When the bacterium Listeria monocytogenes invades the body, it commandeers its host cell's actin cytoskeleton to invade other cells. |
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Now when anything invades another cell, or particularly when a parasite invades a red blood cell, they have to multiply. |
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The infringer invades a statutorily defined province guaranteed to the copyright holder alone. |
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This species, typical of mesic to dry-mesic upland forests, has wind-dispersed seeds and evidently readily invades barrens. |
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The pink bollworm is a major cotton pest which invades the growing cotton bolls and destroys both the seeds and the cotton fibers. |
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But then a side drum invades, playing at its own tempo, and a battle is set up between the orchestra and this single drummer. |
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But we live in a fallen, sinful world in which sin invades family units as it does all other aspects of society. |
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Once the tumor extends to or invades local organs, radiation therapy becomes the mainstay of treatment. |
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The soft underbelly of the country's power is its reluctance to take casualties and to pay the costs of rebuilding societies that it invades. |
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The placental tissue from the fetus then invades the uterine wall by sending finger-like extensions into it. |
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The Prophet is not warning us about a thought that invades one's mind uninvited. |
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The military, armed with cement mixers and bricks, invades shanty towns to build houses, not to destroy them. |
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Many species, such as parrotfish and surgeonfish, prospered on the algae covering that invades stricken coral reefs. |
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Civil liberties groups, however, have raised concerns that the long lens of the law invades the privacy of innocent residents. |
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An indescribable sensation grabs at the back of my neck, as a coldness invades what feels like the center of my skull. |
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Yes, but to be famous is, if you like privacy, it invades your privacy and takes that away from you. |
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This system is characterized by an expansive dynamic which invades every pre-technological enclave and shapes the whole of social life. |
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Next comes the pain that invades your forehead, temples and the nape of your neck. |
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It invades old fields as well as woodlots, and has been reported along roads, utility corridors and fencerows. |
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When a microbe or a virus invades the body, white cells are among the first of the body's defenses to attack the invading organisms. |
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Magma invades the cracks, and the process of continental rifting, ultimately leading to seafloor spreading, begins. |
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It is a sentiment that invades everything, fills all the cracks and makes any attempt at aggression turn to dust. |
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It takes littleness to diminish ever more while God invades you to make you become a vessel. |
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But then a powerful neighbouring country, armed and encouraged by a superpower, invades. |
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It is no exaggeration to say that Brazil only wakes up fully when the aroma of coffee invades our homes and stimulates our senses. |
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If untreated, this nodule eventually ulcerates and invades underlying tissues. |
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For example, when it invades the lungs, Pseudomonas reason pneumonia with fever, chills, and a productive cough. |
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It invades, spreads and destroys the healthy spirit of competition and fair play amongst our athletes. |
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The interest towards the products bio is essential and led to the result of an ecological awakening which has invades the entire world. |
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You'll be glad to know that the story has a happy ending, with only several thousand Londoners drowning horribly in the rising floodwaters as a surge tide invades the capital. |
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The lake invades the glacier's deep chasms and crevasses, detonating thunderous explosions as great shards of ice detach and re-emerge as icebergs. |
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The mycelium grows more rapidly in the xylem than the bark, but rarely invades the pith. |
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Shot in 35 mm, 'RROFW II' presents a view of a tunnel disappearing into thick white smoke which invades the scene before withdrawing very slowly. |
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It invades the nervous system and can lead to paralysis within five days of infection. |
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Simply put, if a computer programmed by people learns the contents of a communication, and takes action based on what it learns, it invades privacy. |
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When too much thallium circulates in the blood, it invades all the organs of the body, impairing their operation, destroying hair follicles, muscles, and nerves. |
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We encounter mostly in Southeast Asia where it invades the landscape at breakneck speed. |
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Dermatophytosis, or ringworm, is an infection that invades superficial layers of the skin, hair or nails. |
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A dermatophyte is a fungus that invades and lives upon the skin or in the hair or nails. |
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The part of the trophoblast that is in contact with the endometrium grows into and invades the maternal tissue. |
