“scales” in-sentences

How to use in-sentence of “scales”:

+ Learning many musical instruments include playing scales and arpeggios.

+ Adult female scales usually do not move: they are permanently attached to the plant they have parasitized.

+ So there is the same fingering in all 6 scales where the base tone is in the same row.

+ Logarithmic scales are also used in slide rules for multiplying or dividing numbers by adding or subtracting lengths on the scales.

+ The authors think the scales were not ossicleossified scutes or osteoderms.

+ The scales have smooth edges or are absent.

+ Ragas are sort of a mix of scales and melodies.

scales in-sentences
scales in-sentences

Example sentences of “scales”:

+ The pentatonic scales used in Indonesian gamelan music are called “slendro” and “pelog”.

+ It is also known as the knightfish or the coat-of-mail fish, due to the scales on its body.

+ Behind their neck are small scales which look like spikes, and are called tuberculate scales.

+ Spring scales are made with the assumption that they are being used on the surface of the Earth.

+ The scales are sharp, providing extra defence from predators.Yu, Jingyu et al 2015.

+ While the “Richter” and moment magnitude scales are similar, they do differ, particularly for larger earthquakes.

+ Later French composers include Olivier Messiaen who used a system of new scales which he called Modes of limited transposition.

+ The belly has 6 rows of larger rectangular scales that are generally reddish, pink, or orangish.

+ For example, the mouth is not back underneath the head, they have tails, and have many scales on their body.

+ They have Scale scales on their skin.

+ The pentatonic scales used in Indonesian gamelan music are called "slendro" and "pelog".

+ It is also known as the knightfish or the coat-of-mail fish, due to the scales on its body.
+ Behind their neck are small scales which look like spikes, and are called tuberculate scales.

More in-sentence examples of “scales”:

+ Swordfish are elongated, round-bodied, and lose all teeth and scales by adulthood.

+ Tropical cyclones in other places such as the Western Pacific Ocean or the Southern Hemisphere are classified on scales that are quite a bit like the Saffir-Simpson Scale.
+ Long and short scales remain in use for counting money.

+ Swordfish are elongated, round-bodied, and lose all teeth and scales by adulthood.

+ Tropical cyclones in other places such as the Western Pacific Ocean or the Southern Hemisphere are classified on scales that are quite a bit like the Saffir-Simpson Scale.

+ Long and short scales remain in use for counting money.

+ In contrast to many other snakes, their scales are flat.

+ Each country customized and designed its own versions to adapt to their musical scales and tunings.

+ All premium slide rules had numbers and scales engraved, and then filled with paint or other resin.

+ The diatonic scale is one of the scale scales used in music.

+ It used scales and curves of the quadrant and related tables.

+ With the aid of scales printed on the frame it also helps with such miscellaneous tasks as converting time, distance, speed, and temperature values, compass errors, and calculating fuel use.

+ Numbers are marked on sliding scales at distances proportional to the differences between their logarithms.

+ If y is “off the scale” locate and square it using the A and B scales as described above.

+ It can curl up into a ball when threatened, with its overlapping scales acting like armour while it tucks its face under its tail.

+ But SI correctly scales any SI prefix.

+ Circular slide rules also eliminate “off-scale” calculations, because the scales were designed to “wrap around”; they never have to be re-oriented when results are near 1.0—the rule is always on scale.

+ Tough, rounded scales protected the top of the skull, while four large pyramidal horns projected outwards from its rear corners.

+ Scutes are made up of a fibrous protein called keratin that also makes up the scales of other reptiles.

+ When looking through a microscope, the scales look like a plate with growth rings and spikes on the top edges.

+ This made chromatic scales very interesting and “colourful” which is why they were called “chromatic”.

+ Scutes are similar to scales and serve the same function.

+ By default the infobox image scales to upright=1.13.

+ Moths have larger scales on their wings.

+ Sharks and other chondrichthyes have “placoid” scales made of denticles, like small versions of their teeth.

+ In set theory musical set theory, Allen Forte classifies diatonic scales as set form 7–35.

+ In its most basic form, the slide rule uses two logarithmic scales to allow rapid multiplication and division of numbers.

+ Like many musical scales it is made up of seven notes: the eighth duplicates the first at double its frequency so that it is called a higher octave of the same note.

+ The term is also used to describe the heavy armour of the armadillo and the extinct glyptodon, and is occasionally used as an alternative to scales in describing snakes or certain fish, such as sturgeon.

+ In conifers, bracts are associated with the scales of a cone.

+ Lengths scales are called macroscopic if they fall in the range of more or less than 1 mm or up to 1 km.

+ He was fascinated by scales which can only be transposed in two or three different ways.

+ There are rows of scales on top of its tail and a covering of scales branching into feather-like structures.

+ He also used the old scales known as the church modes.

+ He owned the popular Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio series, “The Scales of Justice”.

+ This system measures on two different scales of 10 points.

+ By the 1920s, to probe the operating of the electromagnetic field at minuscule scales of space and time, quantum mechanics was developed.

+ Trigonometric scales are sometimes dual-labeled, in black and red, with complementary angles, the so-called “Darmstadt” style.

+ Separate scales are used for jazz/classical albums, and soundtracks.

+ It is not a true berry, but its unusual roundness and merged scales make it look like a berry.

+ The cones are cylindrical, 7–10cm long and green when young but maturing to a pale brown when they shed their scales and winged seeds.

+ The long and short scales are two of several large-number naming systems for integer powers of ten that use the same words with different meanings.

+ Messiaen was fascinated by scales that only had a few transpositions.

+ The scales are usually covered with a layer of slime which improves passage through the water, and makes the fish more slippery to a predator.

+ The scales were exceedingly hard and glossy withall the appearance of burnished gold.

+ Another drawback of circular slide rules is that less-important scales are closer to the center, and have lower precisions.

+ Premium slide rules included clever catches so the rule would not fall apart by accident, and bumpers to protect the scales and cursor from rubbing on tabletops.

+ Then they close their beaks and the tips push the scales apart.

+ The scales of birds are made of the same keratin as beaks, claws, and spurs.

+ Those slide rules have special scales for those applications, as well as normal scales.

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