Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Microfluidics" ¶ 40
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

one and location
There was one vote for location being the place where the property is situated for the greater portion of the twelve months preceding the assessment date.
To summarize, it may be said that there is no one prevailing practice in Rhode Island with respect to the taxation of movable property, that assessors would like to see an improvement, and of those who have an opinion, that assessment by the town of location is preferred on the basis of their present knowledge.
The supposed tactual sense of spatial location and orientation in the patient and his ability to specify the location of a member, as well as the direction and scope of a movement, passively executed ( with one of his members ), proved to have been, on the contrary, very considerably affected ''.
Department stores congregated in the `` one hundred per cent location '', where all the transit lines converged.
They will often memorise the location of such nests and return to them to save the trouble of finding a new one.
Colonel William Light, one of Adelaide's founding fathers, designed the city and chose its location close to the River Torrens in the area originally inhabited by the Kaurna people.
Typically, young children will make an ASL sign in the correct location and use the correct hand motion, but may be able only to approximate the hand shape, for example, using one finger instead of three in signing water.
For instance, one could now make a " Printers " zone that would list all the printers in an organization, or one might want to place that same device in the " 2nd Floor " zone to indicate its physical location.
Although his home has been traditionally identified as one of the Aeolian Islands ( there is little consensus as to which ), near Sicily, an alternative location has been suggested at Gramvousa off the northwest coast of Crete.
Megiddo was the location of various ancient battles, including one in the 15th century BC and one in 609 BC.
Because of the seemingly highly symbolic and even cryptic language of this one New Testament passage, some Christian scholars conclude that Mount Armageddon must be an idealized location.
When he arrives at the Necronomicon's location, he finds three books instead of one.
His solution was the concept of “ alternative location ,” in which a particular subject could be put in more than one place, as long as the library made a specific choice and used it consistently.
If communities are developed based on something they share in common, whether that be location or values, then one challenge for developing communities is how to incorporate individuality and differences.
On location, there is usually just one camera to film an interview, and it's usually trained on the interviewee.
This allows weather and lighting to be controlled ( as the shooting is indoors ), and for all clothing and sets to be stored in one place to be hauled out the next day from a secure location.
At one location in Southern California, coyotes began relying on a colony of feral cats as a food source.
" The location of " Wibbandun ", which can be translated as " Wibba's Mount ", has not been identified definitely ; it was at one time thought to be Wimbledon, but this now is known to be incorrect.
Copying files to another hard disk in the same computer protects against failure of one disk, but if it is necessary to protect against failure or destruction of the entire computer, then copies of the files must be made on other media that can be taken away from the computer and stored in a safe, distant location.
In addition to a call centre, collective handling of letters, faxes, live chat, and e-mails at one location is known as a contact centre.
Even at this stage Arthur could not be tied to one location.
Two main east-west roads were built rather than the typical one, due to the awkward location of the Temple Mount, blocking the central east-west route.

