Movement expends energy and can attract predators, and increased movement capacity may evolve only at the sacrifice of reproductive effort. |
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Another hallmark of parasites is that hosts often evolve defenses against them. |
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Their parts evolve in a kinetic parallax of curves and angles that create a shifting perceptual spectacle. |
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These must be understood so plans can evolve and adapt to different conditions. |
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That policy is to stop attacking countries that don't espouse Western values, and leave them to evolve in their own way at their own rate. |
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About 1,000 years ago, surnames began to evolve as a hereditary means of identifying people. |
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Bacteria and some viruses multiply and mutate rapidly, and can evolve much more quickly than we can develop new drugs to fight them. |
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Bacteria evolve so fast they will undoubtedly find a way to overcome this, too. |
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So the blogs provide a chance to see thought evolve in complete, unedited sentences over days, weeks, months. |
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Quite unmindfully, organizational practices can evolve that either insure a company's ethicality or future of dubious activity. |
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Intracranial and subarachnoid hemorrhages may evolve into intraventricular hemorrhage and hydrocephalus. |
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This helps the market to evolve to become smarter over time through natural selection. |
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Functionally equivalent genes may evolve heterogeneously across closely related taxa as a consequence of lineage-specific selective pressures. |
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The billions of years believed necessary for the earth to evolve from some nebulous mass simply evaporate when confronted by such evidence. |
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In conclusion, it is of utmost importance that Rastafari continue to evolve to suit the unique demands of now. |
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It continues to evolve and the head-spinning moves and kicks form the basis of break-dancing. |
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Unfazed, members of the band have, it seems, decided to evolve into sonic pioneers instead. |
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The whole theory seems to evolve around the moon landing never happening and actually being shot in a film studio or other Earth based location. |
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Instead, in general relativity the properties of space and time evolve dynamically in interaction with everything they contain. |
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Rush allows the photos to evolve into a physical manifestation of vibrant colour. |
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If the labour market doesn't evolve to accommodate the needs of working mothers, there will be strife at home. |
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Dimerization is usually required for proteins to evolve oligomeric proteins. |
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He grabbed power in a civil war, not a revolution, and advocated voluntarism and cadres to force Socialism rather than evolve it. |
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The chemical reactions by which they do this evolve gas, which is why peas and beans cause wind. |
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Proteins encoded by sperm genes in both males and hermaphrodites evolve more rapidly than most other types of genes. |
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These warm-hearted scenes seem to evolve organically, almost like a documentary about real roommates. |
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Not wanting to wallow in the dead-end mud of emo, the boys have decided to evolve their sound. |
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Emslie admits that no-one is sure how the industry will evolve and that mergers, acquisitions and amalgamations are on the horizon. |
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Programmers must evolve to writing applications in higher programming languages. |
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Populations that did not evolve far from the ancestral stock are all included in the long-ranging B. rhombiferus. |
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In the best fiction, great themes evolve organically from great stories rather than the other way around. |
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If not treated promptly, heat exhaustion may evolve into heatstroke, a deadly form of heat illness. |
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In other words, our ancestral rodents did not merely evolve gradually until they emerged as bipeds with opposable thumbs. |
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An eminent futurologist predicted many years ago that humans would eventually evolve without legs as we would have no use for them. |
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Walford believes Celtic will gradually evolve to take account of the fact that you-know-who is no longer there. |
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Most of his productions evolve out of workshops he conducts, and are performed first in his amphitheatre for a select audience. |
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Over millions of years these organisms would develop, adapt and evolve into newly created organisms. |
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Common law provides a way for property rights to evolve from the bottom up. |
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Not one word is said about how single cells could evolve into a multiple-celled organism. |
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Often called the silent killer, colon cancer is believed to begin when polyps or small benign growths evolve into cancer. |
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Birds did not evolve from massive sauropods or antediluvian, tanklike ankylosaurs or even from the large tyrannosaurs. |
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Current trends suggest six or fewer global food retailers will evolve over the next few years. |
