| This consultant could provide advice, assistance and help decipher the masses of legalese and hogwash that most laws are wrapped up in. |
|
| The mind literally boggles as you try to decipher the narrative that might have created this collision of objects. |
|
| Pitch variations, or the absence of them, can also make synthesized speech seem unnatural and hard to decipher. |
|
| The place of meeting was written in her red lipstick and was slightly smeared, but Delilah could manage to decipher its message. |
|
| Not helping is his unsoftened South African accent, which makes much of his dialog very difficult to decipher. |
|
| Because the language was unique and unwritten, it would prove impossible for the Japanese to decipher. |
|
| For a few minutes afterward, I couldn't decipher if the bed shaking was my doing, or if they were aftershocks. |
|
| Having to stare at an image for long moments simply in order to decipher what is being shown tends to place a bump in the road of the story. |
|
| The goal is to make each password as difficult for hackers to decipher as possible. |
|
| Handwritten on scraps of paper, crumpled and often stained, they may be hard to decipher at times. |
|
| Each one has certain markings and, so you can amaze your friends, here's how to decipher them. |
|
| In recent decades, anthropologists and archaeologists have been able to decipher large parts of the hieroglyphic code. |
|
| Dated 196 B.C., the stone is engraved with Greek and hieroglyphic texts that enabled scholars to decipher ancient Egyptian writing. |
|
| Moll took a moment to try to decipher it, feeling like she was playing an odd parlour game of charades. |
|
| Eventually, we foreign idiots were able to decipher that the car was overheating. |
|
| And looking at the set and the staging and trying to decipher which came first is indeed something of a chicken-and-egg proposition. |
|
| She knew she needed to decipher it, knowing that the prophecy held the key to her homeward journey. |
|
| The latter fail to decipher the real meaning of the Horatian maxim which Titus attaches to the gift. |
|
| The need for the viewer to decipher the work was exactly what the artists who first forayed into the world of surrealism had in mind. |
|
| Use a pencil and piece of paper to rearrange the letters of a word, and then decipher them. |
|
|
|
| During World War II some of the top military code-breakers in America tried to decipher it, but failed. |
|
| The people who'll grade those essays won't have any time to decipher illegibility. |
|
| It's not worth it to try to specifically decipher his incoherent ramblings, but the message comes through anyway. |
|
| Thus, we learn to decipher the individualities of our co-workers and make the best that we can. |
|
| Increasing evolutionary diversity for comparative genomics to early-emerging multicellular animals may help to decipher animal origins. |
|
| Defying our expectations of user-friendly interactivity, these Internet-based works are not easy to navigate or to decipher. |
|
| Somehow, you must record that other sheet and interlace one image over the other to decipher this code. |
|
| It remains impossible to decipher the irreducible core within McConnell's administration. |
|
| If people could decipher the signs that foretold events, the events would be predictable and humans could act wisely. |
|
| By the end of this activity, students will be able to decipher a cryptograph. |
|
| Inmates write letters using codes that have been so hard to decipher, they have been sent to the FBI's cryptologists in Washington. |
|
| The quest for humanity's genetic genealogy began in the early 1980s, when researchers were just starting to decipher the genetic code. |
|
| I began putting on shocked faces, trying to decipher which one seemed more genuine. |
|
| The catch is that anyone intercepting the key then could decipher all your messages. |
|
| He had to decipher more than ten lines of code before entering the right password. |
|
| On numerous occasions, I simply could not decipher what the actors were saying. |
|
| They are able to decipher much of the language spoken to them, but they do not speak it. |
|
| As usual, we put together a panel of market mavens who can decipher today's investment climate. |
|
| I wrote these words in the dark and it was often a struggle to decipher the scrawl which resulted. |
|
| In this day of spin and PR consultants, it can be hard to decipher what lies beneath the gloss. |
|
|
|
| This may seem impossibly gnomic, and it is certainly complicated to decipher, but its main arguments are clear enough. |
|
| Among the most notable artifacts is the last remaining slab of the Rosetta Stone, circa 196 B.C., used to decipher ancient Egyptian language. |
|
| Somehow, the sender and recipient agree on which section of the number string they will use to encipher and then decipher the message. |
|
| And not many non-academics would have had the time or the disposition to try and decipher what they are about. |
|
| Here, we draw together recent data on diverse centriole movements to decipher common themes in how centrioles move. |
|
| If only the quartermaster had supplied us with ammunition instead of tracts no one could decipher. |
|
| To an outsider trying to decipher the roots of such conflicts, the situation is, well, Kafkaesque. |
|
| He was also able to train the software on one keyboard to decipher the keystrokes on any other keyboard of the same make and model. |
|
| As often bedevils the translator's task there appears to be at least one lacuna in the extant text, but it was relatively painless to decipher. |
|
| Alongside the body are a series of baffling codes, which Langdon is asked to decipher. |
|
| It's one thing to read a bunch of dits and dahs on paper, but it's much harder to decipher the sounds. |
|
| Derrida neglected to discuss alternatives except in language so opaque it is impossible to decipher. |
|
| The connection between Berlusconi and Italian fascism is not difficult to decipher. |
|
| The recipient of the message would decipher it by rewrapping the parchment around a cylinder of the same size. |
|
| They decipher traces of ancient Platyhelminthe movement in the California mountains, on rocks that are over half a billion years old. |
|
| She had made a rubbing of the writing and was anxiously trying to decipher it. |
|
| The writing was atrocious, scribbled in black ink, and Karen had to focus on each word to decipher it. |
|
| Fay ably expresses the feelings of many as they try to decipher the babble of words coming from the religious sector following the tsunami. |
