Alternatively, the similarity in adaptive response is a matter of convergence. |
|
At the same time, through similarity and contiguity, the infant constellates the child archetype in the mother. |
|
The question whether the degree of similarity leads to a likelihood of confusion is a question of fact. |
|
In truth it is the genetic similarity between humans and primates that makes experimenting on them expedient. |
|
These are just some of the signs presented in a recent book that point to an unexpected similarity between the wise birds and humans. |
|
This indicates that a simple Euclidean distance in feature space can be used to quantify the relative similarity between different mutant types. |
|
It seems that a fundamental similarity and parallel exists between the aggregation of lipoproteins and amyloid proteins. |
|
They were linked by common origins and language, some fairly common religious traditions and a close similarity of laws. |
|
The building is of drop log construction, a style adopted by Tim for its similarity with the pioneering architecture of the region. |
|
The key similarity was the evidence that in both incidents he had armed himself with two knives. |
|
Mantel's test did not reveal any correlation between armature, genetic distance and the overall quantitative morphological similarity. |
|
The similarity between these tables and the ones made for the Gallery in Kensington in 1727 endows the whole group with a stylistic unity. |
|
The phonological similarity between Ulster and Lowland Scots is reinforced by vocabulary, although many traditional words are in decline. |
|
They have no linguistic relationship to any other language except for a vague similarity to the Athabaskan language. |
|
They also share some cultural similarity with the Athabaskan, with whom the Tlingit have interacted and traded for centuries. |
|
Another intriguing feature of Titan's atmosphere is its apparent similarity to the atmosphere of the early Earth. |
|
As a measure of structural similarity with the native state, we monitor a parameter Q that we call nativeness. |
|
But perhaps the real similarity lies in the smash-and-grab variety of science both fossickers blithely espoused. |
|
In spite of the similarity in name and location, the parathyroid glands and thyroid gland are separate glands with very different functions. |
|
That is, in order to be homologous, structures must satisfy the tests of similarity, congruence and conjunction. |
|
|
Next, he explored a different aesthetic with less prominent fins, visible rocket thrusters, and less visible similarity to marine life. |
|
Thus, the transfer of training that was found could not be attributable to generalization on the basis of stimulus similarity. |
|
But this old affair, scandalous enough to serve as a motive for a Greek tragedy, arose from the similarity of their characters. |
|
The similarity between the transition states is large, indicating that possibly only a part of path space is sampled. |
|
The similarity of the bacterial floras associated with the apical surface of the parasite tegument and the intestine of the host should be noted. |
|
Another odd similarity was the open air markets in the weekends, where farmers from nearby villages and towns brought their produce to sell. |
|
The similarity of the two fires suggests the possibility of malicious intent. |
|
To determine the correct gene structure, we performed a sequence similarity search against the protein database. |
|
Due to the similarity in function among thorns, spines, and prickles, we will generically refer to all plants bearing them as armed. |
|
The average values for the whole family are indicated with a solid line for identity and dashed line for similarity. |
|
Patterns of genetic similarity did not correspond with geographic location within any of the sites. |
|
A competing, though less compelling, interpretation is that similarity mediates the link between liking and perceived intelligence. |
|
Such unwitting similarity to Boyd's conception of strategic paralysis suggests that Owens's variant possesses the same weaknesses. |
|
Be ready to point out the similarity between a wind tower and existing communications towers, or even grain elevators and silos, he said. |
|
Main's method of meditation bears a similarity to, but has some differences from, centering prayer as practiced and taught by Keating. |
|
If we do not topicalise the similarity, we have these two choices for the sentence. |
|
Its similarity with toreutic works on the banks of the hill reminds us of Strabo's assertion touching the likeness of Egyptian and Tuscan art. |
|
An even more perfect fit is the similarity of attitudes to women between the two times. |
