Because of its very smart stealth and anti-anti-virus technic, most common AV software can't detect or clean it. |
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Suddenly she spoke, and he could detect the fear, horror, and absolute abhorrence in her tone of voice. |
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Seabed sensors detect abnormal wave movements and relay the information to scientists. |
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Air Jamaica has reduced its flights to the UK in the wake of the introduction of hi-tech wands that can detect cocaine inside passengers. |
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Quadrotors could also use sensors to detect radiation levels and other biological hazards, he said. |
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The laser warner provides broadband laser frequency coverage to detect and display rangefinding, designating and missile guidance laser threats. |
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To detect hard braking or cornering, the system uses an accelerometer that detects high g-forces on the vehicle. |
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This indicates that the bound azide is required to detect the 410-nm signal and suggests that azide plays the role of the proton acceptor. |
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The more perceptive members of the group will be able to detect there's something wrong and act accordingly. |
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The proficiency testing algorithm is used to detect deviations from acceptable performance that may affect the accreditation of a laboratory. |
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Small bowel bleeding involving the jejunum and ileum is less common and more difficult to detect scintigraphically. |
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This approach is already used to detect neutrinos, which have similarly weak interactions with matter. |
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The best available data, from weather satellites and weather balloons, do not detect any appreciable atmospheric warming. |
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If someone did try to destroy us we'd detect it on radar before we were hit and could send a blast straight back. |
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Most of us who drive cars have grown up since the advent of radar to detect speeding. |
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It hovers high above the clouds and literally no radar can detect it because of its wind-elemental cloak. |
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Our helicopters will rain fire down upon your camps before you detect them on your radar. |
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Traditional radar detectors use radio waves to detect when a radar gun is in use. |
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Prune your apple tree every winter before you detect any signs of new growth. |
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The devices could be equipped with sensors that detect various substances, from heat to chemicals or radioactivity. |
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Highly trained sniffer dogs used to detect explosives could have their snouts put out of joint by pioneering chemical research. |
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He was able to detect the Sun and about five radio galaxies, some of the most distant objects then known in the universe. |
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And that absorption forms the basis by which satellite UV radiometers detect ozone from space. |
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Apart from coots and related rails, only ostriches and weaverbirds can detect parasitic eggs left by their own species. |
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So, as you might imagine, a planet wide radar would obviously detect a ship barreling down at full speed with all weapons blazing. |
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The mobile cameras can detect a speeding motorist up to 100 yards away while red light cameras detect drivers who jump traffic lights. |
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Women manifestly have the ability to detect rivals and to employ a variety of tactics to place themselves at an advantage over them. |
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These programs can be used to detect and remove spyware and adware that is already present in your computer. |
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The capacity of radars to detect biological scatterers in the aerosphere has been known for 50 years. |
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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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Sifting through these observations, they were able to detect the white dwarf orbiting the pulsar and measure its color and temperature. |
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Split the crowns at the base of stems with a sharp knife or a razor blade to detect rot. |
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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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A police officer urged shop managers to check any suspicious notes using forge pens or machine readers that can help detect counterfeits. |
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Yes, you can detect in her eyes the whirring of a mental ready reckoner, and hear in her utterances a ruthless self-censorship. |
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Do you detect a new aggressiveness by journalists in covering this presidency? |
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Though higher-visibility policing does not detect crime, it reassures people and helps deter criminals. |
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The cameras were also aimed at helping to detect youth crime and anti-social behaviour at the troublespot. |
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But sharks also detect their prey with sensory receptors that run along their sides. |
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Windows will automatically recognize the new pointing device, but will detect it as a mouse and not a graphic tablet. |
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Our ability to detect doubly recombinant chromosomes depends on the genotype of the homolog after fertilization. |
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To be an effective guard, the Komondor had to rely mostly on its own senses to detect and defend against danger. |
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The system had to be radically reformed to detect murder, medical error and neglect. |
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Jenner's discovery was a touch-stone, to detect what proportion of selfishness alloyed the human heart. |
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Scientists are working toward a simple blood test that would reliably detect ovarian cancer at its earliest stages. |