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This behavioral response should force brown anoles to evolve shorter, more nimble limbs in order to survive on the small branches, he said. |
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In some cases, these ideas evolve into a symbolically charged moment of private religious devotion. |
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As a consequence, we believe that the bill has continued to evolve into a workable proposition and a good piece of legislation. |
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Reproductive isolation is often caused by the disruption of genic interactions that evolve in geographically separate populations. |
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The Gaskins name began to evolve in England in the 12th century when Gascons began moving there. |
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Although a molecular clock is rejected, divergence times may still be estimated by allowing the rates of evolution to evolve along lineages. |
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Working in harmony with Nature, our growth and transformation can evolve us beyond Gaia, into the cosmic whole and possibly home. |
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The largest of these is the coconut or robber crab, which has even managed to evolve a skin tough enough to discard the need for a shell. |
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One day the system could evolve into a robotic device for continuous monitoring of crop canopies in a production setting. |
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The self-knowledge that I could never live contentedly elsewhere than in Nova Scotia seemed to evolve to a point of rock-hard certainty. |
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The first vertebrates to evolve true flight were the pterosaurs, flying archosaurian reptiles. |
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Pathogens evolve at a higher rate than humans, or other large, longevous animals. |
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But do we have an obligation to allow machine intelligences to evolve into human-like minds? |
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The linkage between genes and behaviour is clear, but it did not evolve by natural selection. |
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Brains do not evolve and then function as a sort of tabula rasa, molded and formed by culture. |
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In fact, the world's tasters, master distillers and blenders have long realised that whisky and champagne evolve in the bottle. |
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It has enabled us to evolve from a single-celled organism into the dominant species on the planet. |
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Given this level of fine control, it became possible, and advantageous, to evolve teeth with fixed and definite patterns of cusps. |
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Instead, they evolve from simple replicators into sophisticated data processors that can crunch numbers in complicated ways. |
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Records of such credit transfers would in time evolve into two accounting entries. |
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It analyses the contemporary role of the coroner and how the institution of coronership is likely to evolve in the post-Shipman era. |
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The idea was to evolve a comprehensive programme with some aspects each from Yoga and Ayurveda, for a geriatric population. |
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Separate lineages sometimes independently evolve similar features, known as analogous structures. |
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In order to make Ethernet successful in metro networks, it indeed needs to evolve to meet requirements of service providers and carriers. |
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However, his music failed to evolve stylistically after the early 1830s and he was often charged with mannerism by less sympathetic critics. |
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The first parasitic association to evolve between a microbe and an autotroph was probably perthotropic in nature. |
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We can make micro-organisms evolve very quickly in a test tube, by applying an appropriate selective pressure like an antibody. |
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Because their meaning is never fixed, they evolve easily during the operations of transfer and displacement. |
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If second-generation systems can meet these criteria, businesses will be eager to evolve commerce to e-commerce. |
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Our core alliances, therefore, must evolve to meet the demands of this new era or they risk falling into irrelevance. |
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The old rock-and-lava ball had built up a nice ozone shield under which life could evolve at a properly sedate pace. |
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Rather it will slowly evolve as conceptual developments and research methods converge. |
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Unfortunately, when these rules are broken there is a real danger that an ingenuous error will evolve from self-delusion to fraud. |
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In three decades covering the Middle East, I have watched it evolve from a largely rural society to a realm of teeming megacities. |
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May impropriety and bawdiness grow and flourish and evolve into lusty, heartfelt words to shake the very foundations of those scared by language. |
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Intuition tells us that complexity and intricacy should almost never evolve the same way more than once. |
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The distinction between organic and inorganic chemistry became highly relative, and it has continued to evolve in that direction. |
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Because the picture was originally intended as a pilot for cable television, the story lines do not blend together or evolve in a satisfying way. |
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What if I don't care if the beautiful architecture of the city falls into the sea and all its inhabitants either drown or evolve into mermen? |
