Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "In vitro" ¶ 0
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Colloquially and these
Colloquially known as " No-Tell Motels ," these are becoming scarce as local laws increasingly require renters ' identification information to be recorded and given to law enforcement agencies.
Colloquially these universities and institutes were all referred to by the acronym " VUZ " ( ВУЗ – высшее учебное заведение, " higher educational institution ").

Colloquially and are
Colloquially flowers of orange are referred to as such as well.
Colloquially, rawinsondes are usually referred to as radiosondes.
Colloquially and by the press, they are often referred to as ministers, e. g. the head of the DDPS as " minister of defence ", even though no such post officially exists.
Colloquially, corrosives may be called " poisons " but the concepts are technically distinct.
Colloquially, the terms are sometimes used interchangeably however.
Colloquially, any shoulder straps with marks are also called epaulettes.
Colloquially, both terms are often referred to as fixing.
Colloquially, " lease " and " leasing " are often a formalization of a longer, specific period as compared with a " rental " that created a tenancy at will, terminable or renewable at the end of a short period.
Colloquially, the terms " town " and " township " are often used interchangeably in Wisconsin.
Colloquially, women in niqab are called, with the plural.
Colloquially, low-technology ( or lo-tech-an antonym of hi-tech ) has also come to be used as a relative description of more modern techniques and designs to show that they are no longer cutting edge.
Colloquially, such multi-browser applications, as well as frameworks and libraries are still referred to as cross-browser.
Colloquially, the term " Fraser Canyon " is often used to include the Thompson Canyon from Lytton to Ashcroft, since they form the same highway route which most people are familiar with, although it is actually reckoned to begin above Williams Lake, British Columbia at Soda Creek Canyon near the town of the same name.
Colloquially described as a " Fish with a flick-knife ", due mainly to their calm nature, such attacks on humans are rare.
Colloquially, attempts by non-Australians to negatively connotate convict pasts are laughed off by Australians, who are now more inclined to associate criminal forbears as evidence for the posession of more positively perceived Australian attributes such as disrespect for authority.
Colloquially the site and / or project are thus sometimes called " Soyuz at Sinnamary ".
Colloquially, " big name " ( 大名 ) are also known as school name.

Colloquially and called
( Colloquially, the school name is called " big name " ( 大名 ), whereas the " milk name " is known as the " small name " ( 小名 ).
Colloquially, the common chimpanzee is often called the chimpanzee ( or " chimp "), though technically this term refers to both species in the genus Pan: the common chimpanzee and the closely related bonobo, formerly called the pygmy chimpanzee.
is sometimes called the reduced density matrix of on subsystem A. Colloquially, we " trace out " system B to obtain the reduced density matrix on A.
Colloquially this type of breathing set is sometimes ( depending on the country of the English speaker ) called an aqualung.
Colloquially, the Virginia opossum is frequently called simply possum.
Colloquially it is called Hesari.
Colloquially, the invasion became known as a ' Police Action ', but this is a misnomer for what was called Operation Polo, led by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, in 1948, the year following Indian independence.
Colloquially it also called exit visa.
Colloquially, use of the fastball is called throwing heat or putting steam on it, among many other variants.
Colloquially, anything which is received in a non-operational ( broken ) state can be called ' DOA ' or ' dead on arrival ' ( or, alternatively, ' defective on arrival ').
Colloquially, it was also called the shrapnel helmet, Tommy helmet, or Tin Hat, and in the United States known as a doughboy helmet.
Colloquially gymnasium refers to what is formally called STX.
Colloquially called the Port Authority, the bus terminal is located in Midtown at 625 8th Avenue, one block east of the Lincoln Tunnel and one block west of Times Square.
Colloquially called the " Forty ", this innovation has since become a common handgun cartridge among law enforcement agencies in the U. S., while the popularity of the parent 10mm Auto has diminished.
Colloquially called the " red duster ".
Colloquially, a person engaging in the activity is sometimes called a gasper.
Colloquially the Field Service cap is occasionally mistakenly called a forage cap but this is incorrect and it has never appeared in War Office or Ministry of Defence official publications under that name.
Colloquially called creeping eruption due to the way it looks, the disease is also somewhat ambiguously known as " ground itch " or ( in some parts of the Southern USA ) " sandworms ", as the larvae like to live in sandy soil.
Colloquially, the latter form is also called the Oslo dialect, which is misleading since the Oslo dialect predates the Dano-Norwegian koiné, and though both influenced by and partially replaced by standard østnorsk, it is still in use, and since the koiné language is not a dialect.
Colloquially, in India, it is often called green potato.

Colloquially and ".
Colloquially, the term " platypi " is also used for the plural, although this is technically incorrect and a form of pseudo-Latin ; the correct Greek plural would be " platypodes ".
Colloquially, this is known as " throwing good money after bad ".
Colloquially known in the surrounding area as " Bishop ".
Colloquially it may also simply mean a " small tank ".
Colloquially, the term is often used to refer to the unit itself in place of the word " apartment ".
Colloquially, the river's name is pronounced something like " Yagkn ".
Colloquially, students refer to the hall as " Eliza Kelly ".
Colloquially, this goal is expressed as " it makes them keep their heads down " or " it keeps them pinned down ".
Colloquially, virtual is used to mean almost, particularly when used in the adverbial form e. g. " That's virtually impossible ".
Colloquially, a maximum matchpoints score on a board is known as a " top ", and a zero score is a " bottom ".
Colloquially, Kensington is referred to as " Kenso ".
Colloquially, this is said to be a matter of " religion ".
Colloquially it is often known simply as " Glasshouse ".
Colloquially, however the process is still referred to as " Cibachrome ".
Colloquially Wirth's law is often phrased as " Software gets slower faster than hardware gets faster ".
Colloquially, the journal is simply called " Angewandte ".

0.180 seconds.