Most sows are sent to the slaughter house the minute they can't reproduce babies. |
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Again, some researchers are debating whether or not moss can actually reproduce by spores. |
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What many children do is to note down what the teacher says and reproduce it for the examination. |
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Most ciliates cannot reproduce indefinitely by asexual fission, and eventually die out if prohibited from conjugating. |
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Most animal species that reproduce parthenogenetically also display a phase of sexual behaviour and sexual reproduction. |
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Seed markets are generally built around hybrid varieties, which do not reproduce and so force farmers to purchase new seeds every season. |
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The refractive index was chosen to reproduce dextran concentrations because dextran is hygroscopic. |
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His skills as a furniture restorer enabled him to expertly reproduce old patina and copy surface decoration. |
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Patients can reproduce these spells by hyperventilating in a controlled environment. |
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Paup does not reproduce the phenetic clusters, and therefore the null hypothesis is falsified. |
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But he was unable to reproduce that scintillating form last season and has found himself out of favour for part of the current campaign. |
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Anyone wanting to reproduce one of my poems will almost always get a speedy and favourable response to an inquiry. |
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Adoption is common, but reproductive technologies that allow infertile couples and gay couples to reproduce are highly valued. |
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Students would not succumb to their desire to insincerely reproduce what their teachers profess. |
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She does reproduce some of his more subversive etchings, although as plates, rather than prints. |
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Both species reproduce by cyclical parthenogenesis, in which phases of asexual reproduction are intermitted by sexual reproduction. |
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Primarily they reproduce asexually, which they accomplish by binary fission, or simple cell division. |
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I reproduce below Duggal's translation of the invocation and the first verse followed by my rendering of the same. |
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There is nothing better than watching us trying to reproduce and copy big money US network TV type shows. |
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For example, many tropical species reproduce at irregular supra-annual intervals. |
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We reproduce what may be the most vicious tirade by a pollie against a journo, delivered by Danby under parliamentary privilege on Tuesday. |
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Among British post-classical economists, the argument was often that the Irish over-breed, while Anglo-Saxons reproduce at relatively low rates. |
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As it happens, the cowardy custards didn't publish it, so with his permission I am going to reproduce it here. |
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Part of the reason why he doesn't reproduce his club form for England is that his form improves as the team he plays in gets better. |
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It can also reproduce asexually using stems that creep along the ground and establish new roots, giving rise to its name. |
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If it were genetic, it would gradually disappear from the gene pool because they don't reproduce as often. |
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The three images were then projected onto a screen by three separate lanterns to reproduce the full colour image. |
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Valgus stress testing in the supine position or resisted knee flexion in the prone position may reproduce the pain. |
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The dominant instinct in every species is the survival and propagation of that species, and the urge to reproduce is paramount. |
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Many plant species can reproduce clonally by creeping roots or stems, propagules such as bulbils and tubers, or agamous seeds. |
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Nematomorphs are dioecious, they reproduce with true copulation or pseudocopulation. |
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When asked for permission to reproduce a work she granted the request and refused payment. |
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The puzzler is usually given a collection of silhouettes to reproduce with the pieces. |
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Genetically engineered species reproduce themselves in the wild, changing ecosystems forever. |
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Obviously, we have some genetic disposition to reproduce or the race would have ended long ago. |
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Among a species known as the little fire ant, both queens and males reproduce asexually, a new study has found. |
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The N-terminal group was acetylated to reproduce the experimental conditions at which the protein was studied. |
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Insects have developed wings to help them find a mate and for mayflies the race to reproduce becomes a race against time. |
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Then she'll think about assembling a crew to reproduce the album live and on tour. |
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When individual animals seem unable to reproduce, keepers can call in physiologists to diagnose possible biological problems. |
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The paintings reproduce the photographed features with illusionistic realism while leaving the surrounding heads completely flat. |
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Rather than reproduce these sometimes technical diagrams, they are redrawn in a more accessible form. |
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Students, at their examinations, had to reproduce their teachers' lessons word for word. |
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Our Quick Copy department stands at the ready to xerographically reproduce your copy job in black and white or color. |
