Thus in order to interdigitate across the center of gel phase bilayers, the long acyl chain of the sphingolipid probably must be long enough. |
|
The 20-year-old model has signed on as the face of accessorize, a jewelry and accessory chain. |
|
Since its inception, the business has expanded to become a national retail chain. |
|
The new book chronicles the chain of events leading up to the crime. |
|
This supermarket chain adopts several families every Yuletide, providing them with money and groceries for the holidays. |
|
After paying out chain, we swung clear, but our anchors were no doubt afoul of hers. |
|
She snaps the chain of the overhead bulb at the same moment a thin slice of white cat, an antishadow, slips past her legs. |
|
Killer whales are the oceans' apex predators, which means they are at the top of the food chain. |
|
Using the right moves, you can sometimes chain 2 specials in a row to form multiple hit combos. |
|
The big company's newest acquisition is a small chain of clothing stores. |
|
The large chain stores are siphoning profits from the small local stores. |
|
In a food chain, there is also reliable energy transfer through each stage. |
|
What was previously a kelp forest becomes an urchin barren that may last for years and this can have a profound effect on the food chain. |
|
High levels of organic chemicals accumulate in these animals since they are high in the food chain. |
|
They have large reserves of blubber, more so for toothed whales as they are higher up the food chain than baleen whales. |
|
Toxic compounds they produce can make their way up the food chain, resulting in animal mortality. |
|
On 12 November 2009, a man was killed and a woman injured after a chain broke and the two people were hit with pieces of the chain. |
|
Damaging chain overshifts from misadjusted derailleurs can occur after wheel swaps, but they're avoidable. |
|
One other derailleur problem I should mention is that of chain overshift or overshooting the gear you select. |
|
Pallas was in poor condition, having a chain passed around the ship to hold the armour plates in place. |
|
|
This comprises two moored, floating contact mines which are tethered together by a length of steel cable or chain. |
|
At this time, the Afrika Korps consisted of the two divisions, and was subordinated to the Italian chain of command in Africa. |
|
The Ryukyu Islands, which include Okinawa, are a chain to the south of Kyushu. |
|
Such erosional material of a growing mountain chain is called molasse and has either a shallow marine or a continental facies. |
|
The topography is dominated by the American Cordillera, a long chain of mountains that runs the length of the west coast. |
|
These mountains were formed when Africa and America collided, and were once a chain rivaling today's Himalayas. |
|
Today, the remains of this chain can be seen in the Fall Line region in the Eastern United States. |
|
The Greenland Sea is densely inhabited by the organisms that form the base of the oceanic food chain. |
|
Its eastern border is the Sea Islands, a chain of tidal and barrier islands. |
|
The Black Sea is connected to the World Ocean by a chain of two shallow straits, the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus. |
|
A team led by Marie Tharp and Bruce Heezen analyzed the data and concluded that there was an enormous mountain chain running up the middle. |
|
In these locations, chemosynthetic archaea and bacteria typically form the base of the food chain. |
|
This long chain of islands and seamounts extends thousands of kilometers northwest from the island of Hawaii. |
|
The Walvis Ridge is one of few examples of a hotspot seamount chain that links a flood basalt province to an active hotspot. |
|
Although commonly referred to as a mountain chain, the Carpathians do not actually form an uninterrupted chain of mountains. |
|
Hydrophobic contaminants bioaccumulate in fatty tissues, biomagnifying up the food chain and pressuring apex predators and humans. |
|
The Atlantic halibut occupies a relatively high trophic level in the food chain. |
|
The fishery has yet to recover, and may not recover at all because of a possibly stable change in the food chain. |
|
By manipulating the food chain, a process called biomanipulation, algae can be removed. |
|
Two high voltage power supplies at the high and low energy ends transfer charge to the pelletron chain. |
|
|
The two towns are connected by the Cowes Floating Bridge, a chain ferry operated by the Isle of Wight Council. |
