– This collateral spelling has the same status, but in reality it is not much used by adherents.
– If a bot can help with vandalism and not cause collateral problems then we should use it.
– An attack with much collateral damage may be considered a disaster, such as the attack on KdF Ship Wilhelm Gustloff, 1945, the worst or perhaps second worst maritime incident in history, in terms of loss of life in a single vessel.
– European promoters are uncomfortable with this case because it is a symbol of collateral damages of European construction : ERASMUS has been implemented to facilitate the student mobility within Europe but when a problem appears, the former way of doing “business” in Europe is going on : no justice cooperation between countries, administrative nightmare for the victims, predominance of diplomatic agenda over the human rights and for the European new entrants of the EU, going on with communist way of doing justice and human rights.
– Wanted to check by CU before causing any collateral damage, though have have removed PMDrive1061’s rollback as a precautionary measure and left them a note.
collateral use in-sentences
Example sentences of “collateral”:
– English has many collateral adjectives from French languageFrench, Greek, because many English words come from these languages.
– It also has the collateral adjective “paternal” from the Latin word “pater”, which also means “father”.
– Congress has specified that a Federal Reserve Bank must hold collateral equal in value to the Federal Reserve notes that the Bank receives.
– A mortgage is a secured loan, therefore, providing collateral is necessary.
– I would like to recommend that this range be blocked for 1 month if there is no collateral to any users in good standing that use this range.
– Hardy the Court held that it did not apply retroactively to collateral review of final convictions.
– I’d also check with the list of sensitive IP addresses and check what collateral blocks of named users I’d be affecting.
– If there is going to be collateral blocks, I’d consider using an anonymous only block or else giving the named users the flag “IP block exempt”.
– The medial collateral ligament is one of the four major ligaments of the knee.
– This collateral is chiefly gold certificates and United States securities.
- English has many collateral adjectives from French languageFrench, Greek, because many English words come from these languages.
- It also has the collateral adjective "paternal" from the Latin word "pater", which also means "father".
– Just wondering if a CU can check the above range for any collateral damage.
– On July 15, 2019 at 3:00 PM the Default judgement entered on June 18, 2019 was used as collateral for trying to help Hahnemann Hospital stay open case # 19-11466 Delaware Bankruptcy Court.
– Yasin was originally ruled by the Khushwakhte Dynasty, a collateral line of the Katur Dynasty of Chitral.
– That is why this case is notable at European level, because it is collateral damage of European construction.
– There should be very little collateral damage as the block would only affect 256 users.
– Blocking it would result in blocking all Opera Minis although looking at the activity both vandalism, there does not seem to be notable collateral damage from the block.
– A loan secured by collateral is called a “secured loan”.
– There will be significant collateral damage to deleting all WP: pages.
+ Another widely known Dane is Hans Christian Andersen, an author mostly famous for such fairy tales as “The Little Mermaid”, and “The Ugly Duckling”.
+ In the Indian-Pakistani folklores, it has two forms, one is of a witch who is very dark, ugly and scary, and another is of a beautiful woman who targets vulnerable men passing through the woods after the dark; they appear and vanish after a while, leaving a fearful experience to the victims.
+ They enforce an idea of equality by allowing every man to sleep with every woman, but that the man must sleep with an ugly woman before he may sleep with a beautiful one.
+ His first soundtrack was the spaghetti western “The Ugly OnesThe Bounty Killer”.
+ In an interview, Jason Lytle tell why the band name got their name Grandaddy; They realized that they are too ugly to seduce young women, so they try to appeal to old women, just like Morrissey.
+ He is glad to know now that the ugly Mime is not his father.
Use the word ugly
Example sentences of “ugly”:
+ The elder is ugly and rude.
+ He becomes more ugly as the movie goes on.
+ They wanted people to like the art so much that they would think Protestantism was ugly and boring, and wouldn’t want to start being part of a Protestant church.
+ Because he was ugly and poor, he was not happy for many years.
+ A woman who looked extremely ugly appeared on his doorstep.
+ What was once a scary little story about a nosy, ugly old woman and three male bears became a cozy little story about a nosy, pretty little girl and a family of bears.
+ This made her too ugly due to which no one ever looked her again.