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There was a happy Xmas photo of Chris and his wife in chilly Edinburgh attached which I reproduce here. |
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The second is designed to reproduce sculptures, as the first, of dimensions equaling the model, but of the kind called alto-relievo. |
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Their blend of the foreign and the intimate created a sound which many have tried, and failed, to reproduce. |
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They also reproduce themselves, and the new cells also crank out interferon in massive amounts. |
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Coronaviruses use efficient and economical mechanisms to reproduce themselves in animal cells. |
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Most people would just love to reproduce themselves and then, of course, be immensely disappointed if they do it, because it won't be them. |
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They reproduce like rabbits and gnaw almost permanently because their teeth grow all the time. |
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To add to the novel's air of primitivism, the editors reproduce a page of the sloppy original manuscript. |
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I could reproduce any layout, liquid or fixed width, with pixel-level precision. |
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If they do not reproduce, channel catfish must be restocked periodically to replace those harvested. |
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This runs from a given stage in the life cycle through all the steps needed to reproduce that stage in the next generation. |
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Automated programs follow a rigid set of rules that may not adequately reproduce the common sense we humans use when reviewing a page. |
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The images reproduce contemporary photographs, while the likenesses of historical figures like Nitti, Capone and Ness are copied exactly. |
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Some angiosperms reproduce by apomixis, a natural way of cloning through seeds. |
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Instead of sending out reproductives to a mating flight as most ants do, the Argentine ants reproduce by budding. |
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It is basically young ginger roots preserved in syrup, so I tried and reproduce something similar using first-of-the-season young ginger. |
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He will also reproduce period fireplace surrounds, ceiling rosettes, and freestanding carvings in the manner of Grinling Gibbons. |
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On the other hand, consider organisms that reproduce by agametic, asexual reproduction. |
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On the other hand, if your music tastes run to classical or pop, you want a speaker system which can reproduce the entire audio spectrum evenly. |
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He attaches sufficient importance to the note to reproduce a photograph of it in the book. |
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Corallites attaining a certain size, although variable in diameter, may reproduce again. |
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By contrast, many Old World monkeys, such as baboons and macaques, live longer, start to reproduce later, and have more time between babies. |
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An adolescent heterosexual male, for example, is certainly driven to distraction by his hormonal urge to reproduce. |
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Music was a vital part of human culture long before anyone was able to mass reproduce and sell recordings of it. |
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While genes compete to get copied when plants and animals reproduce, memes compete to get stored in our memories and passed on to someone else. |
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The dampness and high temperature of about 25 degrees Celsius provides the best conditions for mould to grow and reproduce. |
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Feldman specifies many tonal colors that the musicians go to pains to reproduce accurately and engagingly. |
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Many plants in the common group reproduce vegetatively from stolons or rhizomes, or sexually with spores. |
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It may be that the respondent will reproduce the transcript as part of the further material. |
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Others, particularly fans of war games, see games as a simulation, a way to reproduce reality. |
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Due to time constraints, I am unable to reproduce every minute detail of my cobbler making. |
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Once she recognizes the historical constitution of the plantation mistress, Peterkin elects to reproduce it through her own activities. |
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This description is able to reproduce the observed biphasic behavior with randomly and uniformly distributed channels and vesicles. |
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The second description is able to reproduce biphasic release even for uniformly distributed vesicles. |
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The malaria parasite has to be able to reproduce in the mosquito in order to be able to infect humans. |
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The ground was very muddy, but eventually they planted their crops and their animals began to reproduce. |
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The official state ID includes a laminated card and a mugshot on instant film, making it easy to reproduce. |
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This is a superficial memorialisation which an analytical history ought not uncritically reproduce. |
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The important part isn't usually visible, the mushrooms and toadstools that we can see are merely the way they reproduce. |
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We wanted to reproduce the kind of magic you experienced with slot car building kits. |
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Festival patrons can put on an EEG helmet, which will reproduce their brainwaves in light and sound. |
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If your cat is not neutered at six months of age, he will be mature enough to reproduce now. |
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When the colonies reproduce through swarming, workers rear a number of new queens, only a few of which will ultimately head a colony. |