|
The similarity between the electronic structures of ethylene and diborane is well known. |
|
Despite similarity in syntax, vocabulary, and grammar, the contemporary languages are mutually unintelligible. |
|
|
The Vandyke print gets its name from its similarity in color to the deep brown pigment, Vandyke brown, used by the Flemish painter Van Dyck. |
|
Sailors noted the similarity of the sand-apes' colour to the rough brown uniform of the British Army, thus soldiers are known as Pongos. |
|
Thus, the similarity of the mimic O. israelitica to the model was higher with regard to the display size than those of O. boryi and O. caspia. |
|
Even though there is a basic similarity with a flight feather, the peacock tail feather has an unusual barbule structure. |
|
Although biocidal compounds derive from a variety of chemical classes, the final resulting damage may show considerable similarity. |
|
Anyone who hunts with bird dogs would remark the similarity between his approach and a hunting dog's point. |
|
She discovered her similarity to Nadine when she was shown on television auditioning for the show. |
|
They also have a similarity to the small blood vessels damaged in long-standing diabetes. |
|
Not only do viewers overlook this one similarity between the species, they do not care. |
|
Except for a vague similarity in the themes, there is nothing in common to them. |
|
This reference probably comes from the similarity of the word llama to the word lamer. |
|
Edwin Mills noted the remarkable similarity of metropolitan and non-metropolitan employment shares. |
|
But the similarity of the name to the Incan word makes the actual derivation ambiguous. |
|
The one area where there is some similarity between the two wars is the domain of public opinion. |
|
A comparison of nuptiality patterns for Hindus and Muslims shows great similarity. |
|
Moreover, the animals and the plants inhabiting oceanic islands bear the greatest similarity to species found on the nearest mainland. |
|
Lewy demonstrated the similarity in breeding strategies between ammonoids and extant octopods. |
|
I was struck by the similarity of displays on many of their office pinboards. |
|
He says their offstage relationship bears an uncanny similarity to their roles in the play. |
|
Scots have a reputation for being hard-headed, realistic folk, bearing perhaps some similarity to the people of Yorkshire. |
|
|
Ever noticed the remarkable similarity between these fairs and traveling roadside carnivals. |
|
The dinners were a cut above average at the U.S. chow halls, but that's where the similarity with hearth and home begins and ends. |
|
Its transformation seems more catachresis than irony, more a twisted similarity than an inversion or negation. |
|
There's not much similarity in the systems required to run say an executive pension plan and a retail with-profits bond. |
|
The similarity of this vision with the events of the Paris Commune is clear. |
|
Another similarity the researchers found was that both groups had decreases in activity in the right caudate. |
|
The only disquiet in the camp emerges from the striking similarity of each tune. |
|
He claimed that the former inhabitants of Britain were Celts or Gauls on the basis of similarity in ancient place-names in Gaul and Britain. |
|
But there was such an overall similarity to his home town that the man felt he must have suffered some sort of breakdown. |
|
Whales are in fact more closely related to hippos than to mesonychids, and the similarity in teeth is a convergently evolved feature. |
|
So I was doing some sudoku the other day when I noticed the similarity to John Dee's Enochian tables, and magic squares in general. |
|
Any similarity to real persons or institutions is unintentional, say the credits at the end. |
|
Animal and human studies have shown that individuals choose mates partly on the basis of similarity, a tendency referred to as homogamy. |
|
Although both terrorism and communism are radical in nature, the similarity stops there. |
|
In a free market, in similarity to other goods, the price of money is determined by supply and demand. |
|
The product of the reaction was 2-chlorobutadiene, called chloroprene because of its similarity to isoprene. |
|
The court should consider the similarity of the names, the intention of the defendant, the type of trade and all the surrounding circumstances. |
|
Also, a focus on differences between the genders often implies similarity within each gender. |
|
Interpreting the extreme similarity in anteaters and pangolins remains problematic due to lingering disagreement among phylogenetic hypotheses. |
|
Given the similarity of the attacks, police suspected that a single individual was responsible. |
