for potential attack. |
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Our wind turbine and hydro worked virtually without hiccup, making our lives sensitive to fluctuations between energy abundance and paucity. |
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The windscreen wiper is speed sensitive in the intermittent position, which is a bright idea, and it also has a de-icer. |
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And third-party agrarians, particularly sensitive to farm debt, chose currency inflation over the gold standard. |
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As it is sensitive to geometric shape, this is an appropriate technique for studying aggregation that occurs in solution. |
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But the courts are ready, willing and able to deal with highly secretive and sensitive evidence. |
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They despise each other, but of course must keep up appearances in front of the sensitive young mistress. |
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The documents contained sensitive information on informants, north west criminal gangs and even bank accounts detailing payments for information. |
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And by making the particles chemically reactive, scientists are building exquisitely sensitive sensors that can detect individual molecules. |
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For patients who have an acute ischemic stroke, the opportunity to limit the neurological damage is very time sensitive. |
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Fly-fishing and white-water rafting disrupted the sensitive Harlequin duck breeding grounds, thus permanently closing the river to human use. |
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Because white pine is very sensitive to time of shearing, small white pine should be given top priority in the shearing schedule. |
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They should release the documents containing the allegations against him, with the sensitive bits whited out. |
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Because of their affectionate and sensitive nature they are used for riding and companionship programmes. |
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Smooth-coated otters are agile in the water and on land and use their sensitive whiskers to detect water disturbances. |
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Padded feet, keen night vision and sensitive whiskers enable silent movement through dense undergrowth at night. |
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The rash appears because part of the immune system is overly sensitive to irritation. |
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A young whippersnapper at the Department of State was willing to discuss this sensitive matter on background. |
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Instantly, Wendy's eyes watered as the ultrasonic whine assailed her sensitive ears. |
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It is a sad fact that, when it comes to sensitivity to attack, there is no one so sensitive as a journalist. |
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These sensitive areas are known as acupoints, and are thought to link to nerve junctions in other parts of the body. |
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Recent food scares have made the public sensitive to new, apparently untested technologies. |
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A more crude approach is bin raiding, where thieves steal rubbish to search for sensitive documents such as bank statements or utility bills. |
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We romanticize depression as a wellspring of finer thought, as the source of melancholic insight for artists, deep thinkers and sensitive souls. |
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Plain radiographs are less sensitive for metastatic lesions than are other imaging tests. |
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I am a sensitive, not in a supernatural sense, but my senses are very acute, my hearing is very acute. |
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The casting directors all like to boast that they have a very sensitive radar for people who just want the celebrity of it. |
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This should be an important reminder to all webmasters not to publish sensitive material online. |
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The total membrane area is a sensitive diagnosis for the force balance within the membrane. |
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Consuming radish generally results in improved digestion, but some people are sensitive to its acridity and robust action. |
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As it happens, these neurons are also very sensitive to the acoustic boundaries between speech sounds, as are monkeys and human infants. |
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But very sensitive hearing is necessary to hear all the acoustic cues in speech sounds. |
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Because they tend to be compassionate and sensitive, they respond best to personal recognition and acknowledgement. |
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The urine ketone dip test was highly sensitive for diabetic ketoacidosis and diabetic ketosis with or without acidosis. |
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However, these negotiations are sensitive and to reveal more of their details would risk jeopardising their outcome. |
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The thing is, I don't think I'm particularly sensitive, though I'll be the first to admit I like peace and quiet. |
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Bennett's writing is highly sensitive, with delicate writing for the harp and harpsichord, as well as for the violist. |
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He's a nimble, accomplished soloist and a sensitive accompanist, capable of pastel washes, shimmering folky chords or juicy bop lines. |
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The lack of protection means that e-mails and sensitive computer files can be accessed by hackers using little more than a laptop and an antenna. |
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Who would wish a life of loveless misery upon a warm-hearted, sensitive young girl? |
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Their only hope lies in Kate Soffel, the prison warden's sensitive and beautiful wife. |
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There are wild-looking cats wandering the open areas and this might upset the very sensitive. |
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I have a theory, which I have mentioned from time to time, that readers are sensitive to fonts, layout, and page design, to a far greater extent than is generally recognised. |
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He acts like a tough guy, but he's really very sensitive to criticism. |