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In the majority of clonal plant species, which reproduce chiefly by vegetative propagation, seedling recruitment is infrequent. |
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It can reproduce both asexually and through aerial bulbils, which is another reason for its high rank in impact. |
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Since hoary marmots reproduce biennially, half the females are fertile and half nonfertile during any given year. |
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Whether females will reproduce oviparously or viviparously can be determined by the colour of the eggs in the uterus. |
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Tiger Sharks reproduce viviparously, which means that like mammals, the give birth to live young that have been nourished by a placenta. |
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During the summer months, pea aphids reproduce parthenogenetically and viviparously. |
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In order to reproduce, and to survive, they will need the untamed energy of the bush fire. |
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When polyphonic motets were intended to replace Gregorian chants in the Mass or Divine Office, they generally reproduce their texts exactly. |
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The flowers are probably wind-pollinated, and the plants can reproduce vegetatively by lateral offshoots, and by rhizomes. |
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Pistia stratiotes L. is a free-floating aquatic angiosperm that can reproduce rapidly by vegetative offshoots from stolons. |
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In addition, ants, carpet beetles, flies and cockroaches may find their way to the comb to feed and reproduce. |
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Computer systems may not be able to ontologically reproduce physical entities that have mass. |
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This allowed pirates for the first time to reproduce what was for all intents and purposes an exact copy of an original. |
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Drug cartels, terrorist cells, and guerilla movements all reproduce themselves as dictatorships in the end. |
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Proglottids are complete reproductive systems that allow the hermaphroditic tapeworm to reproduce. |
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If a book is out of print, the publisher may grant permission to reproduce its entire text. |
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Many of the exquisite carvings and secret chambers found in old wooden chests and wardrobes are difficult to reproduce. |
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Therefore, we tested the tryptophan catabolites, picolinic acid and quinolinic acid to see if they could reproduce the effects of IDO overexpression. |
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The sporozoites released from the oocyst reproduce asexually within cells, producing merozoites that burst from those cells, each to infect a new cell. |
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Everybody can recognize an unfiltered sample of a jazz-record in a hip-hop track, although the sample can't reproduce the improvisations of the musician. |
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Bacteriophages, or phages, infect bacteria in order to reproduce inside. |
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Professionals use a device called a colorimeter to measure the actual computer display and create a profile that is then used to reproduce colors faithfully. |
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Mills may have paid a record price, but Goupil still owned the copyright, which enabled him to reproduce the composition again in 1877 as a photogravure. |
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Most bands these days aspire to reproduce their recordings on stage as faithfully as possible. |
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Thus, whereas the parental species reproduce sexually, the hybrid reproduces unisexually due to the result of meiotic drive, but still depends on a sexual hang-up. |
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In the face of fluctuating environments, organisms that reproduce asexually have a reduced capacity to generate variation compared to sexual organisms. |
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What I mean by this term is that humour functions and is constructed to produce and reproduce certain desirable, socio-cultural effects within social in-groups. |
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And second, two experiments were conducted in an attempt to reproduce empirically the confederating function of humor hypothesised in groups facing such situations. |
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As in life, evolution selects for maximal ability to reproduce. |
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But was her affection for him, her obvious attraction to him, based solely upon an instinct to reproduce and justify her feminine role in society? |
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Scientists attribute the declines to pollution, habitat degradation, and unsustainable fishing practices that allow species to be harvested faster than they can reproduce. |
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Despite the prevalence of asexual mechanisms of propagation, most clonal species also reproduce sexually, and exclusively asexual species are rare. |
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The presence of a self-incompatibility mechanism and its inability to reproduce vegetatively makes Trillium grandiflorum reproduction dependent on pollinator activity. |
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The small Greek figurines known as Tanagra statuettes were mass produced from moulds, and reproduce everyday life as well as copies of famous statues. |
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Airline pilots are now slowly, too slowly, being given access to flight simulators able to reproduce sudden and unexpected upsets. |
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His work thus has the tendency to reproduce the elisions of the religious and political polemics of the sixteenth century while seeking to explain them. |
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You may have noticed that roughly 100 percent of higher animals reproduce sexually, requiring a male and female partner to do so. |
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White shrimp, blue crabs, sea trout and other fish require brackish water to reproduce, and the mouth of the Rio Grande was one of the few places they could find it. |
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Anguillid eels are catadromous, meaning that maturing individuals spend most of their lives in estuaries or freshwater but migrate to the ocean to reproduce. |