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Nonetheless, we did not detect differences in species diversity between the floodplain and upland landforms. |
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They use passive remote sensing instruments to detect sunlight reflected by mounds and mark areas infested by imported fire ants. |
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The current study would only be able to detect a relatively large mortality difference. |
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He said that this technology can also detect the sulfur-based odorants added to natural gas. |
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In neither case did urine screening detect cocaine, amphetamines, or other abused drugs. |
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An existing satellite system designed to detect and track ballistic missile launches is currently being upgraded. |
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Engineers studied network traffic patterns, using tools such as protocol analyzers to detect anomalous behavior, and blocked compromised hosts. |
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We did not detect any nest site changes among resident birds as a response to the experimental treatment. |
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Many other animals have sense organs that can detect stimuli beyond the confines of the human senses. |
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A thorough physical examination should be performed to detect and evaluate all anorectal lesions. |
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Many people with total blindness experience life-long sleeping problems because their retinas are unable to detect light. |
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These foreground clusters act as lenses that magnify the light of the protogalaxies and allow us to detect and study them. |
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A blood test can detect antibodies to the hepatitis C virus and a positive test shows that you have been infected. |
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Once your system is patched you should update your antivirus software and run it to detect and remove virus infection. |
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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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As a hunter-killer, she was designed to detect enemy submarines and destroy them using torpedoes. |
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Nonetheless vendors have announced plans to update antivirus software to detect the bug. |
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Users are advised to update their antivirus software to detect the worm and to resist the temptation to open unsolicited email attachments. |
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Cytochemistry and autofluorescence observations were used to detect the presence of lignin and suberin in unfixed tissues. |
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The power to detect a significant linkage is examined on the basis of 1000 replicates. |
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Unless a mapping population is very large, it is difficult to detect repulsion linkages between simplex markers in polyploids. |
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And I detect a troubling literal-minded Phariseeism here, and will respond in kind. |
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The ACCP recommends that patients with suspected PAH be screened with echocardiography to detect cardiac anatomic and arrhythmic problems. |
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We do detect some sort of orchestrated opposition by incomers to the area, but locals don't seem to be bothered. |
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In addition, PCR can detect small deletions and can specifically localize the regions contained in the deletion. |
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By setting a switch, an operator can use these locators to detect both passive and active signals. |
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Possible sightings have been ruled out and equipment which can be used to detect if earth has been recently disturbed has found nothing. |
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He also suggested BT should use technology to detect obvious faults in the system before such enormous bills were run up. |
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In this way, astronomers will perform very precise astrometry to detect the reflex motion of stars due to orbiting planets. |
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Until now it has been impossible for scientists to detect every atom in the structure of protein molecules, which play a vital role in the body. |
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The system reflected the radar beam off the ionosphere to detect objects from ranges of 500 to nearly 2,000 miles. |
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Measurement of the head circumference is vital to detect associated microcephaly or macrocephaly. |
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Ultrastructural examination failed to detect viral inclusions, although the tissue exhibited a sizable degree of postmortem autolysis. |
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The technique evolved during the Second World War when the US Navy developed a magnetometer to detect submarines. |
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Hubble can detect objects as faint as thirty-first magnitude, which is comparable to the sensitivity of much larger Earth-based telescopes. |
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We can detect malodours if we smell dental floss or woodsticks that have been used to clean between our teeth. |
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In her experiment, psychologist Penny Pexman of the University of Calgary found that children as young as five were able to detect verbal irony. |
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With this, companies can detect and take down malvertisements to protect customers from attack and fraud. |
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It is doubtful, however, whether the management accounting techniques employed by the company were tailored to detect high overheads. |
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Already I detect a reduction in the number of training sessions being organised by team managers in general at present. |
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Although we didn't detect any ginger in our ginger chicken fillet, the meat wasn't the tough old bird we often get off Bulgaria's grills. |
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They declared that they could detect no trickery and that the horse was genuinely telepathic. |
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Tiny, aligned telescopes can send and detect single photons sent through the air. |
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The aim was to detect long-term abnormal changes of the telluric field, which were possibly related to imbedding earthquakes. |
