These results are consistent with a loss of one functional copy of the ear gene in the mutant strains. |
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Leigh Brown says that the inappropriate use of drugs is contributing to the emergence of resistant strains. |
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In the Kiev Sports Palace gymnasium I watched Larissa go through her paces to the strains of music by Tchaikovsky. |
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The contributors identify the strains and costs associated with maintaining this system. |
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You see a lot more strains and pulled muscles that can end up hampering the player all year long. |
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This afternoon, with almost half his squad involved in matches, he will face a tense wait for news of groin strains and hamstring pulls. |
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A proper warm-up literally warms and lubricates the muscles, thereby greatly reducing the risk of pulls and strains. |
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He got more bruises and cuts, muscle pulls and strains than he could remember. |
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All the 300 strains were resistant to oxacillin and penicillin and susceptible to rifampicin and vancomycin. |
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He has worked diligently on his conditioning, hoping to prevent muscle pulls and strains, which have hampered him during the season. |
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The result has been few problems with hamstring pulls, rib-cage injuries and shoulder strains. |
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Avoid jerking or bouncing as it can lead to strains, pulls and other kinds of injuries. |
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I had hopes that she would develop her twin strains of doughtiness and dottiness and become a thorn in the flesh. |
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This was a mongrel breed incorporating strains of Labrador, Greyhound, anything that could advance the genes of endurance and pulling power. |
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In both strains, haploid phenotypes from tetrads yielding four viable spores may be used to measure the strength of crossover interference. |
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The strains were serotyped using polyvalent O1 and monospecific Inaba and Ogawa antisera. |
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In modern brewing many of the original top fermentation strains have been modified to be bottom fermenters. |
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Specialist growers have experimented with garlic from all over Europe and breed the best strains suited to our climate. |
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There were still, however, strains that appeared to be pure types, from the diagnostic bands on the autoradiogram. |
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The polarisation of politics creates strains between the social democratic leaders and their mass base through sudden political eruptions. |
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Our results further show that the extent of hybrid male fertility varies somewhat with the particular parental strains used. |
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These are two warring but important strains to the national character, at tension with each other. |
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Relations were severed over the ideological differences between different strains of Baathism practiced in the two countries. |
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This put intolerable strains on the casework, the string tension trying to pull the wrest plank closer to the soundboard. |
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And those closing strains die away, and the finale begins, a faint chorus of distant voices singing in unison, the orchestra silent. |
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He strains to hear something recognizable, but the fog and the sea muffle everything. |
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What is the impact of stresses and strains from external forces on our practice field? |
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The structure of the ligamenta flava enables them to be stretched to high strains without damage. |
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In the sensors, small acoustic vibrations or environmental strains induce frequency and intensity modulations. |
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This structure enables the high extensibility of elastic fibers to be exploited but protects them from damage at high strains. |
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Many candidates reacted to the strains of zero gravity by looping the loop compulsively. |
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These populations offer a unique opportunity to monitor evolutionary dynamics in ancestral populations that harbor multiple strains of Wolbachia. |
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Last year he struggled with groin strains for most of the year and was never operating at full fitness. |
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Divorce often strains and sometimes even completely severs the child's relationship with at least one parent, often the father. |
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A recent study concluded that maintaining constant glycine levels might prevent sports injuries such as muscle strains and sprains. |
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Yoga students who push themselves too far without proper supervision risk suffering painful injuries and strains. |
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But it also restores the mental equilibrium we need to recover after the stresses and strains imposed by daily life. |
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In our experiments, we used three strains carrying chromosomal duplications with known endpoints. |
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Moreover, in flocculent strains such as 1278b it is difficult to distinguish between two adherent cells and a cell with a large bud. |
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One by one, they staggered to the podium, like footballers with groin strains. |
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Two possible causes have been argued to explain this feature for limestone deformed to high shear strains. |
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The c-maximum fabric normal to foliation is typical of calcite rocks deformed experimentally to high strains in simple shear. |
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Experts have warned that injudicious use of the drugs could be seeds of a disaster, possibly in spreading drug-resistant strains of the virus. |
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The resultant dengue outbreaks place severe strains on public hospitals, with wards filled to overflowing with patients. |
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Just a few yards away from the mahal, the strains of Carnatic music emanate from a small shrine. |