one and dependent
This problem of fair and equitable assessment of value is a difficult one to solve in that the determination of fair valuation is dependent on local assessors, who in general are non-professional and part-time personnel taking an individualistic approach to the problem.
It's one thing to go without food when you're occupied with some work or when you're simply postponing a meal, but when you're dependent on someone else and know that you can't eat until he's bedded down for the night, hunger can be a gnawing torture.
The highest grade amethyst ( called " Deep Russian ") is exceptionally rare and therefore, when one is found, its value is dependent on the demand of collectors.
Stenton regarded it as one of the " small class of books which transcend all but the most fundamental conditions of time and place ", and regarded its quality as dependent on Bede's " astonishing power of co-ordinating the fragments of information which came to him through tradition, the relation of friends, or documentary evidence ...
A right established by law, such as that to an old age pension, is less galling than an allowance made by a rich man to a poor one, dependent on his view of the recipient ’ s character, and terminable at his caprice.
Activation of each phase is dependent on the proper progression and completion of the previous one.
" The Merriam-Webster Dictionary offers four definitions, including " something characteristic of a colony " and " control by one power over a dependent area or people.
Therefore, the independent principles of yin and yang are actually dependent on one another for each other's distinguishable existence.
If one component changes another component's vapor pressure, or if the volatility of a component is dependent on its percentage in the mixture, the law will fail.
The probability " wave " can be said to " pass through space " because the probability values that one can compute from its mathematical representation are dependent on time.
As one article put it: " So why do we agree to a system in which we're dependent on a foreign country's whim before we can prosecute a criminal inside our own borders?
Other reasons include: a ) changes in plant canopy caused by shifts in plant biomass production associated with moisture regime ; b ) changes in litter cover on the ground caused by changes in both plant residue decomposition rates driven by temperature and moisture dependent soil microbial activity as well as plant biomass production rates ; c ) changes in soil moisture due to shifting precipitation regimes and evapo-transpiration rates, which changes infiltration and runoff ratios ; d ) soil erodibility changes due to decrease in soil organic matter concentrations in soils that lead to a soil structure that is more susceptible to erosion and increased runoff due to increased soil surface sealing and crusting ; e ) a shift of winter precipitation from non-erosive snow to erosive rainfall due to increasing winter temperatures ; f ) melting of permafrost, which induces an erodible soil state from a previously non-erodible one ; and g ) shifts in land use made necessary to accommodate new climatic regimes.
The Roman Catholic Church does not consider the validity of an ecumenical council's teaching to be in any way dependent on where it is held or on the granting or withholding of prior authorization or legal status by any state, in line with the attitude of the 5th-century bishops who " saw the definition of the church's faith and canons as supremely their affair, with or without the leave of the Emperor " and who " needed no one to remind them that Synodical process pre-dated the Christianisation of the royal court by several centuries ".
However, Afghanistan still remains one of the poorest and least developed countries in the world that is highly dependent on foreign aid.
Single-equation methods model a single variable ( the dependent variable ) as a function of one or more explanatory ( or independent ) variables.
In terminology close to that found in later Gnostic works, one tract, generally known as " The Trimorphic Protennoia ", must either be dependent on John or the other way round.
As a colony or other dependent state or territory lacks the authority to vest in a true head of state of its own, it either has no comparable office, simply receiving those roles exercised by the paramount powers ( in person or, most of the time, through an appointed representative, often styled governor or lieutenant-governor, but also various other titles, on the Cook Islands even simply King / Queen's Representative ) or has one, such as a formerly sovereign dynasty, but under a form of metropolitan guardianship, such as protection, vassal or tributary status.
Grimm says that Hel is an example of a " half-goddess ;" " one who cannot be shown to be either wife or daughter of a god, and who stands in a dependent relation to higher divinities " and that " half-goddesses " stand higher than " half-gods " in Germanic mythology.
Some of those algorithms will map arbitrary long string data z, with any typical real-world distribution — no matter how non-uniform and dependent — to a 32-bit or 64-bit string, from which one can extract a hash value in 0 through n − 1.
The eye is a famous example of a supposedly irreducibly complex structure, due to its many elaborate and interlocking parts, seemingly all dependent upon one another.
* Judea, the former territory of the Kingdom of Judah after its demise ( c. 586 BC ), being successively a Babylonian, a Persian, a Ptolemaic and a Seleucid province, an independent kingdom under the Hasmoneans regarding itself as successor of the Biblical one, a Roman dependent kingdom and a Roman province
Snorri ’ s own usage, however, seems to fit the looser sense: “ Snorri uses the term " kenning " to refer to a structural device, whereby a person or object is indicated by a periphrastic description containing two or more terms ( which can be a noun with one or more dependent genitives or a compound noun or a combination of these two structures )” ( Faulkes ( 1998 a ), p. xxxiv ).
In statistics, linear regression is an approach to modeling the relationship between a scalar dependent variable y and one or more explanatory variables denoted X.
In biochemistry, ligase ( from the Latin verb ligāre — " to bind " or " to glue together ") is an enzyme that can catalyze the joining of two large molecules by forming a new chemical bond, usually with accompanying hydrolysis of a small chemical group dependent to one of the larger molecules or the enzyme catalyzing the linking together of two compounds .... e. g.: Enzymes which catalyze joining of C-O, C-S, C-N etc.
* Limburg of the States ( 1633 – 1685 ), one of the Generality Lands, a dependent territory of the United Provinces of the Netherlands

0.353 seconds.