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In addition to determining the available volume of the disc, discography is used to reproduce the symptoms associated with a possible herniated disc. |
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These explanations proceed by asserting that the most complex nonliving molecules will reproduce more efficiently than less complex nonliving molecules. |
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Subjects are first asked to copy the figure to assess their visuospatial constructional ability, and then 30 minutes later, are asked to reproduce the figure from memory. |
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The ability to remember music in nearly complete detail after only one or two hearings and reproduce it on an instrument is a rare and valuable skill. |
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This virus is not spread to the offspring as beetles reproduce. |
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Spectacularly well-timed, I agree, but unfortunately I spilt all my vitriol on another carpet, so I can't reproduce it with the same passion here. |
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When the hawk moth proboscises were long compared to the length of the flower tube, the hawk moths did not efficiently pick up pollen, and the flowers did not reproduce well. |
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Over time, as cells reproduce, our telomeres become shorter and shorter, until they become so stubby that the process stops. |
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These organisms can reproduce, cross-pollinate, mutate, and migrate. |
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Plants can reproduce themselves without the help of human intervention. |
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After looking at two-dimensional patterns made up of red and white squares and triangles, you have to reproduce these patterns using cubes with red and white faces. |
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It is in these trachea that the acarine mites reproduce and feed. |
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The zonkey could live well into its 20s but will be unable to reproduce. |
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Many plants, such as strawberries, reproduce both sexually by seeds and also by putting out suckers that produce plants that are simply extensions of the parent plant. |
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If they stay true to their nature, androgynes cannot reproduce. |
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Coral reefs act as safe havens for food fish to reproduce and grow. |
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Asked if the ability to reproduce should be a human right, spar said she would leave that for the philosophers to think about. |
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The physician can demonstrate how gentle palpation of the pain trigger point can reproduce the pain and its radiation over a wide area of the abdomen. |
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The most powerful impulse of the time can be summed up as neoclassicism, a reversion to the purist attempts of the Renaissance to reproduce classical models. |
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Chemists discovered that in the presence of light, rhodium compounds react with DNA, and they ultimately kill malignant cells by interfering with their ability to reproduce. |
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The hawksbill sea turtle population in the Gulf of Thailand is small and in danger of extinction because of illegal fishing and the mammals' limited ability to reproduce. |
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Bryophytes reproduce through syngamy and meiosis, but the dominant stage of the plant is the gametophyte, as opposed to the sporophyte in vascular plants. |
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The homosocial paradigm of the fraternity of officers, however, produces a new impossibility, for its same-sex society cannot reproduce, cannot generate a future. |
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Although the red image may be imperfect through underexposure, we may still precipitate the black substance on the parts which have come out, and reproduce on them any amount of blackness we choose. |
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He had shown that hydroid jellyfish known as naked-eyed medusae reproduce not only by spewing eggs, but also by asexual budding, which he found marvelous to behold. |
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These oath-takings are critical to Tolkien's mythologising of the past because they reproduce the feudal bonds that a vassal pays to his liege lord. |
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Avoiding fishing in spawning grounds may allow fish stocks to rebuild by giving adults a chance to reproduce. |
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In all the studied cases, carnivory allows plants to grow and reproduce using animals as a source of nitrogen, phosphorus and possibly potassium. |
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A ruffe usually matures in two to three years, but a ruffe that lives in warmer waters has the ability to reproduce in the first year of life. |
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The biodiversity of aquatic plant and algal life is reduced, and invertebrates are also unable to survive and reproduce. |
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And because they live everywhere and reproduce quickly, bacteria have the upper hand. |
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Nor can I reproduce these letters today either, whether I opt for Arial, Helvetica, Wingding or Kfang. |
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Although larvae are the result of sexual reproduction, corals also reproduce clonally. |
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Server captive data is difficult to protect, reallocate, share and reproduce when it's kept on disk drives within individual servers. |
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Although people can't naturally reproduce this way, a woman's egg also retains an extra set of chromosomes in a polar body until fertilization. |
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Viruses are tiny, nonliving particles that invade and then reproduce inside of living cells. |
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Fomorians had lost the ability to reproduce and had discovered that human woman could be used for children. |
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Researchers had previously been able to use the sequencing of these veritable molecular building blocks to reproduce a binary code. |
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Some lichens have lost the ability to reproduce sexually, yet continue to speciate. |