|
It is a chain ferry, and is one of the few remaining not to be replaced by a physical bridge. |
|
Local campaigns resulted in the rejection of proposals for the opening of branches of the Argos retail and in 2010 the Wetherspoon's pub chain. |
|
Cowes is connected to East Cowes by a chain ferry known as the Cowes Floating Bridge. |
|
As well as the chain ferry, the River Medina has several small ferries which cater mainly for sailors. |
|
It is one of a few remaining chain ferries not replaced by a physical bridge. |
|
The engine of an underbone typically drives the rear wheel by a chain of the kind used on a conventional motorcycle. |
|
This final drive is often concealed by a chain enclosure to keep the chain clean and reduce wear. |
|
This is a pointed weight attached at its blunt end to a length of rope or chain, which can be used to throw and retrieve it. |
|
The initial reason was probably to prevent mice and rats from climbing down the chain to eat the oil. |
|
They are made of metal and either suspended on a chain or screwed onto a pedestal. |
|
Sometimes a simple change triggers a chain shift in which the entire phonological system is affected. |
|
No one enters it except bound with a chain, as an inferior acknowledging the might of the local divinity. |
|
These informants are typically asked to identify other informants who represent the community, often using snowball or chain sampling. |
|
The gaps between the camps were closed by a chain of watchtowers or signal towers. |
|
This binding then sets off a chain of events that can be visibly obvious in various ways, dependent upon the test. |
|
Two new islands were formed in 2011 and 2013 in the Zubair Archipelago, a small chain of islands owned by Yemen. |
|
This chain, which floated on logs, was strong enough to prevent any Turkish ship from entering the harbour. |
|
It served as a model for a chain of African feitorias, Elmina Castle being the most notorious. |
|
On top of the shield is a conch shell, which represents the varied marine life of the island chain. |
|
|
The depression is home to a chain of salt lakes, including Lake Azuei in Haiti and Lake Enriquillo in the Dominican Republic. |
|
A chain was strung through the water from the base of the tower to prevent boats from traveling into the river port. |
|
Fifteen million years ago, the main tectonic uplift phase of the Andean chain started. |
|
It now amounts to only a chain of limestone shoals remaining above sea level. |
|
It is on the north side of the Banda Sea, part of a chain of volcanic islands that encircle the sea. |
|
The region consists almost entirely of an uninterrupted chain of volcanic arcs and oceanic trenches, and experiences continual plate movement. |
|
Some manufacturers will need to cut costs by moving up the value chain or moving to more undeveloped regions. |
|
After leaving Puerto Rico, they sailed northwest along the great chain of Bahama Islands, known then as the Lucayos. |
|
On June 14 they set sail again looking for a chain of islands in the west that had been described by their captives. |
|
It is the fourth largest island in the Bahamas island chain of approximately 700 islands and 2,400 cays. |
|
Huascar was named after a huge gold chain that was made to mark the occasion of his birth. |
|
The United States Navy controls San Nicolas Island and San Clemente Island, and has installations elsewhere in the chain. |
|
Their concentrations in polar bear tissues continued to rise for decades after being banned as these chemicals spread through the food chain. |
|
Vaygach Island and the islands of Novaya Zemlya form a further continuation of the chain to the north into the Arctic Ocean. |
|
Vaygach Island and the island of Novaya Zemlya form a further continuation of the chain on the north. |
|
Nonetheless, a chain of Russian pickets was established on the Bukhtarma River, north of Lake Zaysan. |
|
Practically all of the sea's islands are either in coastal waters or belong to the various islands making up the Kuril Islands chain. |
|
These pesticides, as well as fertilizers, end up in the soil, waterways, and the food chain. |
|
This is transported up an apron chain consisting of steel links several feet wide, which separates some of the dirt. |
|
The High German consonant shift is a good example of a chain shift, as was its predecessor, the first Germanic consonant shift. |
|
|
Grimm's law consists of three parts which form consecutive phases in the sense of a chain shift. |
|
