Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Chemotherapy" ¶ 60
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

For and continuous
For continuous control, feed 1 part phenothiazine to 9 parts minerals or salts.
( 3 ) For anionics, these micelles appear to be roughly spherical assemblages in which the hydrocarbon tails come together so that the polar groups ( the ionized ends ) face outward towards the aqueous continuous phase.
For a rigorous definition of basis with a continuous set of indices and consequently for a rigorous definition of position and momentum basis see.
For the study of the mechanical behavior of solids and fluids these are assumed to be continuous bodies, which means that the matter fills the entire region of space it occupies, despite the fact that matter is made of atoms, has voids, and is discrete.
For instance, any continuous function defined on a compact space into an ordered set ( with the order topology ) such as the real line is bounded.
For seventy-four years ( 1689-1763 ) there were six colonial wars, which involved continuous warfare between New England and Acadia ( see the French and Indian Wars as well as Father Rale's War and Father Le Loutre's War ).
For a time-dependent process of heating of the calorimetric material, defined by a continuous joint progression of and, starting at time and ending at time, there can be calculated an accumulated quantity of heat delivered,.
For example, a continuous chain of speakers across the centuries links Vulgar Latin to all of its modern descendants.
For any source material of specific composition, the main variables that affect the purity of products in continuous distillation are the reflux ratio and the number of theoretical equilibrium stages ( practically, the number of trays or the height of packing ).
For continuous cash flows, the summation in the above formula is replaced by an integration:
For continuous dynamical systems, the map τ is understood to be a finite time evolution map and the construction is more complicated.
For example, despite continuous revision, the 14th edition became outdated after 35 years ( 1929 – 1964 ).
For example, oscillating charges produce electric and magnetic fields that may be viewed in a ' smooth ', continuous, wavelike fashion.
For example, proteins dissolve better in water than in oil, and so tend to form oil-in-water emulsions ( that is, they promote the dispersion of oil droplets throughout a continuous phase of water ).
For example, the Spitfire, one of the few fighters in continuous production throughout the war, was in 1939 powered by a Merlin II, while variants produced in 1945 were equipped with the Griffon 61.
For instance, by assigning to every open set U the associative algebra of real-valued continuous functions on U, one obtains a presheaf of algebras on X.
For three decades there are costly and continuous campaigns to suppress the local African rulers.
For example, a homomorphism of topological groups is often required to be continuous.
For example, the K ' iche ' language spoken in Guatemala has the inflectional prefixes k-and x-to mark incompletive and completive aspect ; Mandarin Chinese has the aspect markers-le 了 ,-zhe 着, zài-在, and-guò 过 to mark the perfective, durative stative, durative progressive, and experiential aspects, and also marks aspect with adverbs ; and English marks the continuous aspect with the verb to be coupled with present participle and the perfect with the verb to have coupled with past participle.
For the more severe disorders, such as type 1 glycogen storage disease, this may be supplied in the form of cornstarch every few hours or by continuous gastric infusion.
For example, a bijective linear map is an isomorphism between vector spaces, and a bijective continuous function whose inverse is also continuous is an isomorphism between topological spaces, called a homeomorphism.
For him " the chief importance is given not to Anarchism as the aim but to Anarchy as the continuous quest for the aim ".
For continuous wave operation it is required for the population inversion of the gain medium to be continually replenished by a steady pump source.

For and frequent
For the frequent case of propositional logic, the problem is decidable but Co-NP-complete, and hence only exponential-time algorithms are believed to exist for general proof tasks.
For series involving amateur detectives, their frequent encounters with crime often tests the limits of plausibility.
For a few days, the entire IRC network suffered frequent netsplits, but eventually the majority of servers added the Q-line and effectively created a new separate IRC net called EFnet ( Eris-Free Network ); the remaining servers who stayed connected to eris ( and thus were no longer able to connect to EFnet servers ) were called A-net ( Anarchy Network ).
For this measure, higher kurtosis means more of the variance is the result of infrequent extreme deviations, as opposed to frequent modestly sized deviations.
For example, systems that depend heavily on immutable objects such as many functional programming languages can suffer an efficiency penalty due to frequent copies.
For example, instant runoff voting is considered to have less frequent IIA failure than First Past the Post ( also known as Plurality Rule ).
For best growth, the guar bean requires full sunshine, flashing rainfalls that are moderately frequent, and well-drained soil.
For the most frequent proposals, see Ainu languages.
For example, tropical climates were said to cause laziness, relaxed attitudes and promiscuity, while the frequent variability in the weather of the middle latitudes led to more determined and driven work ethics.
For pregnant women with negative antibody titer, indicating no previous exposure to T. gondii, as frequent as monthly serology testing is advisable as treatment during pregnancy for those women exposed to T. gondii for the first time decreases dramatically the risk of passing the parasite to the fetus.
Abbott is a frequent public speaker, newspaper contributor and TV performer, appearing on programmes such as Have I Got News For You, Celebrity Come Dine with Me and Cash in the Celebrity Attic.
For example, small children need shorter, more frequent time with parents, whereas older children and teenagers can tolerate and may demand less frequent shifts, but longer blocks of time with each parent.
For example, delusions of guilt and punishment are frequent in a Western, Christian country like Austria, but not in Pakistan-where it is more likely persecution.
For accessing sterile injecting equipment clients frequently visit NSP outlets, and for receiving pharmacotherapy ( e. g. methadone, buprenorphine ) they visit OST clinics ; these frequent visits are used opportunistically to offer much needed health care.
For instance, he and frequent co-star Evelyn Ankers did not get along at all despite their on-camera chemistry.
For the rest of his life, St-Calais remained a frequent advisor to the king.
For some time his marriage had been under strain, exacerbated by his wife's frequent absences on concert tours.
For example, a commercial pilot may have to demonstrate more maneuvers to a higher standard, and may need to pass more frequent medical examinations.
For comparison, the upper teeth were restored with porcelain veneers. The frequent contact between teeth and gastric acid, in particular, may cause:
For less frequent crimes such as intentional homicide and armed robbery, reported incidences are generally more reliable.
She says " My stars " and " For pity sakes " a lot, but her trademark line — always delivered after a ( frequent ) putdown — is " I'll smack your sassy face!
For instance, the network no longer allows the frequent local station breaks that were previously allowed during the former broadcast as of January 7, 2008.
For instance, in English, the plaintext letters E, T, A, O, I, N and S, are usually easy to identify in ciphertext on the basis that since they are very frequent ( see ETAOIN SHRDLU ), their corresponding ciphertext letters will also be as frequent.

1.260 seconds.