Most consist of a viral protein called hemagglutinin, which has the unique ability to latch onto respiratory cells and invade them. |
|
It is a good idea to actually install the spring latch itself in the door temporarily to be sure the plate is properly located. |
|
The fore-end is mounted to the barrels not with a cheap spring latch as on late American doubles, but rather with a nicely inlet lever release. |
|
The binding latch remains in a reset state while the battery signal is applied. |
|
In one embodiment, the storage element is a data latch comprising a clock-enabled inverter serially coupled with a flip-flop. |
|
He kept disappearing into the toilet where he would latch the door and snort cocaine. |
|
With the alarm off and the back-door on the latch, all my major appliances were safely delivered. |
|
The guy checking them was so concerned that the lock on his gate was on the latch properly he just stamped it and waved me through. |
|
The last time he gained entrance, he would say that the patient had been expecting him, and he had the door on the latch. |
|
Luckily the door was on the latch and I managed to stumble through and shut it behind me. |
|
Miranda rarely left the front door on the latch and if she did she wouldn't stray far. |
|
It began with damage to the garden and if I left the door on the latch they would come in and turn off my electricity. |
|
You are led to believe that your baby will naturally latch on, and off you go on a journey of blissful feeding. |
|
But this figure is expected to rise as more affluent mainland tourists latch on to the idea of health tourism. |
|
It won't take food and drinks companies long to all latch on to the fact that Manchester sells. |
|
Ludovic Giuly beats John Terry for pace and tries to latch on to a long ball played from the back. |
|
No sooner had I typed that last bit than Marc Overmars threaded a lovely ball through the Portugal defence for Ruud to latch on to. |
|
These are specialized molecules that can latch on to antigens and help the rest of the immune system eliminate the foreign particle. |
|
Some contain a strip of adhesive amino acids that latch on to their cognate sequences like Velcro. |
|
So what they did was condense the information into an encrypted message so tiny that it could latch on to only one wavelength of sound. |
|
|
By means of simple chemical programming, it's able to latch on to a cell wall. |
|
It turns out that the protein, gp 120, is extremely flexible and difficult for antibodies to latch on to. |
|
Anyone who works or has worked in an office environment will latch on to at least some of what the programme is all about. |
|
Pupils soon latch on to this, and the spiral of decline suddenly becomes much steeper. |
|
If there are impressionable folks out there looking for a guru to lead them by the nose, there are worse people they could latch onto. |
|
Failing to open a top window I climbed up onto the ledge of the bottom window and tried reaching for the latch. |
|
There is a dual lock with simultaneous retraction of latch and deadbolt by an inside lever. |
|
And indeed the energy the anger generates revives me, and gives my head something to latch onto. |
|
Another annoyance is that the rewind and fast-forward buttons latch until you press any other button. |
|
You will need to drill a hole through the door face for the lock or deadbolt and one through the edge for the latch. |
|
Devin waited until he heard the lock in the door latch shut, and upon hearing it, he walked right by Sandra and walked up the stairs. |
|
The tiny cylinder latch assembly gave the assemblers fits and, in 1906, it was eliminated in favor of a locking bolt in a lug under the barrel. |
|
The gate latch creaked rustily when he opened it, but his braying would probably cover that up. |
|
To field strip, make sure the pistol is unloaded, remove the magazine, decock and pull down on the takedown latch. |
|
The takedown latch is located right above the trigger and couldn't be much easier. |
|
We should neither accept easy reassurances nor hysterical scare stories which latch onto individual pieces of research. |
|
She heard the click of the closing door and then the sound of the latch falling into place, but still she did not move. |
|
Switch contact de-bouncing is not required as the first press will latch one of the bistables. |
|
He gave the lid a strong push and then clasped the latch, shutting the trunk. |
|
Shoving a massive skeleton key under the brass latch, she unlocked a door and stepped aside. |
|
|
Crossing to the door, she threw the top and bottom bolts, lifted the door latch and shoved against the heavy oak door. |