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In the case of earthquakes, the sensors are used to detect the onset of temblors. |
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Nuclear medicine scintigraphy can image the entire axial and appendicular skeleton to detect distant sites of osseous metastases. |
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The low dark noise of rods allows the scotopic system to reliably detect a flash eliciting less than 10 effectively absorbed photons. |
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As in paintings by Malevich and Mondrian, one can detect irregularities of surface texture that come from dragging a brush across the canvas. |
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Significant wind drift can occur, and it's difficult to detect it at night. |
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Although expensive, these thermistors may be the best means to detect subtle differences in physical conditions among sites. |
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White Sturgeon have been described as opportunistic feeders, feeding on the bottom with their long snouts and using their barbels to detect food. |
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Urine screening tests for drugs of abuse detect general classes of compounds, such as amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, or opiates. |
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A CT scan enables assessment of the degree of aeration of the middle ear cleft and mastoid cavity and a bone scan may detect osteomyelitis. |
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As hard as you might try to detect them, there are few gaps or details to distract from the overall impression of seamlessness. |
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He added a pair of filters that correspond to two bands of infrared light needed to detect aflatoxin and fumonisin. |
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Traditional toxicology screens that employ thin-layer chromatography can detect MDMA metabolites in the urine. |
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In accordance with their criteria, we were unable to detect a maturational pattern in our cases. |
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We can detect that mockery as a characteristic thread throughout the oeuvre. |
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The awareness of their individual blemishes and shortcomings inclines the frustrated to detect ill will and meanness in their fellow men. |
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Also, because nighttime air and water fall so still, bass detect sound and vibration more easily. |
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This is similar to seismologists using seismographs on Earth to detect earthquakes. |
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Extensive investigations have failed to detect such a mechanism of gene transfer in crop plants. |
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This implies that there is room for improving the power to detect selective sweeps by adding LD into frequency spectrum. |
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It can take decades to detect important and unanticipated side effects of medications reliably. |
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In its grapey bouquet one can detect a faint muscat-like undertone while the easy-drinking palate is fresh and medium dry. |
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These battery-operated devices detect movements that can easily be used to trigger a camera. |
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Periodic self-examination of your mouth is the best way to detect the early signs of oral cancer. |
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The only flaws I could detect was, at one point in the middle, a scene had some flicker in contrast levels, but this went away never to return. |
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Modern sensing devices detect objects or terrain disturbances even though they are well camouflaged. |
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Each sense organ has specialized receptor cells to detect the appropriate type of physical energy or stimulation. |
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American units look for enemy command posts with sensitive systems that can detect radio transmissions and other signatures that TOCs give off. |
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Other applications of this discovery include sensors so sensitive that they can detect a single molecule. |
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The stains have been used to sensitively detect single DNA fragments using two-photon fluorescence excitation. |
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The transactivation assay needed to sensitively detect changes in transcription factor activity. |
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The ship's sensors detect incoming threats, which the command system then analyses and evaluates. |
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They use infrared sensors to detect the stairs in your home and stay away from them. |
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In other words the electronic odour sensor can detect the presence of bacteria in a sample of urine or other body fluids. |
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There are even tiny sensors that can detect the presence of gunmetal and tanks. |
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Ceiling speakers pump music into every room, and special sensors can detect water leaks. |
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This generates battery power for the lamp and there is a light sensor to detect whether it is dark enough to switch on. |
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Thelwall hopes that in the future sentiment analysis could help computers detect their users' moods so they can react accordingly. |
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The basic task of psad is to make use of firewall log messages generated by either ipchains or iptables to detect suspect network traffic. |
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The late sampling time is to detect compounds which require time to be absorbed, distributed and metabolized. |
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Because these women initially are seronegative, serologic screening tests for HSV do not accurately detect those at highest risk. |
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Several tests have been developed or are being investigated for testing seropositive individuals post-seoconversion to detect recent infections. |
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If I look real close at this old photo I can even detect the beginnings of the family double chin. |
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Odontocete cetaceans rely upon echolocation to sense the environment and detect prey. |
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Police are developing a mobile scanner that can detect weapons being carried on the streets as part of the fight against the rising tide of gun crime. |