These pseudoradicals are not directly chain carriers in the reduction of peroxydisulfate, but they can further build up oxygen radical ions. |
|
The Great Vowel Shift was a chain shift affecting all of the long vowels of Middle English. |
|
It is also possible for chain shifts to occur synchronically, within the phonology of a language as it exists at a single point in time. |
|
Synchronic chain shifts are an example of the theoretical problem of phonological opacity. |
|
Basically buff pet, have it pull lots of mobs, shield pet, chain heal pet, have your aoe casters finish off hurt mobs once pet gets good aggro. |
|
The Appalachians are actually a huge chain that extends from Alabama to Newfoundland. |
|
Because of the extensive length of the mountain chain, noticeable variation also exists within this subdialect. |
|
In English, the term Leeward Islands refers to the northern islands of the Lesser Antilles chain. |
|
The more southerly part of this chain, starting with Martinique, is called the Windward Islands. |
|
The chain of Windward Islands forms a part of the easternmost boundary of the Caribbean Sea. |
|
Between the defendant's acts and the victim's harm, the chain of causation must be unbroken. |
|
Whether the acts of a third party break the chain of causation depends on whether the intervention was foreseeable. |
|
The cockatoo was tied with dunny chain to the outside rear-vision mirror from which perch it shrieked and wailed and attacked its own reflection. |
|
This was not possible as long as the beam and the rod were connected by a chain. |
|
In the town's shopping district, department stores and chain stores closed. |
|
He improved upon the hydraulic presses invented by Joseph Bramah, and in 1825 designed a huge press for testing chain cables. |
|
Worsley Old Hall is now a public house and restaurant in the Brunning and Price chain, part of the Restaurant Group. |
|
For example, they are a critical part of the supply chain for all sides of the conflict in remote parts of Afghanistan. |
|
A long chain was tied between Phoenix on the northern track, and the three remaining carriages of the Duke's train on the southern track. |
|
|
The report found Gap had rigorous social audit systems since 2004 to eliminate child labour in its supply chain. |
|
In 2014 the pub chain Wetherspoons opened a branch in Penrith, naming it after the Dog Beck. |
|
Both mark the beginning of a larger horseshoe chain of hills known as the Kentmere Round. |
|
Early cable ferries often used either rope or steel chains, with the latter resulting in the alternate name of chain ferry. |
|
They occur along the whole chain of the Cordilleras and Andes, in the West Indies, New Zealand, Japan, etc. |
|
Hemingway suffered a severe injury in their Paris bathroom when he pulled a skylight down on his head thinking he was pulling on a toilet chain. |
|
South of the pass the same chain is in Umbria and includes a number of parklands considered by the Italians to be in the northern Apennines. |
|
The Apennines are much younger, extend from northwest to southeast, and are not a displacement of the Alpine chain. |
|
He did not desire to cross this rugged mountain chain and to descend into the Po valley with exhausted troops only to have to fight a battle. |
|
Supermarket chain Morrisons has its head office in Bradford as does water utility company Yorkshire Water. |
|
Shortly after opening it was renamed the Playhouse, and by 1972 it was part of the Classic cinema chain. |
|
The castles once operated a defensive chain across the estuary, which was raised at dusk to destroy enemy ships attempting to attack the harbour. |
|
The remains of the operating mechanisms for the chain are still visible in Dartmouth castle. |
|
Just then a prisoner broke a gate chain with an iron bar and a number of the prisoners pressed through to the prison market square. |
|
But without its own respected brands, its Toyotas and Samsungs, China will always languish at the lower end of the value chain. |
|
And thus began what is by far the most horrendous chain of events in my young, semitortured life. |
|
If you get some chain letter that's threatening to leave you shagless or luckless for the rest of your life, delete it. |
|
These early smuthounds were children of the great chain of religious awakenings known as the evangelical revival. |
|
I jumped out with a piece of thin chain, which I snickled round her neck, and pulled her aboard. |
|
He wore black three-quarter cargo pants with that same strange belt, except his had a chain running from that to his cargos. |
