However, we find it difficult to describe the way that quarks and gluons bind together to form hadrons. |
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When the beans are cold he stirred in more fresh dill and enough strained Greek yoghurt to bind them into a soft dip. |
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Ours is the world of love, questing to find the common links that bind all people. |
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These agents can bind to several drug classes including quinolones, and tetracyclines. |
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Any artist who has had their past work stamped with classic status must surely find themselves in a bind. |
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They would like to use their carborane acids to bind protons to atoms of the inert gas xenon. |
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This puts the International Olympic Committee, with all of its paeans to international brotherhood and camaraderie, in a bind. |
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Bind him fast or by Zeus, I shall see you rotting in gaol alongside this upstart vagabond! |
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The BIND database and its associated software tools are easily accessible to both academics and commercial companies worldwide. |
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May God bless the memory of the victims and, in the words of Scripture, heal the brokenhearted and bind up their wounds. |
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It is precisely the ability of WGA to bind to proteins lining the gut that raises concern amongst medical researchers. |
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On Escobar's order, Popeye took Mendoza hostage in the warden's house while Escobar tried to figure his way out of the bind. |
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By announcing this meeting with such feel-good publicity, they are placing their successors in quite a bind. |
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On the other hand, other antitumor drugs such as trabectedin, lurbinectedin and mitomycin C bind to the minor groove. |
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They threatened to bind him over, but Turpin refused to pay the required surety, and was committed to the House of Correction at Beverley. |
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The medium used to bind the colours was primarily egg white, with fish glue perhaps used in a few places. |
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Parliament may also bind successor parliaments as to their method of election and their constituent parts. |
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The opening of the subway in 1904, first built as separate private systems, helped bind the new city together. |
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In contrast, other proteins have evolved to bind to particular DNA sequences. |
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Alternatively, transcription factors can bind enzymes that modify the histones at the promoter. |
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The Scots, he maintained, were free to believe as they saw fit but not to bind anyone to the same faith if they did not share it. |
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Then there are directives which bind member states to certain goals which they must achieve. |
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The transcription factor wraps around the DNA helix and uses its fingers to accurately bind to the DNA sequence. |
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Also, the deep roots bind the sand together, and the dune grows into a foredune as more sand is blown over the grasses. |
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When the pH drops, luciferase changes its shape, allowing luciferin, more specifically tetrapyrrole, to bind. |
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By comparison plutonium, uranium, and caesium tend to bind to soil particles. |
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To protect from overposting attacks, please enable the specific properties you want to bind to. |
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Bandages were soaked in this juice and would then be used to bind sword and spear cuts. |
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This is thought to symbolize the power of the god to bind and unbind, mentioned in the poems and elsewhere. |
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These tests are based upon the ability of an antibody to bind specifically to an antigen. |
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Sequential staining is critical as Pyronin Y can also bind DNA and the prestaining of DNA with Hoechst 33342 blocks this. |
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Generally speaking decisions from the higher courts will bind the lower courts. |
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Bind it with some of the olive oil and a squeeze of lemon juice. |
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Whereby ye shall bind me to be your poor beadsman for ever unto Almighty God. |
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Indeed, for its colliculoretinal transport, BDNF needs to bind to its receptor in order to be internalized into a transport vesicle. |
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Since this act, few take bonds with cautioners, but bind them all as correi and principals. |
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Acts of Parliament derogatory from the power of subsequent Parliaments bind not. |
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During epididymal transit, spermatozoa bind to proteins that were secreted by the epididymis via epididymosomal transport. |
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Slay not that my musk-deer fawnling, Hunter! Prithee, have thou shame Of her night-black eye nor bind her With thy lasso long and strait. |
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However, ordinarily, only the government of a state can obligate or bind the state, for example by treaty. |
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It became common practice for landowners to bind their mesnie knights to their service with annual payments. |
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George Washington and his unanimous cabinet, including Jefferson, decided that the treaty did not bind the United States to enter the war. |
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The ministers agreed to drop the measure then pending, but refused to bind themselves in the future. |
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Water ligands typically bind metals in a labile fashion and are rapidly interchanged in aqueous solution. |
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In these, gluons that bind quarks together confer most of the particle mass. |
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Notably, the only federal court that can issue proclamations of federal law that bind state courts is the Supreme Court itself. |