+ He knew that Cook was not ugly and that audiences would have to accept the idea and pretend: “You either go along with it or you don’t go along with it.” He compared it to how Clark Kent changes into Superman.
+ The elder is ugly and rude.
+ He becomes more ugly as the movie goes on.
+ Some people also consider wind turbines to be ugly and unsightly.
+ Some of the boxes this template calls only handles images of max 52px width, thus that limitation also applies to this template or you will get ugly padding problems.
+ Sometimes Jews suffered from outright persecution, sometimes they were forced to dress in special, ugly clothes, pay higher taxes than others, not build higher houses than others, not to ride a horse or donkey, wear certain badges etc.
+ The book says that Eris might not have been scary and ugly after all, but that she was just misunderstood.
+ Parts that show The Tooth Fairy use an ugly green or purple color.
+ To take an obvious example, the comic mask is ugly and distorted, but does not imply pain.” To him, the lampooners became writers of Comedy and the truly artistic ones became writers of Tragedy.
– In addition, the increased workload of the heart causes thickening and enlargement of the right ventricle, making the heart less able to pump blood through the lungs, causing right heart failure.
– The States Reorganisation Act of 1956 led to addition of Purulia district to the state and to enlargement of West Dinajpur district.
– The province was an enlargement of the “Territory of Zara” obtained by the Kingdom of Italy after WWI.
– Growth is the enlargement of a tissue or organism.
– The IRZ also carries out projects as part of the European Union Neighbourhood Policy and Enlargement Negotiations.
– The specific name means “full below the throat” and refers to the male having an enlargement of the neck and throat during the mating season.
– An aortic aneurysm is a general term for an enlargement of the aorta to greater than 1.5 times normal size.
– It was constructed in several stages that had a fourth enlargement during the third century A.D.
+ However, it contains no seafood and is typically not added to seafood.
+ They do not eat red meat, seafood or fish.
+ Most of the people of Chimbote catch fish, or work with seafood in some way.
+ Aquaculture supplies over 20% of all the seafood harvested.
+ Tanjung Dawai is a place which is known as a seafood spot in Sungai Petani.
+ Many different kinds of fresh fish and other seafood are served raw in Japanese dishes.
+ Because of availability of seafood and competition, fine cuisine is available at prices lower most other similar areas – with a dinner for 10-12 people costing around MYR 100.00.
Some sentences in use of seafood
Example sentences of “seafood”:
+ Crêpes are also served as a dinner meal, by filling them with seafood or other meats.
+ The county has a golf resort and a very good seafood business.
+ There are many restaurants that serve seafood in Galicia.
+ The reason was to make sure that seafood that might be poisoned by the oil would not be sold and maybe make people sick.
+ It is named after a former president of the Philippines and is known for its seafood and a statue of Jesus.
+ Shark fins are among the most expensive seafood products, commonly sold at US$400perkg.
+ On the coast, many people eat seafood and fish.
+ Consumers can get information about the conservation status of the seafood available to them.
+ Fresh, locally-caught seafood can be bought by the public.
+ Despite effort to diversify, particularly into the travel industry, seafood exports continue to account for nearly three-quarters of merchandise exports and approximately half of all foreign exchange earnings.
+ It has about twenty seafood restaurants.
+ Beef or seafood can be added too.
+ Dunmore East is home to several seafood restaurants, and there are two principal hotels in Dunmore: The Strand Inn and The Haven.
+ Most fruits, vegetables, meat, and seafood are usually sold by weight.
+ Today, half of the seafood eaten in the U.S.
+ Food allergies are not as common, but some foods, like peanuts, Nut nuts, seafood and shellfish cause serious allergies in lots of people.
+ It is usually served with a seafood sauce, or with garlic, parsley and olive oil.
+ The station is near the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.
+ Crêpes are also served as a dinner meal, by filling them with seafood or other meats.
+ The county has a golf resort and a very good seafood business.
+ There are many restaurants that serve seafood in Galicia.
+ With the last of them die the clock and the flames illuminating the scarlet window both die out at the same time.
+ Scientists are not sure why the Wyoming toad started to die out in the 1970s.
