What you can always do, however, is ensure that the switches encode an odd or an even number. |
|
They are forms of memory, mnemonic devices that encode the history of and knowledge about particular initiations. |
|
These expressions literally encode language with hidden, subversive meanings, enacting linguistically the larger thematic focus of the novel. |
|
Private banks also open accounts under code names and will, when asked, refer to clients by code names or encode account transactions. |
|
These genes encode proteins that are involved in regulating the expression of homeotic genes by changing chromatin structure. |
|
It also violates our fundamental values of justice and fairness which these legal instruments encode. |
|
She has expressed her demand for action in a declarative form, rather than encode it in the more direct imperative form. |
|
The function of the genes that encode rapidly evolving proteins remains largely unknown. |
|
The multitude of other mechanoreceptors act mainly as proprioceptors although some encode both proprioceptive and exteroceptive information. |
|
Two or three genes encode sucrose synthase isozymes in monocot species such as maize, barley, wheat, and rice. |
|
The Uto-Aztecan language Huichol, for example, deploys different sets of switch-reference markers to encode different tenses. |
|
Using the whole volume of a storage medium, instead of just the surface, allows us to encode much more information in a small space. |
|
Both transcripts from the mutated allele are thus likely to encode completely nonfunctional GLB1 proteins. |
|
Adleman realized that the genetic code can be used, just like the binary code of computer science, to encode mathematical problems. |
|
These degenerin genes encode ion channels, and mutations in these genes appear to perturb the ionic balance in cells, resulting in their death. |
|
The theory TRC is an illative theory, in the sense that it can encode notions of propositional logic. |
|
Homeobox genes encode transcription factors involved in many aspects of developmental processes. |
|
Spanish uses word order, rather than noun and pronoun inflection, to encode meaning. |
|
In insects, the genes that encode the proteins of the egg membrane, the chorion, become amplified in the surrounding follicle cells. |
|
The genes that encode these proteins are located immediately downstream of the cos region at the left end of the mature chromosome. |
|
|
Most represent degradative enzyme deficiencies, but some of the genes encode transport, stabilizer, or activator proteins. |
|
The two most highly differentially expressed transcripts in smokers that give discordant results in the mouse models encode secreted proteins. |
|
You'll need to construct the header and encode the text onto the end of it. |
|
But if quantum theorists are correct, quantum bits, or qubits, will enable more efficient problem solving because a qubit can simultaneously encode both a zero and a one. |
|
While these objects are seemingly simple in construction and unimposing in materials, Doris illuminated the many rich layers of meaning they encode. |
|
Shun distractions, in other words, and you should encode events more effectively. |
|
We conducted a detailed analysis to determine how many MR genes have been molecularly identified and what molecular and biological functions they encode. |
|
This will take up less space than before, making for smaller files or the option to encode video with higher quality. |
|
Its new system can encode the distinctive timbre of this by analysing about an hour's worth of recordings. |
|
The electron beam was magnetically aimed so as to encode the stream of data to be written, forming it into a sequence of dark and light spots on the chip. |
|
It therefore worked with Ipedis to encode the report and to make it readable by a text-to-speech synthesis system. |
|
Its primary function is to encode video and control data for transmission over an IP network. |
|
It is possible for you to memorize mac addresses, so you do not need to encode it each time you use the software. |
|
Cues are easy to remember and encode rather complex information about products. |
|
The technology exists to encode and transmit movies in digital form, to compress them for storage, and to encrypt them to stop illegal copying. |
|
This side information needs considerably less bitrate than would be required to encode the high band with the core audio codec. |
|
Tests showed that they could encode, transmit and decode a three-line English message in 20 seconds, about 90 times as fast as machines of that era. |
|
Many RNA molecules have specific functions, but of particular interest are those which encode proteins. |
|
In the U. S. when color video was introduced, part of the black and white frame information was used to encode the color information. |