|
He turned back towards the door and slowly unlatched each latch and unlocked each lock behind him. |
|
What is certain about Andersen is that he was an inveterate social climber, and managed to latch on to some useful patrons. |
|
Your next step is drilling the latch hole on the edge of the door, using the specified spade bit. |
|
To drill the latch hole on the edge of the door, use the spade bit specified by the manufacturer. |
|
They are a spent force, only coming out of hibernation to latch on to the topical issue of the day. |
|
Drive them into the soil near the base of a plant and the vines instinctively latch onto them. |
|
Unfortunately I'm a butterfingers and grabbed the door latch when I got a hold and the door swung open, with me on it. |
|
I negotiated the railless stairs and dark corridor without too much injury to my person, and managed to fumble the wooden latch open. |
|
I tried to stand back up, but only managed to move just within reach of the latch. |
|
We also expect them to quickly put down any wild-eyed, frothing animal before they can latch on to anyone with their fatal, infectious bite. |
|
The integral lock is present, its keyway sitting atop the current style cylinder latch. |
|
You have to lift the latch to swing the door out, and listen for it to click when it closes. |
|
Because if it is the one with the gate, that is quite a secure fence and it looks like a gate with a latch. |
|
It is made out of household parts, including a gate latch and a bike seat, and is thought to have been used for an arms exhibition. |
|
I nodded at Mr. Gretchen and slowly made my way over to the gate and unhooked the latch. |
|
He simply chuckled in return, stepping closer and undoing the latch to the metal box on the floor. |
|
He put it on, swung down from the sides the cheek-guards, fastened the metal latch tightly. |
|
Their products are about as accurate as a lobbed brick, and cycle like the rusty gate latch in your great aunt Emily's side yard. |
|
On large canvas slabs, he uses a thick rust-colored paint and applies objects such as antler-shaped branches, a door latch or a metal chain. |
|
|
A deadbolt is more secure than a spring-driven latch since it's much harder to push the bolt in from the side of the door. |
|
In the instance of thrush, babies may pull off the breast, refuse to latch on, or make clicking sounds. |
|
Of course, it is a little late to be thinking about this now, since the plate must align with the spring latch of the lock you just installed. |
|
The side access panel is secured and released by means of two knurled thumbscrews and a spring-loaded latch. |
|
She pushed a series of buttons on the outside of the door and a latch unhitched. |
|
John steps silently into the hallway and closes the door behind him, careful not to make a noise when he presses the button on the metal latch. |
|
Wasting no time I pulled on my trousers and buckled them, kicking into my shoes and grabbing my shirt and jacket when the door latch opened. |
|
One latch is spring-loaded and another is a two-position switch that prevents the battery from slipping out accidentally. |
|
He fumbled for the latch to open his door, and left the limousine and the beautiful woman behind as quickly as he could. |
|
John undid the latch and opened the door as if he were breaking in, using his shoulder like a battering ram. |
|
An 89-year-old woman discovered a man in her home in The Dell, Great Baddow, at 2pm, after he walked into the premises while the front door was on the latch. |
|
He was holding the latch of a metal door in the side of the pipe. |
|
Michael Owen tries to latch on to a dinked Paul Scholes pass over the top. |
|
Solid gates are more likely to catch the wind, and a faulty latch will cause the gate to bang about, causing you and your neighbours sleepless nights. |
|
He muttered a quiet malediction, tugged off his gloves, and dug his dagger point into the soft lead that sealed the pane beside the latch in place. |
|
Lamb did well to parry but the ball fell for the Unibond Premiership's leading scorer Paul Gedman to latch on to the loose ball and score from six yards. |
|
When you depress the spring-loaded latch it opens smoothly on a hinge. |
|
The Finnish researchers had made these antibody fragments to specifically latch on to only one mirror-image form, or enantiomer, of a test molecule. |
|
Close and snap the carriage latch, and pull the bail arm back. |
|
It's not like having a normal visit, when you can whip all the scuzz into the spare room and push the door until the latch clicks shut against the mess. |
|
|