|
|
A chainless bicycle transmits power to the driven wheel through a mechanism other than a metal chain. |
|
The Manhattan Project produced the first recorded controlled chain reaction. |
|
Another ring, from the same locality, with a cross of simpler form engraved on the chaton was found attached to a chain. |
|
The pizza chain was forced to close several locations and cut employees loose. |
|
She had put a daffodowndilly behind each ear, and twisted a dandelion chain around her neck. |
|
She was also almost naked, except for a couple of mere scraps of the lightest chain mail and riding boots of iridescent dragonhide. |
|
Vast chain of being, which from God began, Natures ethereal, human, angel, man. |
|
At the top of the food chain is PJ's, whose pizza wins high accolades, and whose menu of fat sandwiches is extensive. |
|
With my promotion this month I will continue my steady journey to the top of the food chain. |
|
In historical linguistics, a chain shift is a set of sound changes affecting a group of phonemes. |
|
The Upstate region contains the roots of an ancient, eroded mountain chain. |
|
The lady girt herself with silver chain, from which she hung a golden shear. |
|
Francine sat in the glider on the porch, swinging lightly, her mind a thousand miles away. The chain squeaked a little, almost like a cricket. |
|
Nothing beats outside basketball with a gripless rubber ball, a chain net, and a bent rim. |
|
These tiny organisms are crucial elements of the food chain supporting many species of fish. |
|
It was a chain shift, meaning that each shift triggered a subsequent shift in the vowel system. |
|
Each bullock had a heavy leather neck-strap on, fitted with a hobble chain and swivel, and a spare rope around its neck. |
|
Records of their speech show that Irish and Scottish Gaelic existed in a dialect chain with no clear language boundary. |
|
Hamoudi, my guide, sings his way uphill. He leads a pack mule by a chain, bowed against an icy wind. His faded kaffiyeh snaps like a flag. |
|
This set in motion a chain of events that almost led to the engines being produced much sooner than actually occurred. |
|
|
The first amphibians also evolved, and the fish were now at the top of the food chain. |
|
The main subjects taught at the college are related to the food chain and much research is done there. |
|
Sheffield City Council has created a new chain of parks spanning the hill side behind Sheffield Station. |
|
Truro has various chain stores, speciality shops and markets, which reflect its historic tradition as a market town. |
|
Michelin, one of the largest tire manufacturers allowed Sears, an American retail chain to place their brand name on the tires. |
|
Delays have also negatively affected the program's worldwide supply chain and partner organizations as well. |
|
It was soon noted by Hahn that if neutrons were released during fission, then a chain reaction was possible. |
|
In this context function composition is complicated to express, because the chain rule is not simply applied to second and higher derivatives. |
|
On the other side of the beam was a chain attached to a pump at the base of the mine. |
|
However, it remained in use into the 1970s where a satisfactory cold chain was available. |
|
The Engine's Card Reader is not constrained to simply process the cards in a chain one after another from start to finish. |
|
These relationships involve the life history of the organism, its position in the food chain and its geographic range. |
|
The chain has a whipping action-like many of the loose-handed whipping motions of the Northern bare-handed styles. |
|
There is a common misconception that publishing houses make large profits and that authors are the lowest paid in the publishing chain. |
|
Airbus sized the production facilities and supply chain for a production rate of four A380s per month. |
|
The Firkin chain consisted of pubs offering cask ale brewed on the premises, or at another brewpub in the chain. |
|
Bucking the trend somewhat are craft beer outlets, the Wetherspoons chain, and the micropub movement. |
|
However, that chain was sold and eventually its pubs ceased brewing their own beer. |
|
On the one hand the standard of right and wrong, on the other the chain of causes and effects, are fastened to their throne. |
|
Five of nine versions published by Alice Gomme in 1894 included references to a prisoner who has stolen a watch and chain. |
|
|