|
|
They average five to ten pounds, and have been developed from the American Hubbard squashes, resulting in a similarity to the Golden Hubbards. |
|
In fact, the similarity is so compelling that D'Arcy has no business attempting a denial. |
|
Market similarity, ease of entry and exit has made the British market a familiar hunting ground for Irish investors over the past ten years. |
|
The memory of the Huss movement had not completely died out in Poland, and the similarity of Luther's teachings with Hussitism made them popular. |
|
Most of my friends were Liberal Arts Majors, but there the similarity ended. |
|
The distinctive pentameral symmetry of this specimen has no close similarity to figured articular facets of fossil and recent hyocrinids. |
|
But to determine the center of a spiral similarity one only needs one segment and its image. |
|
Tonight's thought is on the nature of politics and its similarity to another line of work. |
|
Corn snakes are named because of the similarity between their markings and the patterns of Indian corn. |
|
The similarity exists but is not likely to be an indication of common ancestry. |
|
The facts of that case bore a striking similarity to those of the present one. |
|
Another striking similarity between Gullah and the languages of West Africa is the use of proverbs to teach and advise. |
|
I think there is a similarity to the attitude of many abused children who blame themselves for the abusive actions of their parents. |
|
However, to formalize this we require quantitative measures of the similarity of trees. |
|
Any similarity to a real person with the initials M and M is entirely intentional. |
|
The essential similarity is that both men are lawyers more than they are liars. |
|
The similarity is higher between the dipteran species than between the dipteran species and the lepidopteran B. mori. |
|
The brain is subdivided into areas of similarity to form a cytoarchitectonic map. |
|
The only similarity to the deadly Australian spider is that both use a comparable type of web for capturing prey. |
|
Three of the blighters appeared in the past week, and the similarity of the respective plots was striking. |
|
|
The East Slavonic and Adygei populations revealed a high similarity with European Caucasoids. |
|
The similarity between the aforementioned lot is that we were all born on the same day! |
|
The similarity of the attacks has stunned the family who had believed the person responsible for the murder had been detained. |
|
But viewing his similarity to the other singer's voice as a disqualification is pathetic. |
|
In fact theirs is very much a superficial similarity, based on prodigious talent and youth more than anything else. |
|
Several methods are used here to help understand the similarity of trees from different data sets. |
|
In fact, it is said that the only similarity he has with Anwar is that both come from Penang State in the north. |
|
The similarity in the cleaning work performed before and after the transfer is reflected in the offer to re-engage the employee in question. |
|
Looking back now, it was a strange choice, as the only similarity between the two animals was that they were dogs. |
|
And what would be the main points of similarity between these two great cities? |
|
As we have often pointed out, similarity does not mean proof of common ancestry or evolutionary relatedness. |
|
There's also a strong similarity to Stay Black and Die, a Fringe show in '98 that was remounted at Centaur that fall. |
|
Comparisons of rotifer SL RNA sequences with those of nonnematode species, e.g., cestode or larvacean, showed no similarity. |
|
The plot in Fig.2 has a striking qualitative similarity to the observed NMR quadrupole splittings. |
|
Two different measures of similarity between permutations were used to evaluate the probe orderings generated from simulated data. |
|
This approach draws parallels between similarity judgments and analogic comparisons. |
|
With the second and third steps, one can see a similarity to Plato's idea of dialectic understood as collection and division. |
|
Coast Guard maritime security cutters will not be frigates, but these categories of warship do bear more than a casual similarity. |
|
Despite this similarity, there are still elemental differences between being alive and deceased, and between the animate and inanimate. |
|
Species that require restudy, based upon their apparent similarity to Cliopagurus spp., include D. hungaricus and D. arrosor. |
|
|
In an attempt to avoid the confusions that resulted from the similarity between their names, Dear changed his surname to Dearden. |
|