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Some individuals have to die, while others have to survive and reproduce. |
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In general, Daphnia reproduce parthenogenetically in most time of the year. |
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Some of the Czech language diacritical marks did not reproduce correctly when published. |
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Current prosthetics can reproduce simple features, such as bright spots or edges, but miss much of a scene. |
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The modified model is able to reproduce the evolution tendency of the hysteresis loop with increasing number of cycles. |
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Microprint, which deters the ability to reproduce a legitimate stamp's text by photocopy or scanners. |
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Tributyl tin is also driving the common dog whelk to extinction by damaging its ability to reproduce. |
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Females reproduce every 2 or 3 years, with as many as six fetuses being reported, but single births are far more common. |
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The shallow lagoon waters in which gray whales reproduce are believed to protect the newborn from sharks and orcas. |
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A fern is a member of a group of vascular plants that reproduce via spores and have neither seeds nor flowers. |
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Alberta defines an infestation as two or more rats found at the same location, since a single rat cannot reproduce. |
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About a dozen single rats enter Alberta in an average year and are killed by provincial rat control specialists before they can reproduce. |
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Only one female and up to three males in the colony reproduce, while the rest of the members are smaller and sterile, and function as workers. |
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Young female roe deer can begin to reproduce when they are around 6 months old. |
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This is because females that are smaller will still be able to reproduce without a substantial disadvantage, but this is not the case with males. |
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These species consist of all females who reproduce asexually with no need for males. |
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Parthenogenesis was also recorded in species that normally reproduce sexually. |
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Birch has a natural resonance that peaks in the high and low frequencies, which are also the hardest for speakers to reproduce. |
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Their ability to reproduce vegetatively, using bulb offsets and seed, means that they can spread rapidly, and may need to be controlled as weeds. |
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The possessors of orchids may be able to reproduce the process with a pencil, small paintbrush, or other similar device. |
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Many lichen fungi reproduce sexually like other fungi, producing spores formed by meiosis and fusion of gametes. |
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During summer, the sun is out day and night, thus enabling the phytoplankton to photosynthesize for long periods of time and reproduce quickly. |
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Horticulturalists are interested in understanding how meristematic cells can be induced to reproduce an entire plant. |
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However the process is complex, and computer models that reproduce some of its features have only been developed in the last few decades. |
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They reproduce by spawning and their main spawning season occurs in spring, but can extend into the summer. |
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Both group spawning and habitat cover increase the likelihood of a smaller male to reproduce in the presence of large males. |
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Both of these factors greatly influence the range and scope of animal and plant life that can survive and reproduce in these environments. |
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When a female has undergone nutritional stress, it is possible for her to not reproduce for the year. |
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Vico would reproduce this argument consistently throughout his works, and would use it as a central tenet of the Scienza Nuova. |
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Once in captivity and out of their natural habitat, many pets die or fail to reproduce. |
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As with other birds, an individual may reproduce several times over its lifetime. |
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This also eliminated the need for engraving, which further shortened the time it takes to make and reproduce maps. |
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As these microbes reproduce in the rumen, older generations die and their cells continue on through the digestive tract. |
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Sheep are generally too large and reproduce too slowly to make ideal research subjects, and thus are not a common model organism. |
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In the work he also wrote that contemporary craftsmen seeking to emulate the style of medieval workmanship should reproduce its methods. |
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Hoiby was particularly good at writing monodramas, two of which aimed to reproduce real life characters in music. |
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As for algorithms S I once had to reproduce a diagram of a thermionic valve. |
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Lichens reproduce vegetatively by breaking off particles, or soredia, composed of fungal threads and algae. |
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It was entirely our fault and somewhat chastenedly, we reproduce the correct set below. |
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The animals are also terminal spawners, meaning females only have one opportunity to reproduce. |
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Those who abstain from the right to reproduce and remain childfree by choice often face harsh questioning, however. |
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This family of viruses uses molecular machinery called reverse transcriptase to reproduce. |
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They haven't been able to reproduce the results of the first experiment. |
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Through the wisdom of our legislators, only the intelligent may contracept, while the stupid are commanded to reproduce their kind. |