|
Because of the forked file structure, it is often necessary to encode Mac files before transferring them on the Internet or to other operating systems. |
|
|
Conjugative plasmids encode an extremely efficient mechanism that mediates their own transfer from a donor cell to a recipient cell. |
|
Our conjecture is that, in general, contextual information requires more attentional resources and intentional processing to encode and to retrieve than does item information. |
|
Some of these genes function in the nervous system, and others encode stable proteins, but it is safe to say that the cause of insusceptibility is not known in every case. |
|
A given hardware device should encode the bytes onto the various media in such a way that other hardware devices may decode the bytes without loss of meaning. |
|
As for ION transmitted by the mitochondrial genome, OPA1 and OPA3 encode mitochondrial proteins from the inner mitochondrial membrane, ubiquitously expressed in all cells from the body. |
|
Various encoding methods remove both redundancy and perceptual irrelevancy in the audio signal so that the bit rate required to encode the signal is significantly reduced. |
|
Hence, if we first send a key to our business partner, and we encode this key into light particles, we can find out if somebody tried to listen in. |
|
Where simultaneous changes in susceptibility to antibiotics and biocides occur, the determinants of resistance have mostly involved genes that encode for multidrug efflux pumps. |
|
It's digital and it provides capability to encode information. |
|
Although it would be possible to encode the signals of the lighthouse so that only ships which pay for a decoder can receive the signals, the cost of such a system would be prohibitive and would outweigh the revenues. |
|
Being able to decipher and understand the meaning of written or printed words constitutes the skill of reading, while being able to encode symbols into recognizable words constitutes the skill of writing. |
|
The software captures photographs, signatures and fingerprints, maintains a secure database of cardholder information, and encode contact, contactless smart chips, and magnetic strips and barcodes. |
|
Encryption refers to algorithmic schemes that encode plain text, such as a card number, into a non-readable form called ciphertext. |
|
Many of the genes encode proteins known as PRD-like homeodomain transcription factors. |
|
Given that auxiliaries encode future, passive, modality, and the perfect, very long chains of verbs at the end of the sentence can occur. |
|
These encode the twenty standard amino acids, giving most amino acids more than one possible codon. |
|
In this paper, we define multiprojective witness sets which will encode the multidegree information of an irreducible multiprojective variety. |
|
Broadcasters of analog television encode their signal using different systems. |
|
In humans, the 16,569 base pairs of mitochondrial DNA encode for only 37 genes. |
|
Mutations in nuclear genes that encode proteins that mitochondria use can also contribute to mitochondrial diseases. |
|
|
Some languages code very little through morphology and are more dependent on syntax to encode meaning and grammatical relationships. |
|
This illustrates how case marking is not only a system to be followed, but one that can be used creatively to encode particular social meanings. |
|
We encode the polyomino in an area word consisting of natural numbers and natural numbers with a bar on top, in the following way. |
|
Five classes of opsin genes encode visual pigments for dim-light and color vision. |
|
One possibility is to use many distinct polarization states of a single photon to encode a large number of digits simultaneously. |
|
The guidelines give recommendations both on what features to encode and how to encode them. |
|
They encode what they're posting using in-jokes, song lyrics, pronouns, and references that outsiders won't recognize. |
|
According to scholars, these encode enigmatic references to learning, religion, mortality, and illusion in the tradition of the Northern Renaissance. |
|
Just as seismic waves produced by earthquakes encode information about Earth's interior, Saturn's ring vibrations betray what's lurking inside the planet. |
|
Collage relies on a technique known as digital steganography, in which an image le is changed to encode the hidden message without affecting the appearance of the image. |
|
Morrow would like eventually to deliver replicons containing genes that encode proteins that shore up damaged neurons and rejuvenate nearby supporting cells. |
|
Choanoflagellates and apusozoa possess a second family of genes that encode a single granulin module linked to a larger protein, as seen also in plants. |
|
In the genome of Mnemiopsis leidyi ten genes encode photoproteins. |
|