Notwithstanding their general similarity, the archegonia of mosses differ externally from antheridia in having a longer neck and longer stalk. |
|
Not that there is much visual similarity, but there is a common unashamedness of the work. |
|
One of the big discoveries of early classical physics was the similarity between the forces of gravity and electrostatics. |
|
The antinomian Blake does, however, have at least one similarity with the oppositional Austen. |
|
Based on sequence similarity to known wax biosynthetic genes, mutants with potentially altered cuticle properties can be selected from this collection. |
|
The late Ordovician brachiopods have been monographed by Villas, who detected a genetic, but not very close, similarity with Armorican and Perunican faunas. |
|
Phonemes connected by a morphophonemic rule commonly show a good bit of phonetic similarity, possible because of the several dimensions of contrast in the system. |
|
The similarity of the shape of the columns to those of quartz crystals was once used to support the theory that volcanic rocks precipitated from water. |
|
The similarity between the two smoky-voiced piano songstresses is uncanny. |
|
He has the pale, pasty set of the sedentary, a fleshy padding of indulgence and a deep, broad accent with an odd similarity to that of Charles Kennedy. |
|
The current international scene is so dominated by conglomerate thinking and similarity between brand profiles that it is hard to find an original point of view. |
|
Their spikey, peroxide blonde locks mean they do have quite a similarity. |
|
The director of today's Jubilee Singers, Kwami, a native of Ghana, says there is a definite similarity between the African American spirituals and the songs of his country. |
|
This bone structure similarity shows that dinosaurs were endothermic. |
|
Indeed, if structuralism has taught us anything, it is that humans impose their sense of opposition on a world of continuous shades of difference and similarity. |
|
It is our intent here to illustrate this mechanistic similarity by reviewing the mechanism of the most widely utilized organic osmolyte, the sulfonyl amino acid, taurine. |
|
However, the similarity lies in that they both describe mysterious and supernatural events as they occur, both of which remain resolved at the story's end. |
|
The similarity to the sweat lodge at the nearby and slightly older Vaughn Branch site reflects continuity in social behaviors as well as in structural technology. |
|
From this partial derivative we can get another picture of similarity in culture and workplace conditions between different regions of the world and the U.S. market. |
|
|
Nevertheless, it's pleasing to note the passing similarity of the resulting image with the angular Vorticist art that I was looking at only thirty minutes later. |
|
In addition, it shares an overall similarity of proportions and physiognomic features with the unfortunately weathered statue of the seated god El, also from Ugarit. |
|
Hitchcock was fascinated when I pointed out the similarity, and considered it at some length. |
|
Fundamental psychophysical results indicate that discrimination and perceived similarity are usually associated, which is consistent with the PERSIM hypothesis. |
|
The apparent similarity to the position the United States finds itself in today in Afghanistan and Iraq warrants giving some attention to Soviet lessons learned. |
|
Initial sequence annotation has revealed an unusually high number of genes with no obvious similarity to previously described genes from eubacteria and archaea. |
|
The similarity between a night-heron and a raven is purely vocal. |
|
Because of the similarity of American and Canadian accents, English Canadians travelling abroad are virtually resigned to being taken for Americans. |
|
The similarity lies in what is reported, and in the fixed data across columns, and there is much programming effort in extracting it from the database. |
|
For example, a two-page spread puts side-by-side a frontal view and a large feathered serpent head in such a way that underscores a formal similarity. |
|
In some areas, the stromal cells appeared to reside within lacunae embedded in a hyalinized matrix, focally producing a remarkable similarity to chondroblastoma. |
|
The authors concluded that topical anesthetics in spray formulations are preferred for endoscopy due to safety, ease of application, and similarity of products. |
|
This, it should be said, bears an eerie similarity to the targeted, predatory lending of the last decade. |
|
When Wotton in 1552 gave to anthozoan corals and gorgonians, and hydrozoans the name Zoophyte, it was because of their morphological similarity to higher plants. |
|