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The success of the whole structure was extremely sensitive to the size of the axle. |
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This is, of course, bluster, yet the harsh words come at a particularly sensitive moment. |
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Koreans are now divided over the sensitive issue of abolishing the system. |
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I am too subversive and eccentric for most of the people I work with to really like, and I am too sensitive to to take their abrasive personalities with gentle good humour. |
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The Sligo Rape Crisis Centre know this better than most and have striven to provide a sensitive and accommodating service to those who have suffered rape or sexual abuse. |
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The genial German-born pianist Wolfram Rieger accompanies in a very sensitive way regarding both the demands of the composition and the needs of the singer. |
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For the most part, Tosti's songs were written for voice with piano accompaniment, and both Carreras and Heppner have been fortunate to work with sensitive arrangers. |
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I start with The Graduate and how the sensitive, open-hearted, vulnerable, confused person can be a cinematic hero. |
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Therefore, regions where this form of rock is present are especially sensitive to the effects of acid rain, and lakes in these areas become acidified very quickly. |
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But if you have an overly sensitive radar for cinematic pomp, stay clear. |
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Clinical practitioners often use herbal compresses and packs to aid in the healing process, which can cause allergic reactions for sensitive skin. |
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To do a body pack, evenly apply it to your skin, beginning with your feet and working up so it remains on your face, where skin is thin and sensitive. |
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Children who need Pulsatilla tend to be weepy, sensitive, and clingy. |
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On sensitive subjects my words have to be weighed carefully. |
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Instead of inserting needles into the sensitive acupoints, Jin Shen uses prolonged fingertip massage to produce the same calming and energy-redirecting effect. |
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This is again problematic because Jezebel is commendably sensitive when it comes to issues regarding race and women. |
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Embodying both the disfigured exterior and the sensitive man inside is the challenge facing cooper. |
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A sensitive microphone placed close to the eardrum typically records a faint hum, but in many human subjects clear whistles can be picked up on top of the background buzz. |
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The affected area may feel hot and be sensitive to the touch. |
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Our assumption is that an increase in affirmative responses to sensitive questions on such behaviors suggests greater honesty or enhanced self-disclosure. |
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Latex agglutination, while quick, simple, and sensitive, is not recommended for routine use as pathogens cannot be ruled out by a negative test result. |
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It is a particularly sensitive time for advertising, an industry so inherently trivial that it is wide open to accusations of insensitivity and crassness. |
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Cars are now nearly as sensitive to weight distribution as airplanes are. |
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Williams interviewed and profiled four D-day veterans, showing his sensitive side without ever seeming maudlin. |
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We have Bishop Dumeni and Bishop Kameeta, two religious leaders with experience who are capable of handling a delicate and sensitive exercise like a truth commission. |
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I just found it depressingly tone deaf for a show that typically handles these sensitive issues so delicately. |
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Levy's wry sort of humour and the ironic use of an English woman's perspective to describe the problems confronted by the immigrants is both clever and sensitive. |
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It includes changing the climate of an institution from one that is hostile and alienating for members of particular groups to one that is sensitive and welcoming. |
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We've used such smart polymers to fabricate chemically sensitive holograms responsive to water, alcohol, pH, and positively charged ions of alkali metal. |
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The mms4 mutant has previously been found to be sensitive to alkylating agents such as MMS, weakly sensitive to ultraviolet light, and resistant to X rays. |
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Many iSCSI applications are latency sensitive, so building the network with the fewest number of hops and the shortest possible links is usually a key consideration. |
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Mr. Childs, an experienced builder of skyscrapers, is in the sensitive position of representing a client who believes he can remake the plan for his own purposes. |
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Contrary to the fantasies of romantic primitivism, civilisation and development have made our species more knowledgeable and sensitive about the workings of nature. |
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What it does say is that our brains are sensitive to this electromagnetic radiation, which is fascinating. |
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Planning and conditions attached by local or national authorities which affect the town both residentially and commercially, is a highly sensitive issue. |
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First, rent collection techniques must be sensitive to market cycles and collect only the residual that remains after allowing normal returns to capital and labor. |
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It demonstrates how relationships during the summer can be so fleeting and how at times even the most sensitive teen can emerge resiliently from disappointment. |
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Linda believes nurses must be sensitive, have good personal resources, including humour, and have grasped their own perspective on death and dying. |