The camping retail chain Millets, and independent shops, set up makeshift outlets at the festival. |
|
Honda sells genuine accessories through a separate retail chain called Honda Access for both their motorcycle, scooter and automobile products. |
|
Buyers of used vehicles are directed to a specific Honda retail chain that sells only used vehicles called Honda Auto Terrace. |
|
The team was owned by the Benetton family who run a worldwide chain of clothing stores of the same name. |
|
The Tudor rose used on the chain in the portrait of Sir Thomas More by Hans Holbein the Younger. |
|
For example, chain making in Cradley Heath seems only to have begun in about the 1820s, and the Lye holloware industry is even more recent. |
|
The first arrivals would prepare the way for their kinsmen who continued to arrive in the chain migration. |
|
As the week drew on, the airfield attacks moved further inland, and repeated raids were made on the radar chain. |
|
A strong chain of regional offices was set up within its planning ministry to provide a strong lead in regional development policies. |
|
Open the double doors to the south and get the mithril plate boots and mithril chain leggings. |
|
In the south of Scotland lie the Southern Uplands, a vast, rolling mountain chain that is less rugged and more forested than the Highlands. |
|
A series of six passages separates each of the islands or island groups in the chain. |
|
Some areas, such as Hong Kong, have preferred to shape their policy around a tighter focus on copyright ownership in the value chain. |
|
Levene thought the chain was short and the bases repeated in a fixed order. |
|
At the peak of construction up to 14,000 people are expected to be needed in the project's supply chain. |
|
Researchers say the oil and dispersant mixture, including PAHs, permeated the food chain through zooplankton. |
|
According to the Freie Universitaet Berlin, this mountain chain is classified as South Central European. |
|
Two chains represent the human and Godly nature of the Son, one chain for the Father and one chain for the Holy Spirit. |
|
Even more important than that chain of links was Britain's determination to honour its commitment to defend Belgium. |
|
Along with the tour sellout, the Spice Girls licensed their name and image to Tesco's UK supermarket chain. |
|
|
He said that these problems had been caused by her chain smoking crack cocaine. |
|
Thus, methanol, ethanol, and propanol are miscible in water because the hydroxyl group wins out over the short carbon chain. |
|
From then on, he wore a heavy iron chain cilice around his waist, next to the skin, each Lent as penance, adding extra ounces every year. |
|
What was reputed to be James IV's body recovered by the English did not have the iron chain round its waist. |
|
This dispute was a link in the chain of events that soon brought about the American Revolution. |
|
The other main hill group is the long chain running from Drumochter in the W almost to the sea just S of Aberdeen. |
|
In special cases the senior class may wear the badge on a collar, which is an elaborate chain around the neck. |
|
Primarily centred on the city centre, there are a large number of chain stores, as well as the Thistles shopping centre. |
|
They are normally hollow and it is presumed that they were worn on a string or chain round the neck. |
|
They lived in hill forts running in a chain through the Clwydian Range and their tribal capital was Canovium. |
|
Mercury can then enter into the human food chain in the form of methylmercury. |
|
In 1283, King Edward I completed his conquest of Wales which he secured by a chain of castles and walled towns. |
|
The Haight is now home to some expensive boutiques and a few controversial chain stores, although it still retains some bohemian character. |
|
The measure is based on the reputation of the Waffle House restaurant chain for staying open during extreme weather. |
|
As for seafood supply chains in general, the supply chain consists of a fisher, processor, distribution and finally the retailer. |
|
In 2006, British supermarket chain Morrisons withdrew bara brith from sale at 19 of its Welsh based stores. |
|
Her bakery had previously supplied British supermarket chain Safeway with bara brith, before it was bought out by Morrisons. |
|
An exception is the Ophiocanopidae, in which the gonads do not open into bursae and are instead paired in a chain along the basal arm joints. |
|
In general however, there are few predators preying on jellyfish and they can be considered top predators in the food chain. |