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The plesiosaurs were beginning to evolve into the familiar long-necked small-headed Plesiosauroidea. |
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That said, like all weirdo songwriters destined to evolve into cranky, bearded hermits, he has inspired his own legion of obsessive completists. |
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Only after these creations did the three gunas evolve followed by Brahma, the demiurge. |
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Block and boulder-strewn nubbins and castle koppies apparently evolve through the further weathering, in the subsurface, of incipient bornhardts. |
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In the eighteenth century the outlook of some groups in the upper and middle classes began to evolve in a new direction. |
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These levels evolve out of the basic training of the dancer and her enlarged vision of the aspects of abhinaya delineation. |
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Such a language will be rootless and will evolve within decades into some kind of Pidgin. |
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By writing comix about how relationships evolve Watson defies expectations. |
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But we're not privy to what is going on inside the artist's head, as his ideas evolve from inchoateness to coherence. |
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Influenza, whose genes evolve a million times faster than ours, is a master of adaptability. |
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For insects on plants, demes may evolve in response to local abiotic features, rather than to the natal host plant. |
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Parents can help children develop the skills and confidence to overcome fears so that they don't evolve into phobic reactions. |
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Not all polyps become cancerous, but nearly all colorectal cancers evolve from polyps. |
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Resonant triangular relationships evolve between you and your special friend and those below that see you. |
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Why would the only monkey in South America to evolve trichromatic vision be the one that eats the least amount of fruit? |
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Defined benefit plans need to evolve to the Internet age with frequent access to benefit accruals and projections. |
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An enanthema may be noted, and vesicles may evolve to shallow erosions, primarily on the palate. |
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What is the critical mass of humanity that it will take for all of the human race to evolve to its next level? |
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Recent work shows that these theorems don't hold in the case of co-evolution, when two or more species evolve in response to one another. |
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But it is a challenge for the human race to evolve into the next stage of our spiritual development. |
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Fans of the AMC hit have seen Megan evolve from an earnest secretary to Mrs. draper, from struggling actress to soap-opera star. |
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If this is to be achieved, man must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. |
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He expected European capitalism to evolve spontaneously into a market socialism of worker-owned cooperatives. |
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Symptoms of radiation sickness evolve over time in distinct phases. |
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Under the ecological theory of adaptive radiation, adaptation and reproductive isolation are thought to evolve as a result of divergent natural selection. |
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The bottom line is that the state will continue to evolve from the traditional welfare role towards an agent of modernisation and structural reform. |
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Darwin was among the many scientists that have helped society evolve out of mysticism, superstition and faith. |
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These sketches evolve into larger, more intense ink prints that deepen and fade with each additional attempt. |
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Finally, Lee embodies a kind of nationalism in his own physical presence and allows his body to evolve as the filmic representation of nationalism. |
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If all nature evolves, why should the laws of nature not evolve as well? |
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Had dinosaurs not been annihilated by an asteroidal impact, mammals might still be small, nocturnal insect-eaters unable to evolve higher intelligence. |
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Even the Model T would evolve into a gas-guzzler with tail fins. |
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In response, web servers must evolve to satisfy these demands. |
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The immensity of choice protected by the law of our land continues to evolve with us. |
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Many film texts evolve as original works written directly for the screen. |
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Though the industry had been deliberating at length over the crisis for long, they failed to evolve a consensus and ultimately the exhibitors had to step in to bell the cat. |
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Perhaps the system will evolve toward a Gaussian distribution, with most people having a middling amount of money, while a few are very poor and a few are rich? |
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A no vote in France would also put pressure on Mr Blair to find acceptable minimalist reforms or see the EU evolve into a diffuse multi-speed bloc. |
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They would see their transportation evolve from walking and horse power to steam-powered locomotives, to electric trolley cars, to gasoline-powered automobiles. |
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Working models may start life as physical representations of verbal, sketched or signalled communication, and through iterative generations may evolve into novel bitsers. |
