Reported neurological manifestations have included tremor, myoclonus, hyperreflexia, ankle clonus, muscle rigidity, ataxia and incoordination. |
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Later the same month the man's sweating, pyrexia, muscular rigidity, and decreased responsiveness returned. |
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The Russian school is famous, notorious even, for its stringency and rigidity. |
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The inherent rigidity of the steel bodyshell enhances the new 3 Series safety levels. |
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When aspirated into the micropipette, these GUVs behaved as liquids with no surface shear rigidity. |
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Taking up so much of the roof area, it has to stay sealed with the glass permanently in place to maintain the car's body rigidity. |
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We added the underbody rails to meet the truck durability and increase rigidity. |
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Barnave rejects rigidity as strongly as he condemns the wild flights of unconstrained imagination. |
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In their rigidity and unbendingness they probably wear back braces to improve their posture. |
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I also noticed some body flex due to loss of structural rigidity with the whole car shuddering over potholes in the roads. |
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Dopamine production goes awry in the brains of Parkinson's patients, leading to the muscle rigidity and tremors associated with the disorder. |
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As a result, patients suffer from muscle tremors, rigidity of movement, and balance and coordination problems. |
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The three main symptoms are tremors, rigidity and slowness of movement, although not everyone will experience all three. |
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Her high spirits and love of life were so different from Mimi's strictness and rigidity. |
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The armored division's modularity and flexibility distinguished it from the Army's traditional emphasis on organizational rigidity. |
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The shotcrete locks the structure together, like architectural papier mache, giving it the necessary rigidity. |
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A hollow forged aluminum crown and 30 mm stanchions help keep grams off while still offering maximum rigidity. |
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Alas, rigidity is key to the handling of a race car, so no team is going to sacrifice its competitiveness for safety. |
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The rigidity and adamancy to continue with the strike action until management appears to capitulate leads to a dead end. |
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The extrema displayed in this figure reflect the rigidity property of the protein. |
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The empennage was built integral with the fuselage to ensure absolute rigidity. |
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The outer windings seem to provide both the extra rigidity needed for motility in structured media and better propulsion in low viscosity media. |
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In a previous report of Lyme-associated extrapyramidal features in 5 patients, 5 all of the patients exhibited akinesia, pains, and rigidity. |
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There is a need to avoid inappropriate dilution of content without undue rigidity. |
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Parkinsonian side effects manifest themselves as tremor, rigidity, and akinesia individually or in combination. |
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With such diverse instrumentation and determined eclecticism, the band is often categorized by music fans who are unforgiving in their rigidity. |
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In other cases akinesia, dyskinesia, waxy flexibility, and cogwheeling may occur instead of or in addition to the classic rigidity. |
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So machine manufacturers are adding rigidity to components such as the workpiece, spindle, and cutting tool. |
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The floorpan is done in thick steel with an arched design for stiffness, torsional rigidity and reduced cabin vibration. |
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Indeed, he boasts tirelessly of his resolve and steadfastness, making a virtue of rigidity. |
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The disease is characterized by a gradual increase in skeletal muscle rigidity and muscle spasm. |
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It's also said to have better bending rigidity than either a coupe or a convertible. |
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And he was learned and perspicacious enough to see that the rigidity which the old Labour party embraced would entail its own reaction. |
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Skis have gotten softer over the years, as manufacturers have learned ways of building in torsional rigidity without lengthwise rigidity. |
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Highly advanced composites and alloys have enhanced its structural rigidity and kept its overall weight to a minimum. |
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The plastic ribbing adds to the rigidity of the structure without a large increase in weight. |
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The base is made of tubular steel for strength and rigidity without excess weight. |
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I noticed that in less than a minute afterward, his corpse had all the stern rigidity of stone. |
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The carpenters applied additional laths horizontally and vertically to ensure the structure's rigidity. |
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It is as if the rigidity of the object were at war with a softening, playful freedom. |
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There are two inseparable, irreconcilable worlds, like the flow of water and the immoveable, skull-like rigidity of the hill. |
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On physical examination there is general tenderness to palpation with rigidity and rebound tenderness. |
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Asymmetric hoops alternate along the length of the bridge to give the fabric rigidity and animate the canopy's form. |
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And the one which comes immediately to mind, is the current rigidity in the issuance of visas to would-be tourists. |
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He critiques the rigidity of laws and prejudices that are so fundamental to the makeup of his native social order. |
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These composers ushered in a greater compositional freedom that deviated significantly from the rigidity of the then-exisiting regimen. |
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The resulting balance combined with front and rear double wishbone suspension and concentrated stiffness and rigidity is almost flawless. |
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Those arguments proceed to the rigidity and arbitrariness of imposed standards. |
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It made me think of Internet advertising and the rigidity that some advertisers bring to a new medium that has truly changed the rules. |
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The rhetorical paradox criticizes the limitations and rigidity of argumentation. |