These links of similarity or contrast create lexical cohesion in a text. |
|
He highlighted the potentially deadly similarity between 5ml plastic ampoules of the clear liquids water, saline and lignocaine, a local anaesthetic. |
|
Apart from the apparent likeness to Harrison, who lost his battle with cancer in 2001, Nick feels his voice also bears a striking similarity to the late musician. |
|
While I know plagiarism, appropriation, copying, etc exist, I also know that every instance of similarity does not equal an instance of compromised professional ethics. |
|
The role of ceramics in building chronologies and as signifiers of cultural similarity single this artifact category out as a prime focus for archaeometric research. |
|
For the purpose of calculating community similarity, species that are part of possible phyletic sequences were synonymized to correct for pseudoextinction. |
|
|
This controls for functional equivalence but not for sequence similarity. |
|
I was definitely naive, I think the main similarity between me and Hal is that we were naive. |
|
The easiest way to satisfy the similarity requirement would be to purchase one or more other sports franchises. |
|
Paprika has a huge cult following and Nolan has quietly admitted a similarity. |
|
Also called numerical taxonomy, Phenetics is a school of taxonomy that classifies organisms on the basis of overall morphological or genetic similarity. |
|
Barkcloth and paper look and feel similar, and writers from the earliest European explorers to present-day anthropologists have commented on that similarity. |
|
Due to the proposed similarity in function among thorns, spines, and prickles, we will hereafter generically refer to all plants bearing them as armed. |
|
False gromwell is the common name usually applied to plants in this genus because of a perceived similarity in appearance to some of the gromwells. |
|
Strip away the money and the middle-aged hang-ups, and the dynamics of rock-and-roll bands bear a striking similarity to those of a dysfunctional adolescent gang. |
|
According to models of episodic memory, contextual similarity is a driving force in influencing the probability of the retrieval of an episodic trace. |
|
In a further similarity to an ad break, my short bursts of sleep were filled with countless little dreams and nightmares, most of which I remember. |
|
These dunes most often form as a continuous 'train' of dunes, showing remarkable similarity in wavelength and height. |
|
While these vary considerably in details, there are certain points of similarity. |
|
The similarity between the Irish and Gaulish way to establish noble rank has already been remarked upon above. |
|
In other words, the similarity of the names is strictly coincidental and does not reflect any ethnic unity beyond Germanic. |
|
One cannot obtain all similarity mappings from products of homotheties alone, but they are necessary and basic to similarities. |
|
All of these traits were highlighted perhaps because of their similarity to idealized Roman virtues. |
|
DeBin et al. purified a 4.1 kDa basic peptide from scorpion venom with sequence similarity to small insectotoxins. |
|
The same procedure was used to calculate the intermonth diet similarity described below. |
|
A contemporary illustration of the 1523 State Opening shows a remarkable visual similarity between State Openings of the 16th and 21st centuries. |
|
|
The similarity of the latter design with Hooker's of 1894 may have contributed to a common mistake of giving priority to Atkinson. |
|
Vertical sequence within each group does not imply a measure of greater or lesser similarity. |
|
Ethnologue gives estimates of the lexical similarity between related languages in terms of precise percentages. |
|
Urdu and Turkish borrowed from Arabic and Persian, hence the similarity in pronunciation of many Urdu and Turkish words. |
|
Such coppers or boilers appear to have been called miliaria, from their similarity of shape to a milestone. |
|
She sent them to Tolkien, who was struck by the similarity they bore in style to his own drawings. |
|
Time commented with approval on his singing ability and visual similarity to Mercury. |
|
Many of his sets, especially in street scenes, bear a strong similarity to Kennington, where he grew up. |
|
A stylistic similarity has been remarked between these double monasteries and those of the Copts of Egypt. |
|
Genetic research shows a strong similarity between the Y chromosome haplotypes of males from Basque country and Irish men with Gaelic surnames. |
|
The research takes into consideration factors like the similarity of the language, the cultural background and education experience. |
|