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It doesn't require a great leap of imagination to detect what Barbra Streisand, Janis Joplin, Carly Simon and his second wife, Rita Coolidge, saw in him. |
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Disappointingly, even though you can at times detect a family likeness to its genius predecessors, The IT Crowd's opening gambit suggests it could be the runt of the litter. |
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The TMD system is intended to detect with satellites ballistic missiles flying within a 3,000-kilometer radius and to shoot them down with missiles. |
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I could detect a whisper of mint, incredibly refreshing with the lamb. |
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Gas-detecting devices currently used by investigators can detect the presence of gas which is invisible to the naked eye but not the source of the leak. |
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The purpose of mass screening is to try and detect the lung carcinoma. |
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Sharks can detect vibrations in the water from a few 100m via their lateral lines, a series of pressure-sensitive organs extending along their flanks and over their faces. |
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Single-site analysis and one-dimensional window analysis can be used to detect selection when the biological functions of amino acid sites are unknown. |
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For example, an organism that eats a plant merely has to detect the plant and locomote to it, since the plant will remain where it is while it is approached. |
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When radiographs are taken to detect foreign bodies a metallic marker should always be placed at the site of the injury, tangential to the site of entry. |
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A computer program reads the same scans the radiologist views, and the combined judgment of the computer and radiologist helps detect more cancers, the researchers found. |
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We were able to detect changes in erythema more sensitively for both natural and solar-simulated light than by visual or standard colorimetric measurement. |
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Twelve business telephone conversations were analyzed in order to detect intercultural differences between speakers of Finnish and speakers of American English. |
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She took a deep breath and could detect eucalyptus and ylang-ylang. |
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Scientists have calculated that the European jewel beetle Melanophila acuminata, about 1 cm. in length, can detect a 25-acre forest fire from 7.5 miles away. |
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At a height of 60 kilometres, it will be able to detect its own altitude using a pair of radar altimeters, which will be able to measure the exact distance to the surface. |
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What biomarkers of lung cancer did the electronic nose detect in breath? |
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In 2004, the number of accused priests laicized by the Vatican grew, while the number of adults and children trained to detect and report sexual abuse increased. |
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But there are computer programs that analyse speech to detect stress. |
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Our ability to detect disease has sprinted far past our ability to manage it, and the trend shows no signs of letting up. |
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However, with the gimlet eyes of a new blogger, I detect ominous portents of change. |
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For example, seismic instruments about 300 kilometers southwest of Mexico City detect the vibrations spreading from large temblors that occur even farther to the southwest. |
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The key to the new receiver is an HEB, which suffers from only about one-tenth of the noise of the Schottky barrier receivers previously used to detect terahertz radiation. |
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It is also possible to detect signs of withdrawal and disengagement. |
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When they detect a predator, chicks either lay low in the nest and remain still, or lie on their backs and strike at the predator with their talons. |
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Astronomers are able to detect the presence of a planet by examining a slight wobble in the motion of the star caused by the gravitational pull of the planet. |
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The receiving devices samples a plurality of points on the near side of the structure to detect vibrations resulting from reflections of the sound wave from the object. |
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Your most important task is to detect potentially serious ocular presentations for immediate referral of the patient to an ophthalmologist and treatment. |
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Without the beeps and whirs of a cellphone, you can use your ears to detect crickets, mice, or other vermin in your home. |
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Other devices include oxygen sensors to check exhaust gases, accelerometers to detect any sudden sharp braking, and a range of pressure and temperature monitors. |
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The traditional sequence includes anteroposterior and lateral views of the lumbar spine, primarily to detect tumors or spinal misalignments such as scoliosis. |
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There is only one approved, working test that can detect whether or not Ebola is present in the blood. |
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No one who lives in an American city requires a flashlight to detect the presence of immigrants or the challenges they face daily. |
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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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For the motorist with a licence laden with penalty points there is the option of acquiring a perfectly legal piece of kit to detect police radar traps. |
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If susceptibility or recent infection is indicated by serology, weekly ultrasound examinations should be performed for four to eight weeks after exposure to detect hydrops. |
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And, for as long as they prefer a conjuror's wand to a handset, they will have to go on reading the runes to detect much of an impact, for IT, on productivity. |
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The bill is packed with tens of thousands of electrical sensors operating to detect tiny electrical pulses that give away the movement of the animal's aquatic prey. |