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In this way, Jenna Hamilton is a reimagining of the sensitive outsider, engineered for the digital era. |
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In the non-lignified portion, even the highly sensitive aniline blue staining failed to detect the presence of callose, which would be indicative of sieve tube formation. |
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That he certainly should not have been entrusted with access to hundreds of thousands of sensitive documents. |
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Because some patients with atopic dermatitis or severe xerosis are very sensitive to the retinoids, we may start them with a lower strength cream or a weaker topical agent. |
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Listeners with a sensitive disposition should retune to KissFM at once. |
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Camera lenses, no matter how expensive, are nowhere near as acutely sensitive as the human eye, nor does the camera see colour in exactly the same way. |
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Balanchine danced the role of Polio and Tanaquil, the Etruscan Queen sensitive to omens, danced the victim. |
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He was highly perceptive and exquisitely sensitive to everything around him. |
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Any ad invoking that tragedy would have to be exquisitely sensitive and carefully crafted. |
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We are strong in our accomplishments, yet by some cruel irony we possess soft sensitive bodies and extraordinarily tall buildings. |
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Post et al. showed that quartz rheology is sensitive to water fugacity, but the above extrapolations do not apply to identical values of water fugacity. |
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The younger, older, and more sensitive you are, the fainter your fingerprints, Lightflower told me in an interview. |
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This is too sensitive a time to be taking such matters lightly. |
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Environmental magnetism is sensitive to particle size, and has proven effective even at low detection levels. |
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Firstly, runoff water can extract soil contaminants and carry them in the form of water pollution to even more sensitive aquatic habitats. |
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Novaya Zemlya was a sensitive military area during the Cold War years and it is still used today. |
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Climate change can reportedly trigger volcanic activity in sensitive areas by changing pressure of ice or seawater and extreme weather. |
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At school I was arty-farty, somewhat sensitive and prone to exorbitant longings and extravagant demands. |
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Collagen biosynthesis by dermal cells in the DE is sensitive to growth factors, ascorbate concentrations and amino acid pools. |
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Many waders have sensitive nerve endings at the end of their bills which enable them to detect prey items hidden in mud or soft soil. |
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It intercepts and blocks attempts to transfer sensitive information by silently redialing modems, or by stealthily sending e-mail. |
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The turtles can see many colors, but are most sensitive to light from violet to yellow or wavelengths of 400 to 600 nanometers. |
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Cephalopods have a rhabdomeric visual system which means they are visually sensitive to polarized light. |
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Scallops are highly sensitive to shadows, vibrations, water movement, and chemical stimuli. |
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As of 2007, negotiations are ongoing to shift the development to the nearby Dale View quarry, a less sensitive area. |
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The mouse inoculation assay is currently the most sensitive, specific, and commonly used method for detecting botulinal toxin. |
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Using a traditional tendon reflex mallet, we located the most sensitive spot on the triceps tendon with the strongest reflex response. |
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However, fish have an optokinetic reflex in their visual systems which can be sensitive to moving stripes. |
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A nonvanilla option will be more precisely sensitive to the forward volatility in the market between its inception and its stopping time. |
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The Model 126 Trotter W pressure sensitive labeler is dedicated to wrap-around labeling of round containers and handles up to 150 cpm. |
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Agronomic haracteristics of autum and winter seeded photoperiod in sensitive spring wheat in agro-climate of north-west India. |
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Because rental housing accounts for more than a third of most tenants' income, rent controls are a very sensitive issue for the renting public. |
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The parish deacon was always pushing to get new kneelers for the church, probably because he was old and his knees were sensitive. |
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For materials that are sensitive to humidity variations, the RH control is said to improve correlation and reproducibility in test results. |
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Lead sulfide is a semiconductor, a photoconductor, and an extremely sensitive infrared radiation detector. |
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I knew that he had been barracked at times, but I did not realise that he was so sensitive. |
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The cells are sensitive to a plant hormone called auxin that is produced by the leaf and other parts of the plant. |
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They have small rounded, highly sensitive ears and sharp teeth adapted for eating small mammals, birds, insects, frogs, and carrion. |
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Deborah finds her clients are often sensitive to nut oils, cucumber, geranium, glycerin and lanolin. |
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At the beginning of the brooding season, the hens are very sensitive to disturbances and leave the nest quickly. |
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By this term we mean a magnetometer whose sensitive elements sense the field in the same region where the UCN are undergoing Larmor precession. |
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Generally, the sensitive zones of electronic dictionary are the LCD screen, power zone, loudhailer, keystroke zone and crust. |
