Many other gastropods use mucus to attach to the substratum with varying degrees of adhesive strength. |
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Rooted plants with three or four fully expanded leaves were transferred to a peat substratum and acclimatized in a glasshouse. |
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Romanian has many adstrata of linguistical accretions, but no one so far knows just how deep is the substratum. |
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If there is a substratum underlying this trust it is that of a property trust in which units are issued to the public. |
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When two or more larvae recruit to the same substratum, stolons of different colonies may eventually come into contact. |
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The downstream section was 50 to 60 m wide, straight, and substratum consisted of flocculent mud, 20 to 100 cm deep. |
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The acoustic facies of its substratum has neither the characteristics of the continental crust nor those of the oceanic crust. |
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Such fishes can offset costs of transport using burst-and-glide behavior when swimming in the water column and ground effect near the substratum. |
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In unstalked crinoids, the cirri are located on the end of the calyx opposite the mouth, and are used by the animal to grasp the substratum. |
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I am reluctant to state a case when the substratum was not the right substratum. |
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One was in contact with the substratum, and the other formed a dome within the marginal ossicles, thus creating a body cavity. |
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Serialization, for instance, has been attributed to substratum from the African languages, particularly the Kwa group. |
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That is, they are interested in how any society conceives its cultural substratum. |
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Consider the following English phrase as a way of examining a superstratum and substratum. |
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A standard view in Japanese academic circles is that Japanese was developed as a mixed language between an Austronesian substratum and an Altaic superstratum. |
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The corpuscular color, undulatory and boldly allied to the substratum, no longer had a purely mythic function. |
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A means of salvation calls upon the living forces deposited in the substratum of nature or in the inmost depths of the human heart. |
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In that case we will have to grant emptiness as existing independently of conventionally real entities, as their underlying substratum. |
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Sowing is carried out in containers over a substratum composed of a mixture of peat and gravel in equal proportion. |
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It helps to build up a nutritious substratum which is important for the development of the oyster's nourishment. |
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By introducing windmills at sea, a new habitat, hard substratum, was created in a predominantly sandy environment. |
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Just as with the preceding taxon, this holothurian is found on all types of substratum, whether covered or not by nodules. |
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We are enabled to perceive, even if it is only a glimmer, a common underlying substratum in all things which seem physically separate. |
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Growing there is a special fauna and flora linked to the concentration of zinc and other heavy metals in the substratum. |
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Similarly, oysters on a hard substratum have harder shells than oysters found on a soft substratum. |
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Human rights are increasingly being presented as the common language and the ethical substratum of international relations. |
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The substratum there was rocky, and nests were placed in the rocks' crevices. |
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Deep drilling in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea floor revealed a continental and oceanic substratum covered by upper Miocene and younger sedimentary successions. |
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Flow rates over the substratum and around submerged objects depend on wind strength and fetch, and in streams, on stream gradients and hydraulic input. |
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But that was the substratum for the judge's award of damages. |
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Similarly, in the Pacific, it has been suggested that there may be Austronesian substratum influence in the serial constructions found in Tok Pisin. |
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The innovation in question is the labral tooth, a tooth-like or spine-like protrusion pointing toward the substratum on the edge of the outer lip of the aperture. |
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The Etheric vital force also constitutes the substratum of mental experience, for all the ideas and images within the mind are generated out of its substance. |
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The preference for open syllables which end in vowels rather than consonants may, however, derive from universal developmental tendencies as well as from substratum influence. |
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In Book VIII, he distinguishes the matter of the substance as the substratum, or the stuff of which it is composed. |
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Spores of many species have special appendages which facilitate attachment to the substratum. |
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The distinct pronunciation of the Hiberno English dialect spoken in Ireland comes partially from the influence of the substratum of Irish. |
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Hence the need to postulate the substratum, which is in itself quite qualitiless. |
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The digital model depicts the topography of the river bed and banks and includes a description of the substratum as well as emergent and submerged vegetation. |
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On the other hand, as the filling of that space, it serves as the neutral underlying substratum from which a particular, once characterized in some way, is constituted. |
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They differ from acorn barnacles in that the plates do not form a separate wall and operculum and in having the wall and the cirri it contains elevated above the substratum by a peduncle. |
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The direction towards the concrete and the applied does not sacrifice the essential substratum to the project of interculturality which is the live wire of the CARDICIS process. |
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This is a substratum for nickel bright and chromium plating processes. |
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In addition, the lactose can serve as a substratum for a large variety of microorganisms, so it is used for example in the production of penicillin and other antibiotics. |
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Millions of years ago, where the Alps stand today, there was a prehistoric ocean in which marine sediments were deposited over a crystalline substratum. |
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Spanish and Portuguese are similar enough to lead some scholars to assign their shared characteristics to the influence of an Iberian substratum and a Moorish superstratum. |
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The narrow intertidal zone is characterized by a shallow gradient slope between the banks and deep channel where the substratum is a mixture of gravel, rock, and mud. |
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Those who argue against the theory of a Brittonic substratum and heavy influence point out that many toponyms have no semantic continuation from the Brittonic language. |
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In the natural substratum, there was a change in the number of desmids taxa, in December 6th, when we registered an expressive contribution of diatoms. |
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