Polysaccharides help form humus, which enables small clay or silt particles to stick together to form larger aggregates. |
|
Certain genes, called vps genes, enable V. cholerae to stick together in bacterial communities, or biofilms, in both fresh and salt water. |
|
White glue and tape are adhesives that companies make for people to get things to stick together. |
|
Without it, the insides of the lungs tend to stick together, making it harder to take in oxygen. |
|
The infected cells stick together, forming clots in the fine blood vessels of the brain. |
|
At this moment in time we're not playing well, but we just have to stick together and come through this bad patch. |
|
While the industry insists it must stick together and speak with one voice, there have been individual voices of disapproval. |
|
For example, feverfew, ginkgo, and ginger may interfere with the ability of blood-clotting cells to stick together. |
|
Make sure that you add just enough gram flour so that the vegetables stick together. |
|
A rain on freshly cultivated soil will make it stick together and become tight. |
|
They are a solid group of people and they will stick together after what was a bitterly disappointing defeat. |
|
Women generally tend to form a group and try to stick together during the travel. |
|
While it is true that professionals stick together clannishly, the US system is superior on paper if not on the ground. |
|
Mixed with poor coal are certain unburnable materials that melt and stick together as it burns and form what are known as clinkers. |
|
Do not dredge the pasta in flour to prevent sticking, as the flour turns to glue when cooked and, ironically, causes the pasta to stick together. |
|
Don't keep your USB stick together with your other secret elements in the same place. |
|
The discharge is more thick in bacterial conjunctivitis causing the eyelids to stick together in the morning. |
|
Hirudin also limits the ability of platelets to stick together and initiate clots. |
|
In addition to this Wagner has discovered that, despite the law on equality, the different groups still tend to stick together. |
|
Chop the mint and add it to the honey, lemon juice and cinnamon stick together with the white wine. |
|
|
The pus tends to clump together on the lashes, making them stick together. |
|
Perhaps that's because while sudden wealth can stratify, the Dowdens would rather stick together. |
|
I offered to help with the retrieval, guiltily remembering the days I used to borrow combs, hair curlers, and all the brushes I could stick together with which to build. |
|
But Thais were accustomed to rices that, like Thai people, stick together. |
|
So, instead of quarrelling, let us stick together and find decent solutions for the common agricultural policy within the European Union. |
|
It improves the flowability of flavourings in the powder form by separating particles that might otherwise stick together. |
|
One of the problems that the bacteria had at the time was a tendency to stick together like a lump. |
|
Photographic emulsions can absorb humidity in excess and stick together or stick to other materials in contact with them. |
|
This makes the rice assimilate some water and later doesn't stick together any more. |
|
Substances which have a tendency to stick together or set must not be applied. |
|
If the bacteria stick together like that then it's impossible for us in the lab to do any work on them because they're just a mass. |
|
In the final stages, the stye will burst and discharge pus, causing the eyelid to stick together during the night in severe cases. |
|
I want to encourage the three opposition parties to stick together on this bill and get the government on side as well. |
|
They taught me good things: how to show respect, stick together, help each other out. |
|
They stick together in order to preserve their powers and privileges, and maintain the status quo. |
|
In a healthy person, the body is able to protect itself from excessive bleeding, by allowing a part of the blood called plasma to stick together and form clots. |
|
When I wrote something, all the pages would stick together, and could not be pried apart without shredded them, and the words bled into a muddy mess of ink. |
|
I sometimes make what I call wallpaper potatoes, because the overlapping paper-thin slices of potato stick together into a golden dappled sheet when roasted on a baking tray. |
|
I guess those who make their living with incendiary language tend to stick together. |
|
When their cousin is battered to death and left on the moors for the crows, they stick together and refuse to co-operate with policeman Ben Cooper. |
|
|
So football imitates life and the healthiest managerial marriages are those that stick together in sickness and in health, for richer, for poorer. |
|
Platelets are the part of blood that stick together to form a blood clot. |
|
Petrushevskaya is best at the pas de deux, where women and men stick together and peel apart due to some mysterious force. |
|
Sean and Richard had sat one night, reminiscing about the days of Shakespeare, when actors would form a stock company and stick together through thick or thin. |
|
I don't know how you want to count that, but it just doesn't stick together. |
|
He builds robots out of DNA by programming strands of it to stick together into complicated shapes, including cubes, a truncated octahedron and a walking DNA biped for use as nanorobots or in a DNA computer. |
|
The loose flakes begin to stick together to a firm cheese. |
|
But we decided as a team to stick together, and stand united. |
|
And Iraqi moderates have to be encouraged to stick together. |
|
To make concrete, cement is needed as it plays the role of 'glue' to stick together the different components involved i.e. aggregates, sand and water. |
|
Great couples always stick together and this Giant Gummy Bear pair is no exception. |
|
In very small objects, this force can cause moving parts to stick together, an effect known as stiction. |
|
Strong nuclear force is the degree to which protons and neutrons stick together. |
|
Likewise, Sephardim referred to Ashkenazim as paisanos, encouraging their young to stick together. |
|
London forces are one of several types of intermolecular forces that cause molecules to stick together and form solids. |
|
Canada is a young country whose domestic magazine press provides a strong nationalizing influence, the mucilage to help our ten provinces to stick together, but we have been deluged with United States periodicals. |
|
Everybody who has exchanged a cheap air filter will be familiar with this phenomenon: the individual pleats of the filter stick together to form blocks, so that the airflow through these areas of the paper is restricted. |
|
Consequently, I was quite amazed to hear that the groups are no longer allowed to sweep certain abuses under the carpet, for fear of being seen as birds of a feather that stick together. |
|
Pages swell up, discolour and stick together, and covers distort. |
|
This declaration underlines that the Community will be full Party to the agreement, but will systematically stick together with its Member States. |
|
|
And because there are so few of us, we must also stick together here. |
|
The seven northern provinces, controlled by Calvinists, responded with the Union of Utrecht, where they resolved to stick together to fight Spain. |
|