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They skip the rigidity of the academy for something more natural and less satisfying. |
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This results in the release of acidic pectins and methanol as well as increased cell wall rigidity and calcium chelation. |
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The rigidity of his administration and congressional supporters meant that effective policymaking was impossible. |
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The desired results can be achieved only if the male members of the family shed their attitudinal rigidity. |
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I still think there's something appealing about the consumer advocate's ideological rigidity. |
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His rigidity of thought means that this level of teaching must be professionally informed, monitored, and developed on a continuum at all times. |
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The rigidity of the first scene, which may reflect the rigidity of Theseus himself, slowed it almost to a halt. |
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In response to his rigidity and dictatorial nature, one of his assistants created his own professional group of physicians. |
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He plays a college physics professor, whose rule-ridden rigidity keeps life at a distance. |
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His habits and tastes were profoundly bourgeois, and he was regular in his habits to the point of rigidity. |
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The cell thus exerts outward pressure on its cell wall, and when all cells are maintaining this pressure, the plant gains rigidity. |
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Our incumbent politicians are keenly aware of Canadians' progressive values and Americans' sociopolitical rigidity. |
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Grandiosity, rigidity, and intolerance of ambiguity, and a tendency to obsess about things are among the traits associated with the dry drunk. |
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However, it is likely that the rigidity of this attachment would decrease with increased linker length. |
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It basically conveys a sense of political hostility rather than religious rigidity, militancy, conservatism or orthodoxy. |
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Symptoms of the infection include muscle rigidity and spasms, particularly of the face and jaw, hence its common name lockjaw. |
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He is unyielding in his perceptions, and his rigidity both elevates and isolates him. |
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I would urge the community to not get into a place of rigidity and narrowness where they can't view the whole and what is at stake. |
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A static camera stresses the rigidity of an unimpressed and unimpressionable Bob, ever present at the bar. |
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The right rigidity, humidity and lubricity create a perfect situation for skiing. |
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Gradually the rigidity left his play and the trademark square cut began to beat out a tattoo. |
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With my coping saw I cut two semi-circular pieces of wood, one to go in the top to give it some rigidity, and the other to go on the bottom so I could attach a tripod mount. |
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The rigidity of a matrix is the number of entries in a matrix which need to be changed in order to bring the rank of the matrix down to a certain value. |
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The drop-in module, which adds to the stiffness and torsional rigidity of the whole vehicle, ties the car together from the seats rearward and from b-pillar to b-pillar. |
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Other signs include incontinence, late rigidity, akinesia, and tremor. |
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This is a hypokinetic disorder characterized by hypokinesia or akinesia, rigidity, and a rhythmic fine tremor at the rate of 3-6 cycles per second. |
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Mindless rigidity has descended upon the land, from the schoolhouse to the White House to, sometimes, your house. |
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Though he was an MP for a family borough from 1853 and in Derby's cabinet in 1866, his prickliness and rigidity made him an awkward colleague and a natural resigner. |
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Specially engineered depressions in the surface of the inner skin eliminate the need for a separate welded-on reinforcement to increase panel rigidity. |
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The stair generated out of this geometry, an almost helical form, frees itself from the rigidity of the ceiling, only to be encompassed by the new limit of the silo walls. |
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The man stands at attention, head angled up, hands clenched at his sides, literally embodying the edifice of culture and the rigidity of man-made structures. |
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They find common ground in religion and the rigidity of the concept of the infallibility of any interpretation coming from the religious authority. |
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Her adherence to conventionally inflexible distinctions signals her rigidity and demonstrates her failure to adapt successfully to her new surroundings. |
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Gone are the palatial apartments, ideological rigidity, and red Prada slippers. |
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With a mobile roof, safety is worth a mention, because there's still the perception that a roofless car doesn't quite have the rigidity, or crash-resistance, of a hardtop. |
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If many current students come to seminary without fixed notions of biblical authority, how can a prime teaching goal continue to be disabusing students of rigidity? |
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Parkinson's disease is a common neurodegenerative disorder, predominantly of the elderly, manifested by rigidity, tremors and movement difficulty. |
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The calipers are of monobloc type to maximize rigidity and reduce deformation due to the high stresses generated by the pressure of the pistons on the pads. |
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The functioning of a key depends on its rigidity whilst that of clocks and watches depend crucially on the weight of pendulum bobs or the elasticity of springs. |
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The dopamine-producing nerve cells in the basal ganglia die, causing slowness of voluntary movement as well as difficulty with balance and muscle rigidity. |
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The fact that rigidity in the monetary unit's purchasing power is unthinkable and unrealizable does not impair the methods of economic calculation. |
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An increase in body rigidity of 112 per cent compared with the outgoing cabriolet will also bring benefits both dynamically and in terms of safety. |
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If patients show signs of increased intracranial pressure or nuchal rigidity, immediate CT scanning of the brain, orbits, and sinuses should be performed. |
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That orthodoxy is no different than the rigidity of the football team at school. |
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A great many surprises must open out in real life as in great fiction, or we descend into the rigidity of myth. |