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Once the first strains of piped music had swept over me, it was as if we had never been away. |
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Even within this strain, variations are seen, and slightly different strains are being seen in the countries affected in this outbreak. |
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This last sequence was accompanied by the heartrending strains of Pablo Casals playing a Spanish folk song on the cello. |
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Inside, we're surrounded by leather and walnut and soft strains of classical music. |
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Already now in Australia we're isolating strains which have low level resistance to vancomycin. |
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Baraka here is particularly interested in the differing timbres or tones that the two strains of music produced. |
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In the background, strains of Latin music blend with sounds of sizzling from the kitchen to create an uplifting, cheerful atmosphere. |
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Take to the countryside to enjoy the soothing strains of classical music at this highbrow summer fest. |
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Their sound has expanded from the punk-rock base to include Celtic and country-and-western strains and contemporary dance music. |
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Somewhere musicians were still rehearsing for later, and the vague strains of music allowed him to make such a move without any culpability. |
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By then, they had already reached the auditorium, and strains of beautiful piano music wafted to their ears. |
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She stopped complaining when she heard the first strains of classical music. |
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We found that the rate of chromosome I disomy among vik1 spores was indistinguishable from that observed in wild-type strains. |
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Thus, we can identify strains of our current discourse in debates held nearly 40 years ago. |
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It opted for quick-cooking, high-yielding grains, while the East bred its strains for taste and texture. |
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It remains a major agricultural problem, especially for potato farmers who have been breeding resistant strains. |
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Australia has been trying to breed better strains of plants and animals for ever. |
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Individual species are also becoming standardized, experts say, with cultivated strains of animals and plants ousting local varieties. |
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Prevnar protects against seven strains of Streptococcus pneumonia bacteria. |
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Modified Herpes virus strains have already been used to treat brain tumours successfully in mice. |
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How, for instance, could we train scientists to fight the virulent new strains of bacteria that have evolved resistance to potent antibiotics? |
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To finish the project in time the pace of work intensified, and more and more virus strains were cultured. |
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Rad6 is important for DNA damage responses and strains with rad6 mutations are sensitive to UV irradiation. |
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To examine germination in various mutant strains, conidial swelling and germ tube emergence were observed under the microscope. |
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A fine dimple network was observed in the fracture surfaces of composites with higher strains. |
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Similarly, the muttonheads who specialise in breeding particularly vicious strains, such as pit bulls, deserve lobotomies. |
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We show here that these strains can be used to determine very easily the mutagenic specificity of various mutagens. |
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The challenge lies in being able to distinguish different serotypes, or strains, of the virus. |
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Raccoons and striped skunks tell the story of scientists using DNA to track down distinct strains of the rabies virus. |
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Some, like the influenza virus, are occasionally transmitted to people via contact with birds or other animals harboring new strains. |
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In a new study, researchers show that special viruses are the culprits behind the emergence of virulent select new bacterial strains. |
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During the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, the advent of the machine age helped create powerful new strains of utopian art. |
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Haunting strains of ethereal music introduced stunningly bright, clear, and artistic opening credits. |
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The Ukrainian state and most strains of Ukrainian nationalism are a product of the last 100 years. |
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The synthetic pulling together of disparate strains of thought that characterizes American Studies has also proved invaluable. |
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The eight strains that showed aggregative adherence pattern in HeLa cells also showed clump formation in liquid cultures. |
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We wondered whether fimbriated strains have a different adherence from related nonfimbriated strains. |
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I wonder whether trying to get his body into that fantastic build has affected him with strains and pulls. |
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The hum of chattering voices floated through the still air, accompanied by the faint strains of music. |
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Bacterial clump formation on the surface of the medium was observed with all the strains. |
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I want other parents to be able to enjoy the last few weeks with their child, without having any of the stresses and strains Richard and I had. |
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Most of their plants have been grown from seed strains carefully bred for high-quality flowers. |
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But recently developed inoculants, with more effective strains of fermentation bacteria, are producing slightly better quality silage. |
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Chickens can spread the infection to their eggs but it is rare with velogenic strains because viremic hens usually stop laying. |