|
| The designs are quite schematic, even crude in their style of representation, and it is not always easy to decipher them. |
|
| Visitors willing to take the time to decipher the assorted scripts were afforded a hundred or so intimate glimpses into the lives of strangers. |
|
|
|
| The meaning, the authors report, as with all Mayan writing, is difficult to decipher. |
|
| The two continuums frequently overlap, which is what makes it hard to decipher all the metamessages at play in a conversation. |
|
| Posted to Kurdistan, he set about trying to decipher King Darius's trilingual inscription on the Great Rock of Bisitun. |
|
| Researchers have turned to the science of molecular biology in an attempt to decipher this complex problem. |
|
| Nothing is certain except the fact that people will continue to try continue to decipher the undecipherable. |
|
| So it's going to be up to all of you to decipher what I mean by crushing enough peppercorns to fit in the cute little demitasse cup Crazy Aunt Anita bought me. |
|
| Now, usually when someone tells you something important, you have to piece the words together slowly, and really understand them to decipher the meaning. |
|
| Yet rather than the French, Argentinian and Dutch tones to be found today, the slang Hill couldn't decipher was the Scottish brogue and the Irish lilt. |
|
| I intend to unmask this thing and discover more about what it is I will find, and give aid to what knowledge I can decipher when I retrieve the Tome. |
|
| In this way the autosomal genetic information of different lineages becomes scrambled over time, and direct lineal associations become difficult to decipher. |
|
| As such, they aid cosmogonists in trying to decipher how it all began. |
|
| Kenta squinted, trying to read it, but could not decipher the scrawl. |
|
| On a table in his office, Pandit keeps a replica of the Rosetta stone, the key that enabled archaeologists finally to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphs. |
|
| His paintings consist of a gestural script simultaneously simple yet impossible to decipher. |
|
| It was beyond the capacity of any human cryptologist to decipher the signals. |
|
| I had to decipher the code so that I could make a counter formula. |
|
| Without any special knowledge of the field, it seems unlikely that any competent espionage organization would assign a code name so easy to decipher. |
|
| It was the stone that helped decipher Egyptian hieroglyphs as it had translations in of ancient text in Egyptian demotic script, Greek, and Egyptian hieroglyphs. |
|
| Like Haller, Bosch is divorced and attempting to decipher the complicated being that is his teenaged daughters. |
|
| He stared at her, trying to decipher the meaning behind her words. |
|
|
|
| There were no technicians with the latest equipment waiting to help him decipher the coughs, bellyaches, chest pains, dizzy spells and fevers that ailed his patients. |
|
| I never owned a copy but I knew people who did, and we spent hours in dorm rooms trying to decipher what was on it. |
|
| For those few months it may have appeared quite simple to decipher the good from the bad. |
|
| The duchess sat at a replica radio to hear, learn about, and decipher morse code. |
|
| After a brief exchange to decipher why Smith, Alencar, and Mousa wanted to go to Syria, the journalists told them to go home. |
|
| It is also true that more people will always be attracted to the passive, easy nature of lowbrow culture than those who will take the time to decipher high culture. |
|
| It may teach people to critically decipher the sermons of the Times columnists who echo the advocates of occupation without an iota of skepticism. |
|
| Like electronic media, your eye keeps flicking back and forth over the images trying to decipher them, creating little associative narratives in your mind. |
|
| This is a written language which looks similar to runes and other ancient scripts, however academics have been struggling for many years to correctly decipher it. |
|
| What I wanted to teach these people was not to decipher words into sentences, sentences into paragraphs, paragraphs into pages or even pages into books. |
|
| While you're at it, try and decipher what the letters spell out. |
|
| For those few hours on the floor, I couldn't decipher what was more important, sound, effective and impactful. |
|
| I remember how my entire life seemed to me to be foretellable, if only I could somehow decipher that cycle. |
|
| Pliny's descriptions of Scatinavia and surrounding areas are not always easy to decipher. |
|
| In early spring, it takes time and scrutiny to decipher the newly emerging weedlings from my precious, rising seedlings. |
|
| The Yale group used X-ray crystallography to decipher the structure of two chaperonins in action. |
|
| Their knowledge of Yucatec Maya allows them the rare ability to decipher the original Maya texts. |
|
| With SSH, would-be spoofers cannot decipher the encrypted identification key if it is intercepted and, thus, cannot use it. |
|
| It turned up in the records of the Mammalogy Department and baffled staff until they were able to decipher the handwritten note on the back. |
|
| Her basic argument, though it takes some work to decipher, is fourfold. |
|
|
|
| A thief can't readily decipher these hashes, but can mount what's called an automated offline dictionary attack. |
|
| Moreover, synthesizing our results in the context of biological networks will provide the opportunity to decipher how epistasis and pleiotropy impacted adaptive trajectories. |
|
| Two decades ago scholars, government policy makers, and military cold warriors struggled to decipher the meaning of the sudden and drastic change happening in the Soviet bloc. |
|
| Kate and the team are keen to decipher when another eruption can be expected, but to do this, they need to collect a lava bomb the minute it's thrown from the crater. |
|
| This choice is made based upon the least intrusive form of contours that enable the reader to decipher the background information in the map itself. |
|
| This form of oneiromancy aims to decipher the messages contained in ordinary, everyday dreams, messages thought to presage future events in the life of the dreamer. |
|
| Geologists use a number of field, laboratory, and numerical modeling methods to decipher Earth history and to understand the processes that occur on and inside the Earth. |
|
| Holley, and Marshall Warren Nirenberg to decipher the genetic code. |
|