The Jam were influenced by the Who, and critics noticed a similarity between Townshend and the group's leader, Paul Weller. |
|
They argue that distinct selves can have perceptions that stand in relations of similarity and causality with one another. |
|
The clustering and structural similarity of DUF 1794 and DUF 3598 with the nitrophorins shows that the DUFs have possible similar binding sites. |
|
In multilingual individuals, there is a great deal of similarity in the brain areas used for each of their languages. |
|
The English Gaul is from French Gaule and is unrelated to Latin Gallia, despite superficial similarity. |
|
In Aristotle's time, the 4th century BCE, porpoises were regarded as fish due to their superficial similarity. |
|
The number of species has varied, depending on how they are classified, due to similarity between species and hybridization. |
|
Other ways of defining species include similarity of DNA, morphology or ecological niche. |
|
Except for the radioactivity of radium, the chemical similarity of radium to barium made these two elements difficult to distinguish. |
|
|
In Aristotle's time, the 4th century BCE, whales were regarded as fish due to their superficial similarity. |
|
Another similarity involved the cities' strategic locations along trade routes. |
|
It is unique in northern Europe, bearing similarity to Neolithic or Bronze Age tombs around the Mediterranean. |
|
This similarity was used to support a theory that a Welsh party colonized the New World in the 12th century. |
|
This separation is based on morphological characteristics and mitochondrial DNA sequence similarity. |
|
In other areas, such as the Mediterranean, some individuals have adverse reactions to apples because of their similarity to peaches. |
|
The similarity in appearance to testes naturally accounts for salep being considered an aphrodisiac. |
|
This process might bear similarity to CO2 fixation via visible light, but instead uses ionizing radiation as a source of energy. |
|
Semantically composite idioms have a syntactic similarity between their surface and semantic forms. |
|
There is a unique similarity between petroglyph marks and prehistoric potteries as if all these works are done by a sole artist. |
|
Its similarity to a bow may not be immediately obvious, but in fact both serve to accumulate energy by elasticity in a fundamentally similar way. |
|
Because of the similarity of the names, the Cimbri have been at times associated with Cymry, the Welsh name for themselves. |
|
The similarity of their ethnonyms is one of the most important links between the two peoples. |
|
Another similarity shared with the pagan perspective was the view of the relationship between disease and the individual. |
|
Although early writers compared llamas to sheep, their similarity to the camel was soon recognized. |
|
A strong similarity exists between the linguistic tree and the genetic tree. |
|
It shares most similarity with other Southern Hemisphere accents, in particular New Zealand English. |
|
This similarity is another source of confusion, since it obscures the difference between prepositional and particle phrasal verbs. |
|
Due to the high frequency of their use, their inflection retains a considerable degree of similarity in some cases. |
|
The similarity is so strong that the few variations may confuse a native English reader. |
|
|
While a hand and a foot have many dissimilarities, the analogy focuses on their similarity in having an inner surface. |
|
It answers SAT questions by selecting the choice with the highest relational similarity. |
|
Some studies extended the approach to specific subjects, such as metaphor and similarity. |
|
The two are often confused for each other due to the similarity of their names. |
|
Its name is derived from its similarity to Portland stone, a type of building stone quarried on the Isle of Portland in Dorset, England. |
|
Aspdin named it due to its similarity to Portland stone which was quarried on the Isle of Portland in Dorset, England. |
|
A frequent source of confusion regarding lime mortar stems from the similarity of the terms hydraulic and hydrated. |
|
Because of the striking similarity that each floor shared, the dense smoke caused the firefighters to become disoriented. |
|
While monopoly and perfect competition mark the extremes of market structures there is some similarity. |
|
His translator James Legge finds a close similarity between Mencius's views on human nature and those in Bishop Butler's Sermons on Human Nature. |
|
Even the style bears similarity, and, as Shin explains, both appealed to the 'same bloodedness' of the Korean people. |
|
For example, the SAPOL Police Security Services Division mentions, in its Strategic Plan 1998-2003, its similarity with SAPOL as an advantage. |