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The patient and environmental strains of V. cholerae were further analyzed for clonality by southern hybridization using the rRNA probe. |
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They also worry that genetically altered plants could escape into wild strains or breed new diseases with disastrous environmental effects. |
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In addition, qualitative analysis of callus indicated that both strains stimulated cell proliferation in the cobiotic cultures. |
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Look for a brand that contains six to eight strains of live organisms, including Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacter. |
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Two strains were studied, one with the infamous Bt gene and another with a gene from cowpea. |
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The coroner's report after her death concluded that Cass died of massive heart failure, brought on by obesity and the strains of crash dieting. |
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Already, by 1963, the dollar had begun to creak under the strains of deepening economic contradictions. |
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It strains credulity to believe that these guys were doing this from any altruistic motive. |
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That clone was created from a cross between two strains from North and South Germany that were distinct from the clones we analyzed here. |
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If the wild relatives of our crop plants die out, we might lose the genes that could be used to breed new pest-resistant strains. |
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They will cross-breed the mice from the two strains to create a population which has a mixture of metabolic rates. |
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Male chicks from selectively bred egg-laying strains are not suitable for meat production and so are killed at one to three days old. |
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After two or three strips, even these strains get the heave, expiring with, at best, a gassy sputter. |
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Under all these conditions, the strains had the same prehistory and, therefore, the same genetic constitution. |
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Commercial livestock are generally produced by crossing breeds, strains, or lines. |
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Several studies have uncovered the potential benefits of probiotic strains on lowering cholesterol, thereby lowering the risk of heart disease. |
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All strains were deleted for the endogenous pah1 gene to avoid complementation of transgene loss of function. |
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This in turn puts strains on the banking system on account of increases in the percentage of loans that are delinquent or in default. |
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Of these often-untrained teens, 200,000 are injured every year through slips, falls, strains and burns. |
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Scientists are working toward breeding farm animals that resist infection with pathogenic E. coli strains. |
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Chlamydomonas strains were transformed according to the silicon carbide whisker method of DUNAHAY 1993, with the following modifications. |
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There are over 30,000 different orchid species and well over 100,000 hybrid strains have been artificially propagated. |
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O'Connor noted that the norovirus has many different strains, making it difficult for a person to develop long-lasting immunity to the infection. |
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Experts analysing the anthrax used in the US attacks are comparing its DNA with a library of strains collected worldwide. |
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Within the reality television genre itself, new strains and amalgamations have emerged. |
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Survival curves were plotted and the significance of differences between life spans of strains was analyzed using the Mann-Whitney test. |
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As far as the commercial growers were concerned the man used strains which were almost wild. |
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Chemical mutagens or serial passages were employed earlier to decrease susceptibility to penicillin in BHS group A strains. |
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Yeast strains grown to saturation in 10 ml liquid medium overnight and were deflocculated by two washes in sodium citrate. |
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These derivatives were noteworthy as potent mutagens for Salmonella strains, and were present in fine particles of diesel particulates. |
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A majority of the strains examined contained one insertion and the highest number of insertions that occurred in a single germ cell was seven. |
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These strains offer the genetic reproducibility that is so valuable in lab mice, but with a wider variety of genotypes and phenotypes. |
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It's a funny, left-of-center film about envy in all its permeations and how it strains friendships. |
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Self-pollination in these strains was found to be controlled by duplicate, recessive genes. |
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Oil of wintergreen, also known as methyl salicylate, is a time-honored rub or liniment used for sprains, strains, aches, pains and arthritis. |
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However, other strains of probiotic organisms actually attenuated the cytokine response. |
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Well it put great strains on those teachers in the faculty who didn't know how to speak Latin. |
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Each Sunday the airport flight path will take these aircraft in over the strains of Gaelic psalm singing in Back Free Church. |
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All negative strains that appeared oxacillin resistant by phenotypic methods were tested for production of beta-lactamase by iodometric method. |
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The vaccine has to be updated periodically, in a race to keep ahead of ever more virulent strains. |
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Even wild-type strains exhibit growth stimulation in response to supplementation with inositol and choline. |
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All the same, the article captured the essence of the new strains of unfolding inflationary pressures now taking hold. |
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The military has repeatedly extended tours of duty for US soldiers and placed enormous strains on the Army Reserve and Army National Guard. |