|
The need to develop and protect the port led to a chain of lighthouses being built along the north the Wirral coast. |
|
|
The previous equation cannot be applied to the decay chain, but can be generalized as follows. |
|
Because 240Pu also occurs in the decay chain of 244Pu, it must thus also be present in secular equilibrium, albeit in even tinier quantities. |
|
The Hawaiian volcanic chain is a series of shield cones, and they are common in Iceland, as well. |
|
Plymouth hosts the head office and first ever store of The Range, the only major national retail chain headquartered in Devon. |
|
An increase in ultraviolet radiation has the capacity to decrease phytoplankton abundance, which forms the basis of the food chain in the ocean. |
|
The Arctic food chain would be disrupted by the near extinction or migration of polar bears. |
|
A hotspot is more or less stationary relative to the moving tectonic plate above it, so a chain of islands results as the plate drifts. |
|
The southernmost chain is the Austral Islands, with its northerly trending part the atolls in the nation of Tuvalu. |
|
Volcanic islands such as those in the Canary chain often have steep ocean cliffs caused by catastrophic debris avalanches and landslides. |
|
Middle ear pathologies were explored with the identical technique, and the status of the ossicular chain was assessed as well. |
|
These dredges have the form of a scoop made of chain mesh, and are towed by a fishing boat. |
|
The Danish Islands, the next in the chain to the north, arose from sandbanks. |
|
Until the 1930s, a towing system using a chain on the bed of the river existed to facilitate movement of barges upriver. |
|
A food chain also shows how the organisms are related with each other by the food they eat. |
|
A common metric used to quantify food web trophic structure is food chain length. |
|
Food chain studies have an important role in ecotoxicology studies tracing the pathways and biomagnification of environmental contaminants. |
|
He wears his chain for a belt and, axeless, swings it for a weapon. |
|
Their business model of the 1920s and 1930s, which had catapulted the business to undreamt-of heights, had then turned into something of a ball and chain. |
|
So they went to sleep like a pair of chain gangers, and bedogged if during the night Rose didn't get up and start for the bathroom, and down she went. |
|
Each time you succeed in creating a hash, you are rewarded with 25 bitcoins, the block chain is updated and all the users on the network are notified. |
|
|
The cavalcade would then proceed slowly through the tunnel with the boat crews travelling in the tug and a British Waterways operative steering the last boat in the chain. |
|
When examined, the molecular chain included oxygen and hydrogen. |
|
His father ran a chain of shops in Barry, and his mother a china shop. |
|
Most survivors fled as refugees to the islands of their trading partners, in particular Keffing and Guli Guli in the Seram Laut chain and Kei Besar. |
|
The Emperor Sea Mount chain, located on the Pacific plate, is one example, tracing millions of years of relative motion as the plate moves over the Hawaiian hot spot. |
|
Strike the bell with the brass chime hanging on the chain next to it. |
|
At each stage in the chain, both height and prominence increase. |
|
The concept that mtDNA is particularly susceptible to reactive oxygen species generated by the respiratory chain due to its proximity remains controversial. |
|
He wore his dolman slung over one shoulder and clasped at his throat with a gold chain, and carried his Hussar's bearskin busby under his right arm. |
|
The true nature of the supply chain is usually more complex and opaque, with the potential for periwinkle harvesting areas and date of catch to be changed. |
|
The Fairtrade organization forms a partnership between the consumer and the producer, and aims to eliminate other parties within the supply chain. |
|
Fairtrade labelling certification provided some assurance that the products were really benefiting the farm workers at the end of the supply chain. |
|
Tiny floating plastic particles also resemble zooplankton, which can lead filter feeders to consume them and cause them to enter the ocean food chain. |
|
The floor manager will then make a thorough inspection together with the foreman to see that all containers, whether of parts or chain, are properly labeled. |
|