|
You could see a similarity to the style of Rick Owens in the oversize sweaters and to the skimmy dresses of John Galliano. |
|
We measure the similarity between entire subreddits both in terms of user similarity and topical similarity. |
|
I never miss a chance to make an allusion to their similarity. |
|
The observed strong phenotypic similarity was preserved under speciation through complete allopatry. |
|
She has chosen to take issue with me for criticizing the use of heroin and cocaine, and for pointing out the similarity with using Zoloft. |
|
She made a light aside about this tennis player and his similarity to the golliwog on the jampot when she was growing up. |
|
But any similarity starts to fade with sweet styling details such as a rear indicator cluster like Flash Gordon's ray gun. |
|
Given the similarity in the reducibility of iron and tin oxides, tin smelters would have faced a trade-off. |
|
|
With regard to relevance, referents are often chosen based on their similarity to the individual. |
|
The similarity is discussed in terras of oceanographic condition and the associated laminarian species as main foods. |
|
Similarity ratings and confusability of lipread consonants compared with similarity ratings of auditory and orthographic stimuli. |
|
Due to its similarity to LH, urine-derived hCG has been used to trigger ovulation and luteinization and to support the corpus luteum. |
|
When self-similarity tables are used, partial similarity equals the similarity between the classes as set in self-similarity tables. |
|
I am pretty happy-go-lucky in general, so that is also a similarity. |
|
We sailed through the South Shetland Islands, named in 1819 for their similarity in latitude to the Scottish islands. |
|
Tree shrews have been classified as prosimian or insectivorous on the basis of their similarity or dissimilarity to primates. |
|
Such outcomes relate to the symmetry of the sphere rather than either congruency or similarity. |
|
There is a lot of similarity and cross-fertilisation between racing stable and studs. |
|
The canine, kindly loaned for the photograph by a local Dawsonite, bore marked similarity to the original dog. |
|
Findings were recorded in the form of dendrograms exhibiting the degree of similarity between isolates expressed in percentages. |
|
Four dendrograms were subsequently generated from each similarity matrix by implementing four different joining algorithms viz. |
|
Many horse owners have become desensitized to advertisements because of the sheer volume and similarity. |
|
This similarity presumably relates more to size reduction in the two genera rather than phyletic relationship. |
|
In the case of Dryandra, DNA sequencing has revealed such similarity with Banksia that Dryandra are now being reclassified into this genus. |
|
Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City are in the same country, but that's where the similarity ends. |
|
This similarity indicates a closer-than-expected relationship between green algae and hornworts, Niklas says. |
|
From a methodological point of view, it will be interesting to test the effect of first-name similarity in a computer-mediated context. |
|
This similarity has caused confusion to INTR shareholders whom have purchased AuctionAnything. |
|
|
The flight deck features new technologies while retaining significant operational similarity with the popular Boeing 777 and other Boeing jets. |
|
Fields were selected based on similarity of dominant vegetation species that included common ragweed, Canada thistle, goldenrod spp. |
|
The pathogenesis of viral hemorrhagic fevers shows similarity. |
|
The strength of the relevance of an authority is determined be evaluating the similarity or distinguishableness of the authority on the pertinent facts and circumstances. |
|
And, funnily enough, the titles for whom the guilty men worked bear a striking similarity to the mis and disinformers of today, even if under new ownership. |
|
Waking epochs were characterized by desynchronized ECoG, absence of similarity between waveforms from both hemispheres, and increased muscular tonus. |
|
The differentiation of the taxonomic composition in periphytic algae community in the zones of reservoir and different seasons is observed in the similarity dendrogram. |
|
The similarity is checked based on a graphical representation, correlation coefficient, Gibbs free energy, and the count of individual nucleotides in each sequence. |
|
Despite this similarity, ornithischians are not related to birds. |
|
The name 'synovial sarcoma' was coined because of the microscopic similarity of some tumors to synovium and their propensity to arise near joints. |