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But what of the strains of working as both a doctor and a poet in West Kerry? |
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At least one report suggests that the number of bacterial strains that are symbiotic or commensal is limited. |
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There, the strains of the hymns all but drowned the chaffinches and the cries of the whaups. |
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Poultry vaccines can prevent healthy chickens from contracting deadly strains of avian influenza, Dutch researchers report. |
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Generally, the sand stiffness decreases by decreasing the effective confining pressure or increasing the shear strains. |
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A fan turns slowly overhead, keeping time with the strains of Latino music. |
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Amid the urban riots, campus unrest, economic strains, and Vietnam War controversies of the late 1960s, Republican conservatism revived. |
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We have mapped it by analysis of backcrosses and intercrosses between B6 mice and both susceptible strains. |
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A total of 116 female mice from an intercross between the strains were genotyped. |
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But above the hubbub, the unfamiliar strains of Scottish reels and jigs were rising on the warm air. |
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While animal strains of scabies exist and can infect humans, the mites cannot complete their life cycle or be passed to other hosts. |
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The next picture is that of modern day advertising, with sports cars cruising along winding highways to tired strains of electronica. |
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Or will the parting strains of Robbie Burns' haunting refrain convince her to come back again soon? |
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The stable food, the potato rotted from the land as the first strains of malignant blight struck, and there was nothing left to eat. |
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These two strains were haploid and isogenic except for the indicated genotypes. |
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These stresses and strains have shown up because the euro is under pressure at the moment. |
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Finally, all the Ames test strains have defective polysaccharide outer coats, to make them more permeable to the test chemicals. |
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To the strains of The Green Hills, played by local pipers Eugene Murphy and his daughter Marie, the players entered the hall. |
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The dim lights and subdued strains of music wafted across the hall, giving a palliative effect. |
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Just the strains in the Anglican Communion Show that a house divided cannot stand. |
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The microbe occurs in many forms, or strains, that sicken other plants, including almond, peach, plum, and oleander. |
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It uses a frame supporting a screen that strains and filters the pulp fibers in an even layer to form a sheet of paper. |
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The central theme of all strains of anarchist doctrine is the illegitimacy of the state. |
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He heaps too much responsibility on his actors and thus strains the abilities of his two leads. |
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When they're cold, they're stiff and inflexible, and forcibly stretching them could lead to injury or strains. |
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Drug resistance arises by natural selection, mutant strains being selected when the virus replicates in sub-limiting drug concentrations. |
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Already diseases like TB are making a resurgence in the West, including strains increasingly resistant to most antibiotics. |
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Four of five strains tested clearly showed staining specifically in the dorsal compartment of the wing disc, as expected for apterous expression. |
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There are few strains of malolactic bacteria that are friendly such as leuconostoc and oenococcus oeni. |
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Bick spends too much time on the minutiae of the ride itself and at times strains to be didactic, which is unnecessary with such a good story. |
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To eliminate possible additional mutations, the mutant strains were backcrossed eight times before genetic analyses. |
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Hurried, resounding strains of a Rachmaninoff prelude are abruptly cut short. |
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We walked over to Joshua's window, dodging strains of TP all over the crisp grass. |
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Interestingly, some toxigenic strains of clostridial species other than C botulinum are capable of producing botulinum neurotoxin. |
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Set to the strains of Mahler, this 1993 film takes place in a city whose streets are rarely penetrated by sunlight. |
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Certainly you are correct that overuse of antibiotics can breed resistant strains. |
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However, change was found among strains of S. dysenteriae type I as non-lactose fermenter became lactose fermenter. |
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It is becoming evident however that some strains that appear to have similar spectra of inhibitory activity produce quite different bacteriocins. |
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Ellington could swing with the strains of Egypt as much as the wails of Harlem. |
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Fairground organ ditties blaring from food stalls soon gave way to the doleful strains of a whiny brass band playing funeral music. |
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The names of the strains denote the place where the virus originated or was first isolated. |
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The three cases are all believed to be bacterial, caused by the meningococcal bacteria, but the strains involved have not been confirmed. |
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O'Sullivan finished eighth in the Scottish race, and admitted she was struggling for fitness after the strains of running in London. |
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Our party opposes the various strains of identity politics and stands firmly in support of integration and the unity of all working people. |