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Case studies and observations indicate that although online communities will evolve according to the needs of members they also require a host, co-ordinator or moderator. |
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The theory that the CPC will eventually evolve into an umbrella party which covers different factions within the party like Japan's LDP isn't new. |
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It is even possible that something akin to racism could evolve one day, as those who are financially challenged will be branded as such by their unattractiveness. |
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New saltmarshes, mudflats and sandflats would evolve and help to form natural sea defences, as well as create a prime location for rare species to make their homes. |
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While they haven't completely gone in a new direction, their sound just continues to evolve in an increasingly complex, and previously undefinable way. |
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How did the novel evolve away from your original idea of it, and can you say something the editorial process, the paring away. |
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Previous analyses have demonstrated that these elements are passed vertically within species and evolve at rates similar to those of nuclear genes. |
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It's sobering news that a virulent pathogen can evolve so quickly. |
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Jayadev believes that Alkazi welded pedagogic and creative strains, the oriental and the occidental, to evolve his own methodology of theatre training. |
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All systems that try to promote a mixture of both free enterprise and state intervention inevitably evolve into some form of authoritarian statism. |
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Oftentimes the most successful developments are those that evolve slowly. |
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We are delighted to have onboarded such a talented pool of individuals who will be vital in helping the company evolve to the next phase of its growth. |
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We will outline a simple Fourier space Brownian dynamics algorithm that allows us to stochastically evolve a thermal membrane surface forward in time. |
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This group has continued to evolve and even to split into subgroups. |
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Over the years Michele's designs continued to evolve from napkin holders and bracelets to earrings, necklaces, chokers and hair accessories at a rapid pace. |
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According to the generally accepted view of gene duplication and evolution, the redundancy created by duplication allows paralogous gene copies to evolve new functions. |
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Following a duplication event, the two paralogous genes may evolve under different selective constraints and thus may show different patterns of molecular evolution. |
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Untreated Hepatitis B can evolve into liver cirrhosis and liver cancer. |
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It is a sign of how quickly technology can evolve that those desktops, once the sign of individual liberation, now seem somewhat clunky themselves. |
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How might the world evolve from where we are toward a balanced regime that promotes collective security, distributive justice, cultural pluralism and individual freedom? |
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The State must evolve a legal framework for development of tourism in conformity with international standards, and create conditions for the promotion of cultural tourism. |
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Hence an awareness of the inverse of differentiation began to evolve naturally and the idea that integral and derivative were inverses to each other were familiar to Barrow. |
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These studies demonstrated that performance and preference of host-plant use may be genetically associated by linkage or pleiotropy, and evolve as correlated traits. |
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They realized that the store needed to evolve to meet the needs of modern consumers, and so in 1986, Chesterton's hometown five-and-dime metamorphosed into a craft store. |
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Replacement substitutions are extremely variable in rate, ranging from many sites that are essentially invariant to a few that evolve fairly rapidly. |
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Studying how they evolve and move through human and animal populations might identify new flu reservoirs and enable the emergence of new strains to be predicted. |
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In warfare, as in nature, you have to evolve to stay ahead of the game. |
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Yet the tectonic and geomorphological processes by which these margins continue to evolve long after sea-floor spreading is effected are not wholly evident. |
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Yet it is Dharma by which the seeker of truth can evolve to gnosis. |
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Endothermy did evolve from ectothermy, and birds did evolve from dinosaurs, which we know came from ectothermic ancestors sometime in the distant past. |
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In this work, networks are conceived as dynamic systems that self-assemble and evolve in time through the addition and removal of actors and ties. |
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Our model assumes that populations evolve with temporal variation in outcrossing rates with no genetic drift, no selection, and with the random mating of outcrossing gametes. |
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Playing on the idea of urban ruin, the garden will evolve to become rambling and overgrown, allowing the omnifarious grasses, low level creepers and fragrant plants to really grow into their own. |
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When several forms are obtainable from a single aecium it is most probably that hybridization will sometimes occur and possibly evolve new forms, or yield forms already known. |
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Viruses, bacteria, fungi and cancers evolve to be resistant to host immune defences, as well as pharmaceutical drugs. |