Right-shoring is the combination of onshore, near-shore and far-shore operations into a single, flexible, low-cost approach to supply chain management. |
|
The morose Ed Wilshot poured himself another drink and mumbled something about taking three weeks off the chain and heading south for some sunshine. |
|
For the Union Carbide Company, the chemical industry, and other businesses, Bhopal is an unfortunate chain of coincidences, a freak accident, a regrettable loss of lives. |
|
But I'll put a gold chain around his neck, An' a gey good chain it'll be. |
|
Nuclear reactors usually rely on uranium to fuel the chain reaction. |
|
Also referred to as a domino effect, this series of chain reactions is by far the most destructive process that can occur in any ecological community. |
|
|
They serve as depositories for a large amount of organic matter and are full of decomposition, which feeds a broad food chain of organisms from bacteria to mammals. |
|
I pulled out a Gryffindor key chain I had been saving for just such an emergency, and she cheered up while telling me why she was definitely a Gryffindor and not a Slytherin. |
|
Hydrophobic contaminants are also known to bioaccumulate in fatty tissues, biomagnifying up the food chain and putting great pressure on apex predators. |
|
In recent decades, overfishing has left many fisheries unproductive, disturbing marine food chain dynamics and costing jobs in the fishing industry. |
|
A ridge or mountain ridge is a geological feature consisting of a chain of mountains or hills that form a continuous elevated crest for some distance. |
|
In North America, a number of chain shifts such as the Northern Cities Vowel Shift and Canadian Shift have produced very different vowel landscapes in some regional accents. |
|
Queen Cartimandua left her husband Venutius for his armour bearer, Vellocatus, setting off a chain of events which changed control of the Yorkshire area. |
|
The silica deposition that takes place from the membrane bound vesicle in diatoms has been hypothesized to be a result of the activity of silaffins and long chain polyamines. |
|
Krill and copepods are not as widely fished, but may be the animals with the greatest biomass on the planet, and form a vital part of the food chain. |
|
The Roman military had an extensive logistical supply chain. |
|
He climbed three marble steps, crossed the terrace and entered a dim foyer, where a chamberlain silently helped him from his helmet, his jupon and his chain cuirass. |
|
Species were seen from the time of Aristotle until the 18th century as fixed kinds that could be arranged in a hierarchy, the great chain of being. |
|
He sported long red hair, starting to thin, a red beard, sandals, loose kaftanlike shirts splotched with colors, sometimes a gold chain around his neck. |
|
For an animal of its size, for the most part, its preferred foods lie unusually relatively low in the food chain, including zooplankton and small fish. |
|
The church bells knelled the peaceful ending of the day, while the purple shades of night descended sadly and majestically on the low chain of neighbouring hills. |
|
The Pennine chain of hills in the west is of Carboniferous origin. |
|
These eventually build up to a level where they absorb so many neutrons that the chain reaction stops, even with the control rods completely removed. |
|
These bacteria occur naturally and will act to remove oil from an ecosystem, and their biomass will tend to replace other populations in the food chain. |
|
When floating plastic particles photodegrade down to zooplankton sizes, jellyfish attempt to consume them, and in this way the plastic enters the ocean food chain. |
|
Together, these ensured a runaway chain reaction and explosion. |
|
|
Hydrophobic contaminants are also known to bioaccumulate in fatty tissues, biomagnifying up the food chain and putting pressure on apex predators. |
|
As long as we break the kill chain sometime between when you arrive in the battle space and when the enemy weapon approaches your airplane, you're successful at using stealth. |
|
If a wire or chain sling is hooked back on itself, or secured by a choke hitch, ie by reeving one end of the sling through the other, it is said to be snickled. |
|
Here, where the subject is so fruitful, I am shortened by my chain. |
|
Instead of having it mended he would count the number of times the pedals went round and would get off the bicycle in time to adjust the chain by hand. |
|
Honda Motor Co. is the latest victim of e-mail perfidy, which started when a phony chain letter promised that the automaker would give away free cars. |