In fact, it's thought that the mathematical structure embedded in the rhythm and melody of music is what our brains latch on to, and that this is why we enjoy listening to it. |
|
Within seconds, I had located the latch and opened the door. |
|
Before then, as soon as a positively charged nucleus tried to latch on to a negatively charged electron, the electron would have been knocked away by an energetic photon. |
|
It takes a long time for the entertainment community to latch on to a hot new trend. |
|
Instead, we latch onto the number and use that as a symbol of everything else. |
|
There is a second lock preventing the latch from opening the door. |
|
The actuator latch of a hard disk drive selectively intercepts the movement of the locking protrusion at the actuator so that the actuator is locked and unlocked. |
|
He'd got stuck fast halfway through, his belt loop was jammed on the window latch, and there was no way of moving up, down, in or out to free himself. |
|
This, combined with Schofield's latch, made it possible for a cavalry trooper to reload the gun with one hand and still maintain control of his horse. |
|
Finally, return to the original side and latch down the locking lever. |
|
Using two NAND gates I have produced a NAND gate latch or Flip-FLop. |
|
The local favourite aggravated an injury to his troublesome right arm after catching his hand in a latch while taking a toilet break on the 16th fairway. |
|
Earlier in the evening, when the Sainsbury's order arrived, I had run down four flights of stairs to collect the groceries, putting the door to the flat on the latch. |
|
I reached for the gate's latch and then pain seared through my head. |
|
She crept downstairs, holding her breath as she passed her mother's room, pulled on her coat and shoes then lifted the heavy latch which secured the door. |
|
The latch seems to lock a bit more securely, but it's still possible to jiggle it loose too easily if you fully load it up with a floppy and two hard drives. |
|
Lifting her dress a few inches, she ran daintily across the grass and fumbled for a moment with the latch of the gate, locking it quickly behind her. |
|
I no longer tell someone I'll leave the latch string out for them or describe a wife's ire at a husband as so severe she took out after him with a singletree. |
|
He led them deep into the back of the castle before they crossed a small, obviously rarely used courtyard and he paused, pulling back the rusty latch of the small gate. |
|
In Alzheimer's disease, you get lots of big sticky balls of amyloid-beta, made up of many individual amyloids, which latch on to brain neurons. |
|
|
Other safety devices for babyproofing include, clockwise from below right, a magnetic latch, an outlet cover and toilet-seat latches. |
|
At the depot, Hook climbed out, slamming the door twice before the latch took. |
|
Internal doors traditionally have a small latch known as a mortice latch, used to keep doors closed but it cannot be locked. |
|
Turning around to locate a vendor, she found herself behind an armored truck with a compartment door held shut by a faulty latch. |
|
Latch-action clamps typically incorporate a hook or U-bolt and latch plate to grab and hold workpieces with a straight pulling action. |
|
I love McCoy hetsmut but sometimes I have trouble finding pairings to latch onto. |
|
As criminals latch onto wardriving, laws and law enforcement agencies lag behind. |
|
Because many commonly used anti-psychotics such as haloperidol and clozapine quickly latch onto their targets, it would seem that the drugs should bring fast relief. |
|
The bottom is held in normal plowing position by a spring operated latch. |
|
Thankfully Havier Henrnandez was booked for a ridiculous dive late on when he tried to latch onto Scholes' pass with Hahnemann happy to let him go. |
|
He went in his room, pushed the door to, without fastening the latch. |
|
Antibodies that can fight the widest range of flu viruses are those that latch onto the stalk portion of the hemagglutinin protein, a molecule on the flu's outer coat. |
|
In earlier work, Denny's team found that the bacteria that cause cavities selectively latch on to some types of glycoprotein sugar chains and are repelled by others. |
|
But it was Frenchmen who increased their lead when Duport took advantage of hesitation in the Saints rearguard to latch onto a Bosc bomb to cross for his second score. |
|
The VSS Latch mechanism stands above any latch on the market today. |
|
She saw him hurry to the door, heard the bolt chock. He tried the latch. |
|
Lone oxygen atoms then repeatedly attack and latch onto a hexagon-shaped carbon molecule, cyclohexane, until the ring breaks open, forming adipic acid. |
|