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He invades personal space, standing mere inches away from his staff while playing the innuendo card with a heavy-handedness that makes his point painfully obvious. |
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Fumitory is a perennial herbaceous plant with sea green leaves, which invades cultivated land. |
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I'm sure you will be grateful to know it is totally soundproofed and no noise invades the site. |
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Phragmites australis is a common reed that aggressively invades wetlands, replacing native plants and destroying a wetland's biodiversity. |
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Rarely, the infection invades the liver and causes an abscess. |
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With the passage of time, the synovium thickens to form pannus tissue which invades cartilage and bone. |
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A Cockney barrow boy invades a Downton Abbey-style world in this cheery 1930s musical, revised by Stephen Fry. |
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Depending on the species of Leishmania that invades a host and on the host's immunologic response to the infection, one of three principal types of leishmaniasis can arise. |
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That day, our house smelled the way old houses do in July, when a certain steaminess invades the carpets and any breeze ushers in just enough of an aroma to give the air the barely noticeable tang of summer. |
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The interrogation celebrated spikes and cuffs, the inky blue that invades a blackened eye, the eyeball that bulges like a radish, that incarnadine only blood can create. |
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The hues of the landscape are rendered more harmonious and limpid when the island is relieved of the dazzling light that invades it in the summer season. |
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Auxilio is trapped in a fourth-floor ladies' bathroom when, in September 1968, the army invades the university campus where she works as helpmeet and muse for her beloved junior literati. |
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Mastitis develops when a pathogen that typically originates in the nursing infant's nose or pharynx invades breast tissue through a fissured or cracked nippie and disrupts normal lactation. |
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Meanwhile, La Rocambolesque invades the Union Française for a very special session of theatrical improvisation: comedic performances, improvisation, marionettes? |
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The bacterium enters the leaves via stomata or wounds, and subsequently invades the intercellular spaces, causing a gradual dissolution of the middle lamella. |
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If a child invades personal space, asks personal questions or misplaces their authority with an adult, supportively re-establish appropriate behaviour. |
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Naturally enough, in a story about a tainted emotional legacy and a virus that invades a person's DNA, Roth is hyperalert to the possibility of creative slippage between literal and metaphorical inheritance. |
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Each winter, nature invades and besieges Montreal for months on end. |
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Mycosis, plural Mycoses, in humans and domestic animals, a disease caused by any fungus that invades the tissues, causing superficial, subcutaneous, or systemic disease. |
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Far more devastating is the mucocutaneous form, which invades the mucous membranes of the upper respiratory, causing gross mutilation as it destroys the soft tissues of the nose, mouth, and throat. |
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If the tumour invades other tissues in the body, it is called cancer. |
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When a mysterious and anonymous intruder invades their six-way Skype session and starts planting venomous private information into their forum, the teenagers first stand together, then fall apart, then turn on one another. |
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We could attack anyone who invades our territory. |
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Work invades the home far more than domestic chores invade the office. |
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It invades, without damaging them, the male and female gametes. |
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The use of a person's body without his consent to obtain information about him, invades an area of personal privacy essential to the maintenance of his human dignity. |
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Every year hopeful observers posted along Gaspé Bay or on the coast near Percé are rewarded: rorqual whales show up before ice, pushed along by currents and dominant winds, invades the Bay and the waters around the Peninsula. |
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An immense rustling, soft as the rubbing of silk, invades the mountain. |
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Guiderius refuses to pay tribute to emperor Claudius, who then invades Britain. |
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A terrible stench invades, part rotten egg, part dead fish. |
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When someone, A, is using something and someone else, B, comes along and grabs it from A, probably whopping him with his cudgel in the process, B invades and aggresses. |
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If a chicken invades your garden to steal seed and your dog barks at it in the line of dogly duty, the chicken's owner has the legal right to kill your dog. |
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Soon afterward, a mountain tribe called the Kassites invades Babylon. |
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Caesar invades once more and besieges Cassivellaunus on a hill. |
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The most prominent HMGB1 protein and mRNA expression arthritis is present in pannus regions, where synovial tissue invades articular cartilage and bone. |
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