|
In short, any contingency that is foreseeable will maintain the chain. |
|
The northwestern portion is on the coastal plain of the Gulf of Mexico with the south and east as part of the mountain chain that extends into northern Chiapas. |
|
There is also the East Street area which has been designated for speciality shopping, with the aim of promoting smaller retailers, alongside the chain store Debenhams. |
|
Mousetraps are also used to demonstrate the principle of a chain reaction. |
|
The pollera montuna is a daily dress, with a blouse, a skirt with a solid color, a single gold chain, and pendant earrings and a natural flower in the hair. |
|
The eastern chain consists mainly of the southern part of the Monti Sibillini, the Monti della Laga, the Gran Sasso d'Italia Massif and the Majella Massif. |
|
The flexible rapper swords form an unbroken chain connecting the dancers. |
|
His complaint made its way up the chain of command, and on November 30, 1936, Barner signed an affidavit alleging that the endorsement of his name on the check was forged. |
|
Isaacs' first restaurant opened in London in 1896 serving fish and chips, bread and butter, and tea for nine pence, and its popularity ensured a rapid expansion of the chain. |
|
The two towns are linked by the Cowes Floating Bridge, a chain ferry. |
|
Craft beer may stand alongside other beers in a mainstream pub, or be retailed in specialist outlets, such as the chain owned by Scottish brewers Brewdog. |
|
High costs passed though the product chain boosted the 'value' of production on which wage increases were based, but made exports less competitive. |
|
Brewpubs subsequently resurged, particularly with the rise of the Firkin pub chain, most of whose pubs brewed on the premises, running to over one hundred at peak. |
|
Each level of a food chain represents a different trophic level. |
|
|
The rust on my bicycle chain made cycling to work very dangerous. |
|
It employed a cylinder containing a movable piston connected by a chain to one end of a rocking beam that worked a mechanical lift pump from its opposite end. |
|
All organisms in a food chain, except the first organism, are consumers. |
|
In 1998, Ritchie and his father contacted their friend Peter Morton, of the Hard Rock Cafe chain, wondering if he had any potential investors for a debut film. |
|
Premier Inn is the UK's largest budget hotel chain, with over 750 hotels. |
|
He had had some scouts give him reports concerning this mountain chain, and he received reports of the difficulties to be encountered there from the Gauls themselves. |
|
An example of this would be kusari gusoku which means chain armour. |
|
Here the characteristic aldehydic note is almost missing from the aldehyde, though this may be due partly to the protective influence of the side chain. |
|
In the car transmission example, the separation of concerns is that individual firms and customers accept no lack of freedom or options from others in the supply chain. |
|
In a complex form of chain migration, many Highlanders emigrated. |
|
These chain pumps serviced the imperial palaces and living quarters of the capital city as the water lifted by the chain pumps was brought in by a stoneware pipe system. |
|
Because the platform was completely destroyed, and many of those involved died, analysis of events can only suggest a possible chain of events based on known facts. |
|
To bring clean water to the West Midlands, Birmingham Corporation created a large reservoir chain and aqueduct system to bring water from the Elan Valley. |
|
Christmas commercials are screened from early November in the UK, with campaigns including the John Lewis Christmas advert for the department store chain. |
|
Some sentences contain a chain of two or more auxiliary verbs. |
|
The slightest problem in a reactor will cause the control rods to plunge automatically in the uranium core at hih speeds and stop the chain reaction. |
|
It is a remote and inhospitable collection of islands, consisting of South Georgia and a chain of smaller islands known as the South Sandwich Islands. |
|
We know the line of this frontier which ran from the Main across the upland Odenwald to the upper waters of the Neckar and was defended by a chain of forts. |
|
There is a general chain of events that applies to infections. |
|
In theory American and European buyers of gold in Africa are required to review their supply chain and report any use of conflict resources, such as gold from eastern Congo. |
|