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During the Principate, the tactical organization of the Army continued to evolve. |
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This regional fashion continues to evolve into both more modern and purer forms. |
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Beer writing was to evolve into beer blogging, leaders in both fields including Martyn Cornell, Pete Brown, Roger Protz and Melissa Cole. |
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In the late 14th century, the sophisticated court style of International Gothic developed, which continued to evolve until the late 15th century. |
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In addition, other forms evolve, such as small lamps with a flat base and larger lamps with a round base. |
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So how could such a critical thing as language evolve in humans, and was its evolution gradual or punctuational? |
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Instead, these are allowed to evolve according to the political and social forces arising throughout its history. |
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Beyond that, how will China evolve its rigid Internet policy? |
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As time went on, his strokes began to evolve into looser, freer ones. |
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Despite being the first romance language to evolve from Vulgar Latin, Sardinian does not fit well at all into this sort of division. |
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Sometime after 1520, Zwingli's theological model began to evolve into an idiosyncratic form that was neither Erasmian nor Lutheran. |
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During shooting, the screenplays continued to evolve, in part due to contributions from cast members looking to further explore their characters. |
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Melt, crystals, and bubbles usually have different densities, and so they can separate as magmas evolve. |
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It helped create a niche which allowed a small tree shrew to come down to the ground and evolve into the human race. |
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A gradual shift of power during the 8th century led the kingdom of the Franks to evolve into the Carolingian Empire. |
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Cyanobacteria were the first organisms to evolve the ability to photosynthesize, introducing a steady supply of oxygen into the environment. |
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This contemporized his image and allowed him to evolve with the changes that took place in the sixties. |
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These lenses evolve at the top towards a high-temperature cinder facies, composed of melted rhomboids in a yellow matrix. |
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Fish, the world's first true vertebrates, continued to evolve, and those with jaws may have first appeared late in the period. |
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Over time, this hydrogen fuel is completely converted into helium, and the star begins to evolve. |
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Myths thus evolve through the conscious conjunction of the Coleridgean primary and secondary imaginations. |
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In the 19th century, biologists grasped that species could evolve given sufficient time. |
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The evolutionary process by which biological populations evolve to become distinct species is called speciation. |
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Some of the early, primitive dinosaurs also became extinct, but more adaptive ones survived to evolve into the Jurassic. |
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Chromosomes evolve more dynamically in sedges than in any other group of flowering plants. |
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Also appearing at the end of the Permian were the first cynodonts, which would go on to evolve into mammals during the Triassic. |
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As the dominant techniques evolve, so do different descriptions of salinity. |
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Two of these evolve to the point of seafloor spreading, while the third ultimately fails, becoming an aulacogen. |
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Fish would continue to evolve through the Paleozoic era, diversifying into a wide variety of forms. |
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Wise words from one of advertising's elder statesmen, who has seen the industry evolve from TV, radio, and print to today's splinternet. |
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Bochy was speaking for the masses, who watched a supposed duel of Cy Young award winners evolve into a full-fledged shellacking. |
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After 6 to 12 months of transplantation, the expansion led to the development of a myeloproliferative disease, which can evolve to leukaemia. |
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Daughter cells might then evolve to carry out specific tasks for the mother cell, in a scenario of flagella in real microorganisms. |
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In a growth mindset, challenges, mistakes and struggles are opportunities to learn and to evolve into the person you want to become. |
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In 1619, the first Africans arrived, though the concept of racially based slavery did not evolve for several decades. |
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Your role as an eductor has changed and will continue to evolve as technology evolves. |
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Such a class would become increasingly brittle and fragile should South Africa evolve into a more pluralised democracy. |
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How did the lowly photocopy evolve to become a business-changing commodity? |
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Along with a sense of history, traditions have a fluidity that cause them to evolve and adapt over time. |
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Magmas will evolve to the eutectic because of igneous differentiation, or because they represent low degrees of partial melting. |
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The second and more important advantage geography gave to the northerners is related to the land area available for their ancestors to evolve in. |