|
Essential to the developer's vision of producing a traditional urban neighborhood was avoiding a cookie-cutter similarity among so many residences. |
|
Because of their great similarity to ants, and because the spiders are found in leaf litter of chilcal, they may be generalized mimics of any myrmicine ant species. |
|
Proof of the similarity of the skills is that within two sessions, he is not only cartwheeling, but doing backward flips off the beatboard and then off the mat. |
|
It proved that we had certain things in common, a thread of similarity that can't be faked or feigned, especially when it comes to covering up my cack-handedness. |
|
The invention includes a cDNA that encodes a predicted protein of 191 amino acid residues having similarity to the carbohydrate recognition domain of C-type lectins. |
|
Posts about the Do It Like A Dude singer's quiff and its similarity to that of her The Voice pal Danny O'Donoghue went online after her X Factor appearance on Sunday. |
|
They demonstrate that spouses are more similar to each other attitudinally than they are physically, suggesting that attitudinal similarity strongly influences mate selection. |
|
There is a similarity between many of the plates used in the two works. |
|
It was named because of the similarity of its color to Portland limestone, quarried from the English Isle of Portland and used extensively in London architecture. |
|
Columns indicate similarity, and are grouped by combinations of premises. |
|
|
A problem for the multiconstraint theory arises from its concept of similarity, which, in this respect, is not obviously different from analogy itself. |
|
In some languages, for example English, there is often a similarity between clauses expressing an action or event in the passive voice and clauses expressing a state. |
|
In a more general sense, kinship may refer to a similarity or affinity between entities on the basis of some or all of their characteristics that are under focus. |
|
Although the city is situated opposite the mouth of the Main, the name of Mainz is not from Main, the similarity being perhaps due to diachronic analogy. |
|
Hawks has argued that the genetic similarity to Neanderthals may indeed be the result of both structure and interbreeding, as opposed to just one or the other. |
|
Although most Mode 2 tools are easily distinguished from Mode 1, there is a close similarity of some Oldowan and some Acheulean, which can lead to confusion. |
|
The distribution of plants in the genera Erythranthe and Pinus are good examples of this as genera members are found in Asia and the Americas with a high degree of similarity. |
|
West argues that the similarity of Odysseus' and Gilgamesh's journeys to the edges of the earth are the result of the influence of the Gilgamesh epic upon the Odyssey. |
|
This similarity was reinforced in the late Middle Ages by the Ingvaeonic sound shift, which affected Frisian and English, but the other West Germanic varieties hardly at all. |
|
The similarity is so strong that even the most modern cladistic analyses of general anatomical features are easily misled into grouping loons and grebes. |
|
Because of its similarity to the Canadian Shield and cratons of southern Africa and Western Australia, the Baltic Shield had long been a suspected source of diamonds and gold. |
|
Persistent suggestions that Harry's father is not Charles but James Hewitt, with whom Diana had an affair, have been based on a physical similarity between Hewitt and Harry. |
|
The similarity in architectural details may, therefore, be the result of the wider role played by Savoy craftsmen and engineers on the Conwy project. |
|
Also unrelated in spite of superficial similarity is the name Gael. |
|
The site's ware is characterized by punctate and incision geometric designs, which bear a similarity to the Sabir culture phase 1 ceramics from Ma'layba in Southern Arabia. |
|
A similarity that runs deeper than the differences in these two unrelated incidents, these separate times that we have allocated to monsterising and mortifying our teenagers. |
|
In addition, our tool determines the charge state of a peak by calculating the similarity between the peak shape of monoisotope and the peak shape of the second isotope peak. |
|
This was in fact true of the historical outlaw of Sherwood Forest Roger Godberd, whose points of similarity to the Robin Hood of the ballads have often been noted. |
|
Because of Urdu's similarity to Hindi, speakers of the two languages can easily understand one another if both sides refrain from using specialized vocabulary. |
|
Economically, the East Midlands bears similarity to South West England. |
|