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Maize is most sensitive to drought at the time of silk emergence, when the flowers are ready for pollination. |
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However, the more sensitive infrared system was able to detect this discontinuity at ambient temperatures without the benefit of a hotgun. |
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Sculptures are sensitive to environmental conditions such as temperature, humidity and exposure to light and ultraviolet light. |
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Shaw, a sensitive boy, found the less salubrious parts of Dublin shocking and distressing, and was happier at the cottage. |
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It has been commended for its sensitive depiction of the close relationship between the hero and his religious mentor, Quaker William Walters. |
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Sup and Gupta found that Rhizobium isolates from urid were resistant to TMTD at pH 7 but proved sensitive to its degradation product. |
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The report also noted that it is estimated that more than 50 percent of the discharges into sensitive areas was not treated sufficiently. |
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From his early years, Bell showed a sensitive nature and a talent for art, poetry, and music that was encouraged by his mother. |
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The base units connect via pipes to wet steam nozzles for wet steam cleaning in sensitive locations without combustion concerns. |
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Because of their topography and perceived remoteness, parts of Scotland have housed many sensitive defence establishments. |
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In 2016, the incomes of poor households are extremely sensitive to the activity in the labor market. |
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Her political adviser Nick Timothy wrote an article in 2015 to oppose China's involvement in sensitive sectors. |
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This encounter was extremely controversial in Spain, being until nowadays a very sensitive point of the Government of Aznar. |
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A root kit is a virtually undetectable program that criminals can use to do things such as log passwords and gain access to sensitive files. |
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The European Tour has always been sensitive to the risk that its best players will leave to play on the PGA Tour for many reasons. |
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If so, this would indicate that Neanderthals may have been very sensitive to climate change. |
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Equipped with large, highly adjustable external ears, moose have highly sensitive hearing. |
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The difficulties of photoheliography consist principally in the rapidity with which the sun's image acts upon the sensitive film. |
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Domitian was allegedly extremely sensitive regarding his baldness, which he disguised in later life by wearing wigs. |
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To suggest the dynasty owed its accession to murder would have been less than sensitive. |
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The 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster caused nuclear fallout in the sensitive Arctic ecosystems and poisoned fish, meat and berries. |
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Girls are especially sensitive to nutritional regulation because they must contribute all of the nutritional support to a growing fetus. |
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Also, ladywear was a very sensitive topic during this time, where women showing their ankles was viewed to be scandalous. |
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Serological methods are highly sensitive, specific and often extremely rapid tests used to identify microorganisms. |
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A broad, sensitive test for pathogens that detects the presence of infectious material rather than antibodies is therefore highly desirable. |
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Some future neutrino detectors may also be sensitive to the particles produced when cosmic rays hit the Earth's atmosphere. |
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Disturbance of these sensitive sites may trigger the mother to abandon her den prematurely, or abandon her litter altogether. |
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A sugarcane crop is sensitive to the climate, soil type, irrigation, fertilizers, insects, disease control, varieties, and the harvest period. |
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For example, user passwords are generally case sensitive in order to allow more diversity and make them more difficult to break. |
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They were highly sensitive to the issue of tyranny, which they saw manifested in the British response to the Boston Tea Party. |
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It was, however, held that in this special and incredibly sensitive situation, that the separation was necessary to save the first twin's life. |
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His historical method was distinguished by his thorough and sensitive use of historical sources, and by his determinedly historical perspective. |
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Previous intervention strategies may have been largely ineffective due to not being culturally sensitive or practical. |
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Hay is very sensitive to weather conditions, especially when it is harvested. |
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Some animals are sensitive to particular fungi or molds that may grow on living plants. |
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A price discrimination strategy is to charge less price sensitive buyers a higher price and the more price sensitive buyers a lower price. |
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The service also allows users themselves to flag inappropriate or sensitive imagery for Google to review and remove. |
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Due to its porosity, it is sensitive to the flow of air and the heat generated can be moderated by controlling the air flow to the fire. |
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Walpole could be sensitive about his literary reputation and often took adverse criticism badly. |
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The sensitive faculty most part overrules reason, the soul is carried hoodwinked, and the understanding captive like a beast. |
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Two hairy, soft projections, evidently very sensitive, inform the bee when she is in contact with a stingable object. |