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Did gemmiferous shoots evolve de novo in the huperzioid lineage, or were they modified from shoots of an anisodichotomously branching ancestor? |
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The fish has a nerve cord down its back and is said to be regarded as a representative of the first animals to evolve a backbone. |
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Complex adaptations tend to evolve gradually, and the trend toward encephalization is no exception. |
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The curia regis would later evolve into Parliament, the Lord Chancellor becoming the prolocutor of its upper house, the House of Lords. |
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Daisy then allowed the Targeteer to evolve into a true BB gun that was even more anemic because of the heavier shot. |
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Secondly, by reducing domestic gene flow, wild populations would continue to evolve within their contemporary environment. |
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Lastly, the most recent area of the brain to evolve is the cortex, sometimes called the neocortex. |
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Since then, the combination of Earth's distance from the Sun, physical properties, and geological history have allowed life to evolve and thrive. |
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Only in England and the Netherlands did representative government evolve as an alternative. |
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You need to evolve as a human being first, like I did when I went for a scriptwriting course and learnt baking. |
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Grammars evolve through usage and also due to separations of the human population. |
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Over the next quarter of the century the relationship between the various members of the Commonwealth continued to evolve. |
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Mineral compositions vary as magmas evolve in sub-volcanic, lithospheric magma chambers by assimilation and differentiation. |
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This Elizabethan Religious Settlement was to evolve into the Church of England. |
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Extra copies of genes are a major source of the raw material needed for new genes to evolve. |
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Here, plants evolve that have resistance to high levels of metals in the soil. |
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He said that it took another 3 million years for elephants to evolve the high-crowned teeth, which are better suited for the grittier, grassy food. |
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The system would continue to evolve through the disappearance of Chauci raiders and their replacement by the Frankish and Saxon ones, up to the end of the 4th century. |
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The skin lesions tended to be fewer and evolve more quickly, are more superficial, and may not show the uniform characteristic of more typical smallpox. |
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But if such badges aren't metabolically costly for animals to produce, why don't fake badges evolve that give milquetoasts the appearance of higher status? |
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Can evolve to a very frequent Less commonly, headache lacks migraine condition migrainous features or is with or without acute or completely absent. |
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They elaborated their constraints, to help find solutions collectively and to evolve a sustainable perspective plan to increase the use of biopesticides. |
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Trade languages can eventually evolve into fully developed languages in their own right such as Swahili, distinct from the languages they were originally influenced by. |
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If the chemical reaction networks remain open-ended, then biochemists may have developed a plausible example of how such networks began to evolve into living things. |
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They and Liverpool seamen helped to evolve lobscouse, the meat and potato stew, whose name, shortened to 'Scouse' has since become the label of every Liverpudlian. |
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The lesion may evolve from a dental germ or from the periodontal membrane, and therefore may invariably be related to the coronal or radicular portion of teeth. |
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Compliance adhocracy exists as new policies, laws and regulations evolve over time and no one can describe a holistic view of the end-to-end compliance infrastructure. |
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Ted Devine, Insurance Noodle CEO, said, 'Insurance coverage tailored to the technology sector is increasingly important as risks evolve at warp speed. |
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Societies, like organisms, evolve throughout history, thrive for a time, but inevitably become weak and die out, giving place to a stronger, superior breed. |
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For carnivory, the trait could only evolve if the increase in nutrients from prey capture exceeded the cost of investment in carnivorous adaptations. |
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Around 50,000 BP, modern human culture started to evolve more rapidly. |
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In contrast, resistance to root rot fungus in jarrah trees has a significant heritability, so jarrahs can evolve to resist the introduced dieback. |
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Myelodysplastic syndrome is a heterogeneous group of clonal stem cell disorders that give rise to progressive cytopenias, which can evolve into acute myelogenous leukemia. |
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In 1865, after the end of the Civil War, Gray established his law practice in Boston, Massachusetts, which would eventually evolve into the modern firm of Ropes and Gray. |
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During the Carboniferous some species of dipnoid fish had 30 million years to evolve into reptiles, unless new discoveries may point to other origins for reptiles. |