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Investigations found samples of rice seed as well as unmilled and milled rice containing transgenic strains. |
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Terry Prendergast, chief executive of Marriage Care, which counsels couples on coping with the strains of wedlock, agrees. |
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Characteristics of the studied strains indicating the presence of the 17 virulence factors as well as the eae type. |
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History has shown that pandemic strains of influenza viruses emerge as reassortants of human and avian viruses. |
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The most common problems include muscle strains, arthritis and herniated discs. |
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It is caused by infections with oncogenic strains of the human papillomavirus. |
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One young insertion was found to be homozygous in two wild-type strains and absent in six others. |
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The mutation also reduced the copy number of the plasmids in otherwise wild-type strains. |
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Charlie began to strum the opening strains of Murderer of the Masses, the next song on the set list. |
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These materials most commonly develop strains or, more applicably, displacements when exposed to electric, thermal and magnetic fields. |
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Graham says the aim is to breed a more modern type of Suffolk to enable the breed to compete with such continental strains as the Texel. |
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Controlled dosing is one of the challenges facing the world of medical marijuana as it explores cannabidiol strains. |
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Antibiotic resistant strains develop when successive colonies of a bacterium grow in a medium where small amounts of antibiotic are evident. |
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Most amoebae strains were obtained from the Culture Collection of Algae and Protozoa. |
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The histopathology of bladder tissue revealed a more or less similar picture in the two strains of mice. |
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The master of the gaita, Nunez embraces a range of influences including the Celtic strains of Ireland, Scotland and Brittany. |
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But the centre's committee took the decision to stop hiring it out because of escalating costs and strains on manpower. |
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These strains might not even use their lac gene products to metabolize lactose. |
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Outside his dramatic and narrative compositions the resulting strains show mostly in lyrical poems constructed of successive stanzas. |
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The strains of music played from shops, which were previously only allowed to sell religious chants or martial songs. |
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Soft-tissue injuries such as contusions, strains, and sprains are the most common injuries in Gaelic football, soccer, and rugby. |
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I had hopes that she, a campaigning journalist, would develop her twin strains of doughtiness and dottiness and become a thorn in the flesh. |
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The most common types of injuries were contusions, sprains, and strains, which is in agreement with the previous results. |
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Minor sprains and strains and contusions constituted one-half of all injuries. |
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Twenty one yeast-like cells were isolated from 21 patients. all the Candida strains were isolated by both the methods. |
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So tonight I'm dining on sole amandine with green beans to the strains of Chinese flute music. |
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This indicates that the japonica and indica strains are descended from different ancestors. |
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To the strains of an ancient crusader hymn, the princes of the church led the pontiff into the square. |
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The one stroke of originality, the house sushi dessert, strains for wit and collapses into a gooey sooey. |
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Less resistant strains tend to be killed off by antibiotics, while those which are genetically tougher survive. |
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From the tropical strains of Kilter to mould-breaking newcomers like Ribongia, this year's given us plenty of local steeze to cheer about. |
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I complain to God, or whoever else will listen, about the annoyances, the difficulties, the strains. |
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Moreover, in flocculent strains it is difficult to distinguish between two adherent cells and a cell with a large bud. |
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In essence, 3D flows can be considered as complex combinations of irrotational and rotational strains that vary in space with time. |
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As regards to the yield of sugar in the south, these strains are close to one another and the sacchariferous strains even have an advantage. |
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And that, in turn, could place major strains on an already stretched relief effort. |
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It helps you unwind and get rid of muscle strains and pains, relaxes stiff muscles, detoxicates the whole body. |
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He parodied the historical parade of styles in modernism, mimicking, for example, the strains of lyrical and geometric abstraction. |
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In addition, antibiotic treatment deranges protective flora and antibiotic resistant microbial strains emerge. |
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The strains of a beautiful orchestra mingled with hundreds of voices raised in honor of Alma Mater and the perpetude of Peace. |
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It was then time for more dancing and the gathering took to the floor and stepped it out to strains of Sean Wisley and his band. |
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But would these sprightly veterans have been better advised to avoid the stresses and strains of full-time toil in old age? |
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Poliovirus is an enterovirus with three different strains that cause disease. |
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Obtaining antisera against two immunologically distinct red cell antigens, he found these present in some mouse strains and absent from others. |
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The course deals with the stresses and strains of the individual driver and how to deal with conflict in the back of a cab. |