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The easement restricts construction and will keep cattle mostly away from sensitive streambeds. |
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Good accompanists are sensitive to the lead of a conductor and to the needs of the singers. |
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Singer Roberta Duchak is more sensitive rhythmically yet awfully bright and unsupple on the high notes. |
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The warp and woof of our lives, sensible, sensitive, a veritable 911, she was called upon whenever something went wrong. |
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For the study, scientists attached highly sensitive GPS trackers to 16 wandering albatrosses in the Indian Ocean, the Independent reported. |
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The test involves observing characteristic actinomorphic changes in fibroblasts in tissue culture and is extremely sensitive. |
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Have you considered that maybe you are being just a teensy weensy bit too sensitive? |
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The advent of molly-coddling central heating has wimpishly made them that bit too sensitive to the cold. |
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Shankar opened with a sensitive alap section, the unaccompanied prelude that ruminates upon the melodic materials of each raga. |
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This technique is generally used to analyze the structure of protein according its sensitive to the amide regions of protein. |
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Aminobenzoic acid, for instance, stains clothing and may cause adverse reactions in those with sensitive skin. |
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Additionally, there is significant demand for these systems anywhere sensitive computer systems and analyzation equipment is located. |
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A short laser energy pulse was then focused on the surface of the filler wire and the angle of reflection detected by the heat sensitive paper. |
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Cephalopods, like fishes and aquatic amphibians, have a mechanoreceptive system that is highly sensitive to local water movements. |
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Yeast is very sensitive to temperature, and, if a beer were produced during summer, the yeast would impart unpleasant flavours onto the beer. |
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Its weaknesses are that it is UV sensitive and can tend to degrade over time, and thus generally is also coated to help preserve it. |
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Today there is increasing interest in developing organic, ecologically sensitive and sustainable vineyards. |
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Living, as they did, in what appeared to me impenetrable darkness, their eyes were abnormally large and sensitive. |
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All crocodiles are tropical species that, unlike alligators, are very sensitive to cold. |
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It is a highly sensitive clay, prone to liquefaction, which has been involved in several deadly landslides. |
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Charlotte describes her as very lively, very sensitive, and particularly advanced in her reading. |
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Tennyson's use of the musical qualities of words to emphasise his rhythms and meanings is sensitive. |
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For the detection of variation of growth it was necessary to devise the extremely sensitive balanced crescograph. |
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Observations of the Ekman layer have only been possible since the development of robust surface moorings and sensitive current meters. |
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During this period of initial flooding the new sea is sensitive to changes in climate and eustasy. |
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Use of the Irish language in Northern Ireland today is politically sensitive. |
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The most sensitive lichens are shrubby and leafy while the most tolerant lichens are all crusty in appearance. |
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Radioimmunoassays and enzyme immunoassays are sensitive methods for quantifying many biologically active small molecules. |
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It is considered to be an invasive species in New Zealand, Norway, and environmentally sensitive locations in the United Kingdom. |
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The first name is that of an Etruscan Queen, one sensitive to omens. |
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Gates are sometimes installed at cave entrances to limit human entry into caves with sensitive or endangered bat species. |
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Tibetan lakes in the endorheic basins are dynamic and sensitive to climate change. |
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Byron's personality has been characterised as exceptionally proud and sensitive, especially when it came to his deformity. |
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It is a supremely sensitive part of the custard cannon and can be tenderly stimulated with licking and kissing. |
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Bill accidentally faxed sensitive documents to our competitors, and such a major-league mess-up could only be dealt with by firing Bill. |
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Rodents have sensitive olfactory abilities, which have been used by humans to detect odors or chemicals of interest. |
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Nocturnal species often have enlarged eyes and some are sensitive to ultraviolet light. |
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In populations with high infant mortality rates, LEB is highly sensitive to the rate of death in the first few years of life. |
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Building upon rabbinic insights, the kabbalists were notably sensitive to biblical nuances and allusions. |
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Brown rats have acute hearing, are sensitive to ultrasound, and possess a very highly developed olfactory sense. |
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Physically larger species and those living at lower latitudes or in forests or oceans are more sensitive to reduction in habitat area. |
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Bottom mines commonly utilize multiple types of sensors, which are less sensitive to sweeping. |
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He or she can then reapproach the sensitive question later from a different vantage point. |