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The only sleight of hand I can detect is the fact that our hero never actually kills anyone himself. |
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Rather than measure temperature directly, a differential radiometer uses a pair of antennae to detect the difference in temperature between two separate parts of the sky. |
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Tastes are what we detect with the taste buds in our mouths. |
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The ability to detect precancerous adenomatous polyps, remove them, and thus prevent the development of colorectal cancer is an important rationale for screening. |
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We are also unable to detect the presence of a separate anhydrous cholesterol or cholesterol monohydrate phase in our binary mixtures, again in contrast to previous reports. |
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Getting a ticket in those circumstances might be seen as a rough trot, but my untrained eye does not detect anything that suggests the law was not broken. |
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It had become a laboratory standard or reference strain for raising antibodies and for challenge in virus neutralization test to detect and assay antibody in serum. |
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We wouldn't detect it unless we were tipped off about where to look. |
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Despite controlling for genetic admixture within families, if a study sample is genetically heterogeneous, the ability to detect genetic associations can be limited. |
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With new adulterants being developed at an alarming rate, it has become increasingly difficult to keep up with the development of methods to detect these products. |
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The technique, which can detect adulteration and locational variation of active constituents of plant materials, has been patented in the U.S. and the European Union. |
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Last year a powerful scanner which can detect plastic explosives and illicit drugs was installed and tested at London's Gatwick Airport as part of a pilot programme. |
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Hi-tech straws can detect the presence of date rape drugs in drinks. |
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With Abandonment Tracker Free, we are able to detect booking and account opening abandonments for the first time. |
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In WarDriving, attackers drive around with Wi-Fi enabled laptops to detect open wireless networks. |
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The session reveals how some of the biggest websites were compromised as watering holes, and how to detect if your website is falling victim. |
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Immune activation occurs whenever immune system cells detect foreign invaders and send out chemical signals to draw other cells into the fight. |
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The ideal bioweapon is hard to detect from the usual microbial flora, has person-to-person spread, and is easy to aerosolize. |
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The automaker said there are two sensors in the airbag sensor assembly which are designed to detect vehicle roll angle. |
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Some MRDTs detect the presence of aldolase, which is not species specific but rather is found in all malaria species. |
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Titan Enterprises has developed a monitor for beer flow that combines a low-cost volume totaliser with features to detect interruption of power. |
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Most dialers cannot detect answering machines with high accuracy and still comply with the two-second rule. |
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It can also be used to detect any plaques and calcifications, which could be associated with chordee. |
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It is used to detect players' motion on games from golf and tennis to shoot-em-ups and fighting simulators. |
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Furthermore, he says, when zebra mussels detect a toxicant, they sometimes stop filtering water for days or weeks while the chemical dissipates. |
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Land-based radar cannot detect helicopters further than about 110km because the aircraft operate at low level, below the radar horizon. |
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But the gas makes radio waves, which we can detect using special telescopes called radio telescopes. |
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Known as the explosive of choice for many terrorist organisations, TATP is easy to make yet very hard to detect using conventional methods. |
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Yu along with his team created an optoelectronic camouflage system which can detect and control surrounding light. |
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Geophysical surveys help to detect mineralized bodies based on their magnetic, conductive, resistive, radioactive and gravimetric properties. |
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People can be cynical about companies hiding behind green ideals, their radars finely tuned to detect a greenwash. |
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Standard pH probe monitoring is unable to detect nonacid GER, which doesn't concern GI doctors because it doesn't injure the esophagus. |
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Clark said he did not detect any twitchiness before home fixtures in the ranks. |
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It aims to detect and stop illegal immigration, human trafficking and terrorist infiltration. |
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The new study describes, for the first time, a fast, simple and fully validated method to detect ketamine in urine and plasma. |
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The reagent can quantifiably detect the presence of ketones in patients with suspected diabetic ketoacidosis. |
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Both species use a statocyst to detect changes in gravity and a photoreceptor to detect changes in light. |
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These were used alongside radar and the improved Asdic equipment to more efficiently detect U-boats. |
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In this condemning of wars of aggression one can detect a Mohist idea of the right of resistance against an unjust government. |
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In Hodgkin's lymphoma patients, a pathologic evaluation of ovarian tissue can detect Reed-Sternberg cells. |
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And the Navy really quietly believes that its radar can detect more of the Stealth bomber than the Air Force lets on. |