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It has been demonstrated that this pathogen produces different enterotoxins and different strains may cause disease by different mechanisms. |
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In recent years, strains of the disease have developed a resistance to the prescription drug and, in some pockets, resistance to other prophylactics. |
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You can even keep them in suspended animation in the freezer for years at a time, allowing you to preserve stocks of different strains of the animal. |
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Borlaug and his associates set out to develop strains of wheat that could resist diseases and pests, and thus improve yields. |
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Pre-election federal spending announcements are so lucrative that one strains to think up ways to get some of the boodle directed toward native communities. |
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These strains were procured from a local dealer in horticultural plants. |
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But, as Gabor comes closer to death, the sad story carries with it the strains of a Greek tragedy. |
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Young adults bonded and relieved their stresses and strains. |
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A survey of 13 domestic breeds and 3 inbred strains was carried out. |
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Warts are caused by different strains of the human papilloma virus. |
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It is in the representations of the city, by contrast, where the stresses and strains of the modern stateless nation most obviously come to the fore. |
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Babies often have an abnormal head shape as a result of the stresses and strains of labour, but most will revert to normal by the time they are six weeks' old. |
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Whether it's sleepless nights, mood swings or loss of appetite, the chances are that the stresses and strains of everyday life have affected you at some point. |
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It might look like a long-lost exhibit from a medieval torture chamber, but this chair is designed to ease away the stresses and strains of the working day. |
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Allen says that some strains of bacteria may be potentially beneficial for some people but harmful to others. |
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The excuse that Netanyahu was blindsided by settler gremlins in the Interior Ministry strains credulity. |
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Higher yields could be in store for pea crops as U.S. and Russian scientists cooperatively field-test an experimental inoculant and new strains of microbe-friendly peas. |
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Commercial inoculants usually contain strains of bacteria that fix nitrogen more rapidly than native strains, but they usually do not survive well from year to year. |
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These strains provided essential controls demonstrating the reproducibility of the quantitative assay and its insensitivity to general growth defects. |
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A genetic map constructed using a cross between the two M. grisea strains used in this study revealed a high degree of synteny between the two genomes. |
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Several strains and species of predatory nematodes are produced and sold. |
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Over 40 different strains of the Legionella germ have now been discovered. |
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We spilled out into the blinding sunshine, the strains of the organ following us and filling the air, signaling the processional at the end of the ceremony. |
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Some strains of lactic acid bacteria are tolerant to salt, enabling them to survive additional salt while the growth of salt-sensitive aerobes is inhibited. |
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Yeast and bacterial strains were propagated using standard methods. |
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The strains were maintained on nutrient agar slants before used. |
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A collection trip to Bolivia yielded strains of peanuts that may be resistant to tomato spotted wilt virus, a disease that reduces peanut size and yield. |
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He has a stubborn streak and definite strains of a rebellious nature, partly cultivated by his circumstances, which give him an appetite for dispute. |
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Apart from the usual sprains, strains, stings and bouts of homesickness, the medics were involved in organising the emergency airlift of a critically ill cadet. |
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Already, Gen X joblessness is leading to all sorts of economic strains. |
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African rice is tough enough to fight drought, but many west African farmers abandoned the variety in favour of Asian strains that produce more grains per plant. |
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The period length of the double mutant strains was close to values predicted from assuming an additive or multiplicative effect from each mutation. |
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They've been inserting bits of it into other strains of flu that wouldn't normally kill mice, and seeing whether the changes make that benign flu more lethal. |
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Of the over 100 strains, the majority are harmless and a healthy immune system will fight it without a person ever realizing it. |
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Mike Martin, a spokesman for Cargill, says there are some 2,400 strains of salmonella. |
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From Ebola to immigration, from honor killing to the strains of military life, the forum covered it all. |
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When the newlywed couple take the floor for their first dance, it will be to the strains of Bert's favourite song, the Rod Stewart classic, Maggie May. |
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Only the advancement of liberal democracy could serve as an antidote to the noxious strains of Islamism emanating from the region. |
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Two rice strains were genetically altered to resist two insects, rice stem borers and leaf rollers, which sometimes require heavy use of pesticides to control. |
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Few biologists doubt that some strains common in domestic sheep are lethal to bighorns, but what actually happens during a bighorn epidemic is still far from clear. |