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These are the norms and rules that countries follow as a matter of custom and they are so prevalent that they bind all states in the world. |
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Only the Supreme Court of Canada has authority to bind all courts in the country with a single ruling. |
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Receiving government advice does not necessarily bind the monarch into executing the advice, except where prescribed by the constitution. |
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It had previously been thought that no Parliament could ever bind its successors in such a way. |
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Typical operation was to tightly bind three or four boats together in a long row with the electric tug at the head. |
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No man can enter into a strong man's house, and spoil his goods, except he will first bind the strong man. |
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To untwine the ties of custom which bind a people to the established and the old. |
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And Samson said unto her, If they bind me with seven green withs that were never dried, then shall I be weak, and be as another man. |
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Clinical correlations of antibodies that bind, block, or modulate human acetylcholine receptors in myasthenia gravis. |
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This has put Ukrainian gay activists and their allies in a bind. |
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Many antacids and some supplements may bind to certain drugs, making them less active. |
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Antisense molecules are tiny pieces of DNA or RNA designed to bind to a cell's own DNA or RNA and interfere with its activity. |
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Bind the edge with double-fold bias tape, foldover braid or ribbing. |
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Sediments containing more clay tend to be more resistant to erosion than those with sand or silt, because the clay helps bind soil particles together. |
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Enzymes can also bind to DNA and of these, the polymerases that copy the DNA base sequence in transcription and DNA replication are particularly important. |
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Proteins that bind specifically to this base have been identified. |
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According to the theory that a parliament cannot bind its successors, any form of a Bill of Rights cannot be entrenched, and a subsequent parliament could repeal the act. |
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Not only he legeth his mercy to bind his reason, but also his wysdome. |
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Likewise the member states of international organizations may voluntarily bind themselves by treaty to a supranational organization, such as a continental union. |
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The ties that bind the tribe are more complex than those of the bands. |
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The roots of the plants bind the soil together, and interweave with other roots, forming a more solid mass that is less susceptible to both water and wind erosion. |
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Many enterprises use open source BIND servers for both caching and authoritative name servers. |
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The two then bind to DNA in cells, activating genes in those plant cells. |
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For salts these interactions are very strong, bind water strongly. |
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Feldman concludes that the Phenomenology allegorizes the successes and failures of conscience, which can never bind its words conclusively to its acts. |
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In studies of zinc supplements and the common cold, zinc acetate produced the most positive results, apparently because acetate does not bind zinc ions. |
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They also took Roman prisoners as hostages and distributed them amongst their neighbouring tribes in order to bind them together and encourage resistance. |
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A right in rem or a judgment in rem binds the world as opposed to rights and judgments inter partes which only bind those involved in their creation. |
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Two distinct anti-allergic drugs, amlexanox and cromolyn, bind to the same kinds of calcium binding proteins, except calmodulin, in bovine lung extract. |
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I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven. |
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These institutions bind the Council's members to a code of human rights which, although strict, is more lenient than that of the UN Charter on human rights. |
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The Indonesia traditional houses are at the centre of a web of customs, social relations, traditional laws, taboos, myths and religions that bind the villagers together. |
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That is because the freezing process damages the zona pellucida, the outer shell of the egg, to which the sperm normally must bind before penetrating the egg. |
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The opinions of the Advocates General are advisory and do not bind the Court, but they are nonetheless very influential and are followed in the majority of cases. |
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So, even in 1600 RCE, as the Bronze Age was progressing, a symbol existed chat continues to bind the Parsi Zoroastrians to their faith in our contemporary world. |
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Quinolones have a bactericidal effect when these bind with two target enzymes, DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV, which are essential for DNA replication within the cell. |
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Iron toxicity occurs when the cell contains free iron, which generally occurs when iron levels exceed the availability of transferrin to bind the iron. |
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The medical management of iron toxicity is complicated, and can include use of a specific chelating agent called deferoxamine to bind and expel excess iron from the body. |
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Neither was anything to be laid on the clean stone to bind the road. |
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Dry stone, sometimes called drystack or, in Scotland, drystane, is a building method by which structures are constructed from stones without any mortar to bind them together. |
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When a large number of crystallographic defects bind these planes together, graphite loses its lubrication properties and becomes what is known as pyrolytic graphite. |
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