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New Boon Edam StereoVision technology allows businesses to detect piggybacking at high-security entrances. |
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In past experiments, Utz has relied on homemade protein arrays to detect biomarkers such as autoantibodies and cytokines. |
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To detect mtDNA depletion, a traditional method is quantitative Southern blot, based on densitometry scanning of autoradiograph films. |
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When the arriving female mosquitoes detect a chemical emitted by the backswimmer, they are less likely to lay eggs in that pool. |
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That's because thermal imaging cameras detect heat signatures, such as body temperatures. |
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Testing methods can now detect HIV within ten days of infection. |
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The company is already brainstorming what it can detect next. |
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Together with light sensors the scintillator crystals can be used as an alarm system to detect the presence of nuclear materials. |
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From a distance of several tens of meters mosquitoes detect CO2 which forms part of exhaled air by humans. |
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Langley's bolometer, invented in 1878, actually had the capability to detect a cow's radiation from 400 meters away. |
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The sea snails save their jumping for conch emergencies, such as when they detect dissolved body odor from the deadly cone snail Conus marmoreus. |
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Guisborough's Prior Pursglove College has its own seismometer, which can detect quakes around the globe. |
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After 50 min, eggs were examined by microscope to detect self-fertilization or sperm contamination. |
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Sentence by sentence, paragraph by paragraph, section by section, Heil connects words and phrases to detect chiasms throughout Hebrews. |
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But screening is designed to detect bowel cancer before it has a chance to develop. |
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In one case, Warthin-Starry special stain to detect spirochaetes was negative and serological confirmation was advised. |
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Rattenborg and his colleagues moved wild birds into the lab and outfitted them with tiny sensors that detect brain waves. |
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Sachs says that it is now important to look at the specialized mechanoreceptor cells of the body to see how they detect distortion. |
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Consequently, in order to learn of a cytoplasmic determinant serving a specific hereditary function, one must detect it in a mutated form. |
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Referee Michael Oliver failed to detect a foul in a crowded box and the Canaries escaped down the tunnel with the scoreline still blank. |
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Helper and Sako did detect some convergence in the way U.S. and Japanese carmakers work with suppliers. |
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Monitoring wells are installed downgradient of a contamination source to detect a contaminant plume. |
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Lightning gives off a radio signal as it ionizes the air, and his goal was to detect this signal to warn pilots of approaching thunderstorms. |
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In competition, an electronic handle known as the eye on the hog may be fitted to detect hog line violations. |
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Lead is one of three metals used in the Oddy test for museum materials, helping detect organic acids, aldehydes, and acidic gases. |
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These devices are similar to an integrated circuit and can detect the energy of incoming gamma ray photons. |
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They are able to detect the Earth's magnetic field and hence navigate back to their colonies. |
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They have also been trained by militaries to locate sea mines or detect and mark enemy divers. |
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It can be used to detect aircraft, ships, spacecraft, guided missiles, motor vehicles, weather formations, and terrain. |
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Radars use horizontal, vertical, linear, and circular polarization to detect different types of reflections. |
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While this does not help detect targets masked by stronger surrounding clutter, it does help to distinguish strong target sources. |
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In most cases, the receiver does not detect the return while the signal is being transmitted. |
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This beam configuration allows the radar operator to detect an aircraft at a specific azimuth but at an indeterminate height. |
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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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It is suggested that in subterranean mammals vision is used to detect predators that have broken into the tunnels. |
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Small prey may be absent in the diets of large bats as they are unable to detect them. |
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For example, immunoassay A may detect the presence of a surface protein from a virus particle. |
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Thus, the technological ability to detect any infectious agent rapidly and specifically are currently available. |
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A significant proliferation of the infectious agent does not occur, this limits the ability of PCR to detect the presence of any bacteria. |
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The very policy of a hostess, finding his purse so far above his clothes, did detect him. |
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Mothers tend to feed in open areas, presumably to make it easier to detect predators, although this may reduce their feeding efficiency. |
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Females watching calving pools will only alert their own young if they detect a disturbance, although the others will take notice and follow. |
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Manufactured primarily for maritime and aviation applications, they can also detect pitch and roll of ships. |
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During the 1990s, the measurement of the stellar wobble of nearby stars was used to detect large extrasolar planets orbiting those stars. |