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I think a lot of us believe this because we grew up seeing the rigidity of our parents and grandparents, uncles and aunts. |
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Symptoms often began as a cataleptic state with catatonic rigidity. |
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Then a faceplate is attached with a welder for structural rigidity. |
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However, as soon as computer to computer communications became important, the rigidity and expense of circuit switched voice networks became apparent. |
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In principle, properties such as tube polarity, local hydrophilicity, and rigidity would be controlled by means of incorporating functional groups into the synthetic channel. |
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To ensure rigidity, he reinforces the panels with wooden cradling. |
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Our proprietary hydroforming and magnetic-pulse welding technologies allow for enhanced structural rigidity, reduced weight, and improved crashworthiness. |
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In the electrically neutral crown ether 6, six ethylene oxide monomers are linked into a circle that gives the molecule ion-complexing capacity and increases its rigidity. |
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Pulsation had ceased. For three days the body was preserved unburied, during which it had acquired a stony rigidity. |
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But not all the exchanges were as model as the sergeant. Some of the exchangees showed a rigidity and reluctance to adapt. |
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Motor symptoms, including tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia, are the most common presenting symptoms. |
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With three-surface contact, the KM design provides increased rigidity and accuracy for leading edge mill turn machines. |
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It is a property of networks to rigidity and of the critical reader to become the reluctant agent of rigidification. |
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Because of friction and the rigidity of rocks, they cannot glide or flow past each other easily, and occasionally all movement stops. |
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It has since shed much of that rigidity, and the result has been positive. |
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Subsequent writers like Ruzar Briffa and Karmenu Vassallo tried to estrange themselves from the rigidity of formal themes and versification. |
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Rule out masses and any signs of acute abdomen, including rigidity and tympanic bowel sounds, she said. |
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Miss H. showed a striking unilaterality of rigidity and akinesia, the left side of her body being much more severely affected. |
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The vertebral processes can either give the structure rigidity, help them articulate with ribs, or serve as muscle attachment points. |
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Indeed, costochondral rigidity and flexion deformity of the thoracic spine could have modified the cuff pressure in an unexpected way. |
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The most common reasons of student anger toward faculty are faculty rigidity, unfair treatment, and overcritical teachers. |
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A pallidotomy is a similar operation that can treat balance problems and rigidity. |
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The stabilizers are constructed with uni-directional carbon fiber tubes that provide plenty of rigidity without adding extra weight. |
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This may indicate the foot is less stable, and tends to supinate when landing on a softer surface with less rigidity. |
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The only metal parts are the rudder hinges and bow guard. Wooden decking, which snaps into place, gives the boat rigidity. |
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Clinical manifestations of NMS are hyperpyrexia, muscle rigidity, altered mental status and evidence of autonomic instability. |
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Clinical features include resting tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia, postural instability and responsiveness to levodopa. |
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The use of metal throughout their construction greatly improved their rigidity and accuracy which became the standard for later machine tool manufacture. |
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A massively rigid bonded aluminum chassis, huge engine compartment cross-brace and cabin-visible FIA approved roll cage hint at its race heritage and structural rigidity. |
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He had nuchal rigidity, dysmorphic facies, and oligodactyly. |
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First-generation antipsychotics, such as haloperidol, are more likely to induce extrapyramidal symptoms such as rigidity, bradykinesia, tremor, and dyskinesia. |
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Reinforcement usually adds rigidity and greatly impedes crack propagation. |
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Granite tables are used extensively as bases for optical instruments because of granite's rigidity, high dimensional stability, and excellent vibration characteristics. |
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The gene therapy, called ProSavin, restored the monkeys' levels of dopamine, corrected motor problems and prevented dyskinesias, as jerkiness, rigidity and tremor are called. |
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He gives that impression by a curious mixture of great courtesy, and even if yielding to pressure, with underlying rigidity on matters of principle. |
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Geologists attribute the arcuate structure to the rigidity of the descending plate, and island arc cusps relate to tears in the descending lithosphere. |
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The ongoing maintenance expense, rigidity, and lack of flexible external connectivity inherent within most ERP systems have led some companies to question their value. |
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The Buell Uniplanar engine mounting system reduces vibration to the rider and increases frame rigidity by utilizing the engine as a stressed member of the chassis. |
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The hallmarks of the most common form of parkinsonism, idiopathic PD, are bradykinesia, resting tremor, rigidity, festinating gait, and postural instability. |
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However, the rigidity of Eurasia is debated based on the paleomagnet data. |
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Patients tend to be nontremulous except in posture and can have a mixture of rigidity and spasticity, with axial and proximal predominance without cogwheeling. |
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This results from increased body rigidity and changes made to the dampers, springs and front anti-roll bar, which maximise the low-slung sportster's aerodynamics. |
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The characteristic Parkinsonian vocal deficit is breathy, whispery, often unintelligible speech due to glottic insufficiency and associated thyroarytenoid muscle rigidity. |
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These fibres then wrap around the cell as the major component of the plant cell wall, providing rigidity, flexibility and defence against internal and external stresses. |
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