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In the current study, we demonstrate that fossorialization can evolve repeatedly even within a single genus and at a relatively shallow time scale. |
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The distinct cultural and ethnic identity of the Normans emerged initially in the first half of the 10th century, and it continued to evolve over the succeeding centuries. |
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Thrash soon began to evolve and split into more extreme metal genres. |
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Magnolias are some of the most primitive of our flowering trees, and fossils dating back millennia prove that they have had little need to evolve. |
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Regional disputes, however, quickly compelled Qatar to resign and declare independence from the coalition which would eventually evolve into the United Arab Emirates. |
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Poulton realized in 1903 that reproductive isolation could evolve through divergence, if each lineage acquired a different, incompatible allele of the same gene. |
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From the 12th century, Middle Irish began to evolve into modern Irish in Ireland, into Scottish Gaelic in Scotland, and into the Manx language in the Isle of Man. |
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In 1959 he started the Detours, the band that was to evolve into the Who. |
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This contrasts with settlements that evolve in a more ad hoc fashion. |
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Evolving organisms inevitably change the environment they evolve in. |
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Access to a wider range of structures and functions would allow organisms to evolve in different directions, increasing the number of niches that could be inhabited. |
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Recent work has suggested that coastal dunes tend to evolve toward a high or low morphology depending on the growth rate of dunes relative to storm frequency. |
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New species evolve from previous species via a speciation process. |
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Amphibians were the dominant land vertebrates, of which one branch would eventually evolve into amniotes, the first solely terrestrial vertebrates. |
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The snekkjas continued to evolve after the end of the Viking age, with later Norwegian examples becoming larger and heavier than Viking age ships. |
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This empire would gradually evolve into the modern states of France, Germany, Italy, and others, though the Frankish identity remained most closely identified with France. |
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In the resulting ecological vacuum, rodents and other Glires were allowed to evolve and diversify, taking the niches left by extinct multituberculates. |
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And the final movement commences as if it will evolve into a kind of heavily figurated set of chorale variations but develops into something less easily defined. |
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This focus on arrisanal, fresh cocktails continues to evolve as bar managers are taking their queue from the kitchen in the mixers and purees that they choose. |
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Against such a toxin, it may be difficult to evolve to a resistant state, based either on lack of uptake or on dispensability of intracellular targets. |
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In this scenario, Type III cluster will evolve vertically and horizontally, by aligning with other similar Type III clusters creating a homogenous super cluster. |
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There is a great deal of parallelism and convergence among rodents caused by the fact that they have tended to evolve to fill largely similar niches. |
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Indeed, if we have initially a small rectangular patch of tracer, smaller than the characteristic scale of the flow so that the rectangle will evolve into a parallelepiped. |
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The separated margins of the continents evolve to form passive margins. |
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Most strong storms lose their strength very rapidly after landfall and become disorganized areas of low pressure within a day or two, or evolve into extratropical cyclones. |
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And as employer-provided health care benefits continue to evolve for a growing number of Americans, you might be able to add out-of-pocket health care costs to the list, too. |
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Plants evolve mechanisms of resistance to being eaten by caterpillars, including the evolution of chemical toxins and physical barriers such as hairs. |
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The market process could not develop and evolve without a coterminously evolving, clearly defined and enforceable set of rules of property and contract of course. |
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Nuclear reactions produce energetic particles ions and neutrons that can damage materials as their energy disperses, causing the formation of flaws that evolve over time. |
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Evolve a revolving roundtable of women, or men, with diverse, unpredictable views. |
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This 120W system from emerging Taiwanese firm Evolve shakes up the soundbar concept somewhat with bluetooth trickery and an enticing price tag. |
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The Evolve process requires no extra process tanks or processing times when compared with conventional metalization cycles. |
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Professor and Director of Monish Heart, at Monish Medical Centre in Melbourne, Australia and the principal investigator of the EVOLVE clinical study. |
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Evolve Technologies will ensure our network runs smoothly, by providing Element H2O with a custom preventative maintenance program to effectively manage our computer network. |
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Detailed control over the surfaces in solidThinking Evolve affords enormous modeling freedom without complexity, says Sundog Eyewear Creative Director, Michal Hrk. |
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