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Glaciers are considered among the most sensitive indicators of climate change. |
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Wausau Coated will provide a variety of pressure sensitive roll products including wine grades, films and specialty substrates optimized for use on HP Indigo digital presses. |
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It has been estimated that in 2004 about 34 percent of the pollutant load from wastewater that falls under the scope of the directive is discharged into sensitive areas. |
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His sensitive radar for hidden alliances keeps him out of trouble. |
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Already, vendors are informing us that door systems are becoming more sensitive, while false alarms and delayed activations are being virtually eliminated. |
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Packaged precut vegetables such as carrot sticks at the market usually have been treated with an antispoilage solution, and sensitive palates can taste it. |
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However, they have several types of sensitive nerve endings in their epidermis, and are able to sense chemicals in the water, touch, and even the presence or absence of light. |
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The sheep model used is naturally sensitive to an antigen derived from the roundworm Ascaris suum, developing asthma-like symptoms when exposed to this antigen. |
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All military campaigns were preceded by careful planning, reconnaissance, and gathering sensitive information relating to enemy territories and forces. |
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For instance, some clients who have very sensitive skin prefer to have the Berber Cereal Exfoliating treatment or Alum Stone scrub to the traditional black soap peeling. |
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The magnetic detonator was sensitive to mechanical oscillations during the torpedo run, and to fluctuations in the Earth's magnetic field at high latitudes. |
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Incandescent lamps are very sensitive to changes in the supply voltage. |
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Passive sonar is a set of sensitive hydrophones set into the hull or trailed in a towed array, normally trailing several hundred feet behind the sub. |
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In essence, the sound was captured by a microphone and translated into light waves via a light valve, a thin ribbon of sensitive metal over a tiny slit. |
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Antennae, minuscule in snow or southern Tanner crabs, were quite active and responsive for red king crab, providing a more sensitive reflex response. |
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By finding photographic materials more sensitive to the less refrangible rays, the representation of the colours of objects might be greatly improved. |
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Because Sutton's photographic plates were insensitive to red and barely sensitive to green, the results of this pioneering experiment were far from perfect. |
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They are highly sensitive to changes in the quality of the water and some species, such as Salvelinus neocomensis and Salvelinus profundus, were driven recently to extinction. |
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To see Nina herself Nick had to crane round the big white bonce of Norman Kent, who was as sensitive to music as he was to conservatives, and kept shifting in his seat. |
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A shy and sensitive boy, he was deeply affected by his life experiences. |
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People who suffer from garlic allergies are often sensitive to many other plants, including onions, chives, leeks, shallots, garden lilies, ginger, and bananas. |
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Each antennule sports thousands of hairlike odor sensors, which give the lobster an extraordinarily sensitive sense of smell by which to navigate. |
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Porpoises are very sensitive to anthropogenic disturbances, and are keystone species, which can indicate the overall health of the marine environment. |
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Porpoises do, however, lack short wavelength sensitive visual pigments in their cone cells indicating a more limited capacity for colour vision than most mammals. |
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Dolphins do, however, lack short wavelength sensitive visual pigments in their cone cells indicating a more limited capacity for color vision than most mammals. |
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Stoichiometric release of 6-amidino-2-naphthol allowed highly sensitive fluorometric estimation of active-site concentration in preparations of matriptase and tryptase. |
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He was struck by the contrast between the Alpine beauty and the poverty of Alpine peasants, stirring the social conscience that became increasingly sensitive. |
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A second gravitational wave was detected on 26 December 2015 and additional observations should continue but gravitational waves require extremely sensitive instruments. |
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Shoreline type is classified by rank depending on how easy the target site would be to clean up, how long the oil would persist, and how sensitive the shoreline is. |
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We have realized that the SACCO sector is price sensitive hence partnering with SACCOs and Co-operatives by offering subsidised rates with clients. |
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Other tests are more sensitive in that they produce higher antibody titres but they do not detect substantially more seropositive individuals in a population. |
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The most sensitive areas are around the eyes, ears, and nose. |
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Antarctic sponges are long lived, and sensitive to environmental changes due to the specificity of the symbiotic microbial communities within them. |
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Not all lichens are equally sensitive to air pollutants, so different lichen species show different levels of sensitivity to specific atmospheric pollutants. |
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White silver nitrate, AgNO3, is a versatile precursor to many other silver compounds, especially the halides, and is much less sensitive to light. |
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Many lichens are very sensitive to environmental disturbances and can be used in cheaply assessing air pollution, ozone depletion, and metal contamination. |
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