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Partly it may be due to its production of the so-called enterocins, a family of bacteriocins, which are antimicrobial peptides produced by some bacterial strains. |
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The bald-headed stranger strains a small cough and rubs his eyes. |
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While Sonia and Steve are sticking with traditional outfits and vows, the strains of the conventional wedding march will not echo through the church. |
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Those 21 strains that grew on AT in the presence of LexA were rejected because the suppression could have been due to mutations that potentiate weak activators. |
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Both retrovirus-like organization and expression are typical of the functional gypsy proviruses that have inserted recently into the euchromatic DNA of some strains. |
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In an effort to maintain wider group cohesion, divergent voices are often dealt with by claiming they arise from entirely different strains of selfhood. |
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However, the notion that nearly two-thirds of Iranians want another four years of Ahmadinejad strains any credulity. |
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The interaction of classes, genders, and generations, and social keystones like marriage, family, and parenthood, experienced massive strains and became less structured. |
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Deforestation and other radical ecosystem alterations also promote diseases, such as malaria and cholera, as well as new strains of existing contagions. |
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Children may in turn be reinfected with different strains of the virus. |
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Furthermore, the playing position and the injury location were registered, and injuries were classified as contusions, sprains, strains, fractures, or lacerations. |
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As we did not serotype these pneumococcal strains or measure antibodies to them, we cannot do more than speculate on the mechanism for this observation. |
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Airsacculitis may be present even after infection with relatively mild strains, and thickening of the air sacs with catarrhal or caseous discharge is often observed. |
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A passage closely resembling the opening strains of Kol Nidre appears in two medieval antiphonaries where it is given as an example of a pneuma in the first Gregorian mode. |
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Witness the fate of strains of corn or wheat perfected by peasants over centuries, as with Indians and hard wheat, later appropriated by Canadian farmers. |
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While tests match strains of bacteria, mixing of meat from different carcasses makes the identification of the source of contamination more difficult. |
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Both strains exhibited macrochaete duplications, eye defects, and loss of wing material consistent with dominant-negative effects of the Mam truncations described previously. |
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Exercise actually helps us to fight against anxiety and depression, and a strong immune system makes the mind better able to cope with life's stresses and strains. |
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From the quiet strains of a young Henry Mancini to the jarring sibilant tones whenever the monster makes an appearance, it is a piece of movie history. |
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I've learned this lesson the hard way after several strains and pulls. |
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Victims developed strains of pneumonia, blood poisoning and dozens of other infections rarely identified outside hospitals as recently as five years ago. |
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As I dunked the teabag into and out of the boiling water a couple of times, I couldn't help but overhear the strains of a one-sided conversation that drifted into the room. |
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A rich macadamia oil was rubbed all over my body, and the full-body massage began while the haunting strains of Aboriginal music plays softly in the background. |
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The calculated membrane strains were in good agreement with experimentally observed and predicted strains in aspirated blebs from red blood cells. |
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While the purpose of early mutant isolations was mostly focused on the identification of auxotrophs, many of these early strains have been subjected to heavy mutagenesis. |
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The back analysis of the results of measuring the distribution of strains and forces along the anchor was done in order to optimise the choice of anchor zone length. |
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A broad range of injury types was found to occur at each of these sites, except in the groin, for which the 12 injuries reported were exclusively strains. |
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In addition to testing for any strains and other injuries it is therefore crucial to assess for any changes, and their causes, in the somatic tissues. |
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Neck injuries or strains often result in painful inflammation. |
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The most common snow injuries are strains, sprains and fractures. |
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Chronic knee injuries include things like strains, sprains and tendinitis. |
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At relatively low shear strains, deformation is apparent from the slight deformation of strain markers, such as the overturning of ice-wedge casts. |
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I hated the voice from behind me, that cut through the wondrous strains of music being wafted to us in that green and prosperous neighbourhood through powerful speakers. |
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The strains of music played, the words came up, and we cheered as one. |
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With women taking part in all branches of war work, to the front came the cowgirls riding to the strains of martial music, the American flag held high, and the show is on! |
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The air is moist and moss-scented, and you slide your fingers along the slick castle stones as you're pulled by faint strains of music that sound vaguely familiar. |
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Bacterial and T4 strains and culture conditions have been described. |
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Avirulent bacterial strains can, in principle, also cause infections. |
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There are four distinct but related strains of the dengue virus. |
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