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The figs are of a mutant variety that cannot be pollinated by insects, and therefore the trees can only reproduce from cuttings. |
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Queens of socially parasitic inquiline ants reproduce by laying eggs in the colonies of other species. |
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There would be no priests in science, and anyone could reproduce the experiments and hear their lessons. |
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Ford was unable to reproduce his semi final form and Nick Evans and Chris Robshaw inspired Quins to their maiden Premiership triumph. |
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Further north, walruses and bearded seals can be encountered on the Pacific side, and ribbon seals reproduce on the ice of Karaginsky Bay. |
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Once ready to reproduce, males travel long distances in search of a sounder of sows, eating little on the way. |
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Salmon can make amazing journeys, sometimes moving hundreds of miles upstream against strong currents and rapids to reproduce. |
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Honko asserted that, in some cases, a society reenacts a myth in an attempt to reproduce the conditions of the mythical age. |
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The reality is that the vast majority of species exposed to a new habitat do not reproduce successfully. |
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In trying to reproduce this so-called lotus effect in the lab, chemical engineers have fabricated a similar self-cleaning material out of forests of carbon nanotubes. |
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He subsequently tried to reproduce these phenomena in the laboratory, resulting in his invention of the cloud chamber, used to detect ionising radiation. |
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To identify with this passage is, on the one hand, to reproduce the identification structure infilm noir with bad guys, femmes fatales, and neurotic detectives. |
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Some governments have sought to regulate which groups of society could reproduce through eugenic policies of forced sterilizations of 'undesirable' population groups. |
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The fate of the Yangtze giant soft-shelled turtle, which can weigh up to 220 pounds, depends on whether two elderly turtles in Chinese zoos are able to reproduce. |
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We used the Monte Carlo code MCNP5 to reproduce system neutronics in different operating conditions and to analyse neutron fluxes in the reactor core. |
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Malarial parasites reproduce by using the PPLP2 protein to venture out of their vacuoles which are their resting places within the red blood cells. |
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To reproduce in mosquitoes, the parasites have to break out of their hiding compartment, called a vacuole, and then bust through the red blood cell's outer membrane. |
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Models are unable to reproduce the rapid warming observed in recent decades when only taking into account variations in solar output and volcanic activity. |
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The model needs to be refined through controlled pH and the use of additional procalcifying agents other than Pi in order to reproduce calcium phosphate deposition in vivo. |
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The female needs the sperm to stay healthy whilst they are in storage in the spermatheca, so that they are viable each time she uses them to reproduce. |
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Mosses reproduce using spores, not seeds, and have no flowers. |
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Agencies can reproduce it as an easy-to-read backgrounder for clients. |
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Ultraviolet light disinfects water by altering the genetic material within bacteria, viruses and protozoa such that they can no longer reproduce and are effectively killed. |
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Some species may allow mating only between individuals of opposite mating type, whereas others can mate and sexually reproduce with any other individual or itself. |
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A welcome consequence of the latest results, Crum adds, is that other researchers should find the uranium-based triggering method easier to reproduce than the neutron one. |
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The tectiforms reproduce in a remarkable manner the simple shelters, tents, and huts in use today among primitive and nomadic races in various parts of the world. |
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The ruffe has the capacity to reproduce at an extremely high rate. |
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Several pivotal discoveries in biology were made by researchers using fungi as model organisms, that is, fungi that grow and sexually reproduce rapidly in the laboratory. |
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The majority of crustaceans have separate sexes, and reproduce sexually. |
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To reproduce right-of-way, speed-restriction, yard-limit, and other signs, photograph the original signs, and make prints, scale size, on doubleweight paper. |
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But fighting Dworkinism and other forms of sexual conservative politics with a sex-positive agenda can also reproduce the racism inherent in the mainstream gay movement. |
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However, the Colombian Rainbow boa, Epicrates maurus can also reproduce by facultative parthenogenesis resulting in production of WW female progeny. |
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With rare exceptions, most hybrids are sterile and cannot reproduce. |
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However, in the United Kingdom, the right to print, publish and distribute it is a Royal prerogative and the Crown licenses publishers to reproduce it under letters patent. |
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Fitness is measured by an organism's ability to survive and reproduce, which determines the size of its genetic contribution to the next generation. |
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They were being taken much faster than they could reproduce. |
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Pouting can reproduce before they reach two years of age and grow rapidly, reaching around 15 centimetres in length by the end of their first year. |
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