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Using multiple methods helps the navigator detect errors, and simplifies procedures. |
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The test is used to detect the presence of alcohol in the blood. |
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This type of cancer is difficult to detect in its early stages. |
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It works for asexual lineages, and can detect recent divergences, which the Morphological Species Concept cannot. |
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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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Britain's exports are harder to detect archaeologically, but will have included metals, such as silver and gold and some lead, iron and copper. |
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Often, local government elections are watched closely to detect the mood of the electorate before upcoming parliamentary elections. |
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The human eye is a precision instrument. It can detect grooves and lands on a slug more efficiently than any computer. |
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If a person would steal the animals, anyone could detect that the actual owner. |
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They are much harder to detect and sweep, and can carry a much larger warhead than a moored mine. |
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The exact measurements and weights made it easy to detect lightweight counterfeits. |
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When a lizardfolk chooses this ability, he can detect opponents within 10 feet and may take a move action to determine the direction of a scent. |
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With an understanding of medieval society, one can detect subtle satire at work. |
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However, special satellites have been launched recently that are now able to detect and retransmit this data. |
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These labs are more difficult to detect than stationary ones, and can often be obscured among legal cargo in big trucks. |
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The Hawking radiation for an astrophysical black hole is predicted to be very weak and would thus be exceedingly difficult to detect from Earth. |
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The BBC is permitted by the latter order to use surveillance equipment to detect unlicensed use of television receivers. |
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It was also stated that it could be used to detect TVs in 'individual flats in blocks. |
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These birds are characterized by keen vision that allows them to detect their prey during flight, as well as powerful talons and beaks. |
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Active sonar uses the reflection of sound emitted from the search equipment to detect submarines. |
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Submarines also carry radar equipment to detect surface ships and aircraft. |
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Olms have special sensors inside their ears that detect sound waves in the water as well as vibrations from the ground. |
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They can detect magnetic information by using magnetic forces acting on the magnetic crystals in their brains. |
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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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Their mystacial vibrissae have ten times the innervation of terrestrial mammals, allowing them to effectively detect vibrations in the water. |
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Like other marine mammals, seals sleep in water with half of their brain awake so that they can detect and escape from predators. |
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This makes tsunamis difficult to detect over deep water, where ships are unable to feel their passage. |
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Some fish, such as catfish and sharks, have the Ampullae of Lorenzini, organs that detect weak electric currents on the order of millivolt. |
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To detect these changes, algae can be sampled from the environment and maintained in laboratories with relative ease. |
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One of the few moments linguists can detect somewhat of a revolution is when the Dutch standard language emerged and quickly established itself. |
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By the end of the War, naval mine technology had grown beyond the ability of minesweepers to detect and remove. |
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The US has worked on some innovative mine hunting countermeasures, such as the use of military dolphins to detect and flag mines. |
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Heat sensors in the nose help them to detect blood vessels near the surface of the skin. |
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As in snakes and many mammals, all lizards have a specialised olfactory system, the vomeronasal organ, used to detect pheromones. |
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A ship towing a magnetometer on the surface of the ocean can detect these stripes and infer the age of the ocean floor below. |
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Animals including birds and turtles can detect the Earth's magnetic field, and use the field to navigate during migration. |
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Gene expressions are being used more often to detect the physiological responses to nutrition, as well as other stressors. |
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Modern science has been able to detect mammalian blood cells on Mode 1 tools at Sterkfontein, Member 5 East, in South Africa. |
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Most molluscs have eyes, and all have sensors to detect chemicals, vibrations, and touch. |
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When above water, crocodiles enhance their ability to detect volatile odorants by gular pumping, a rhythmic movement of the floor of the pharynx. |
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This makes it possible for crocodiles to detect prey, danger and intruders, even in total darkness. |
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Passive instruments detect natural energy that is reflected or emitted from the observed scene. |
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Surface survey cannot detect sites or features that are completely buried under earth, or overgrown with vegetation. |
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In this context, one can detect its roots in the experience of Germans in the Napoleonic period. |
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