+ Fighting with European settlers, the introduction of new diseases like smallpox, and the destruction of their natural food sources saw about 90 per cent of the Eora people die out between 1788 and 1900.
+ There may be 200,000 mother tongue speakers of the Breton language over 50 years of age, but fewer than 2,000 under 25 years of age – thus it is likely Breton will die out in the next half century.
+ Around 7 people die out of every million that use MDMA.
+ A conservation-dependent species is any plant, animal, or other living thing that would become endangered or die out if human beings did not help it.
+ Any difference that would cause the plant or animal to have less of a chance to live would be less likely to be passed on, and would eventually die out altogether.
+ This is why UNESCO lists Okinawan and the other Ryukyuan languages as “endangered”, meaning it’s possible for the language to die out in the future.
+ Representative from North Carolina, a United States SenateSenator from Alabama, and the thirteenth Vice President of the United States.
+ Garside sung on the thirteenth song on the album, “Where We Fall We’ll Lie”.
+ Roundhay Park was a private hunting ground in the thirteenth century.
+ Graham O’Brien is a companion of the Thirteenth Doctor.
+ The Thirteenth Amendment was an amendment to the United States Constitution, meaning that it was a change to the basic and most important laws that govern the United States.
+ It was the band’s thirteenth studio album.
+ The thirteenth season of SpongeBob SquarePants was announced in July 14, 2019.
+ Passed on December 6, 1865, the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution abolished slavery in the United States.
thirteenth in sentences?
Example sentences of “thirteenth”:
+ It is the thirteenth book in the "Redwall" series.
+ Tropical Storm Melissa was the thirteenth tropical cyclonenamed storm of the 2007 Atlantic hurricane season.
+ Mom Rajawong Kukrit Pramoj was the thirteenth prime minister of Thailand, 14 March 1975 - 12 January 1976.
+ It is the thirteenth book in the “Redwall” series.
+ Tropical Storm Melissa was the thirteenth tropical cyclonenamed storm of the 2007 Atlantic hurricane season.
+ Mom Rajawong Kukrit Pramoj was the thirteenth prime minister of Thailand, 14 March 1975 – 12 January 1976.
+ Walker attended the National Negro Business League Thirteenth Annual Convention in 1912.
+ North Uist is the tenth largest Scottish island, and the thirteenth largest island surrounding Great Britain.
+ It is currently in its Thirteenth Generation.
+ Ryan Sinclair is a companion of the Thirteenth Doctor.
+ It is in its thirteenth season.
+ In 1865, the Fugitive Slave Clause was repealed by the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States ConstitutionThirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery.
+ Following the addition of thirteenth member Kyuhyun, the group dropped the suffix “05” and became officially credited as Super Junior.
+ By the late thirteenth century BC mainland Greece witnessed a wave of destruction.
+ Vilnius has been home to an Eastern Orthodox Christian presence since the thirteenth century.
+ The FIA announced they would consider adding a thirteenth team to the grid.
+ There is one series each year; the most recent being the thirteenth series.
+ It was the thirteenth Survivor Series event held by the WWF.
+ Part I opens with Christine reading from Matheolus’s Lamentations, a work from the thirteenth century that addresses marriage wherein the author writes that women make men’s lives miserable.
+ The castle was built in the thirteenth century.
+ Jeremiah began began his work in the thirteenth year of king Josiah, when Jerusalem went into exile.
More in-sentence examples of “thirteenth”:
+ Hurricane Marilyn was the fifteenth tropical depression and thirteenth named storm of the 1995 Atlantic hurricane season.
+ Plessy argued that the state law which required East Louisiana Railroad to segregate trains had denied him his rights under the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
+ It is the thirteenth of their fourteen operettas.
+ With the thirteenth episode of the third season director Alex Graves became an additional supervising producer and Eli Attie joined the writing staff as a story editor.
+ It is the thirteenth largest city in Texas.
+ The Court also held that the Thirteenth Amendment was meant to eliminate “the badge of slavery” but not to prohibit racial discrimination in public accommodations.
+ This line became stuck in the public consciousness despite not often being repeated, and was recognised by producers of the show as a plot obstacle for when the show finally had to regenerate the Doctor a thirteenth time.
+ Her first minor roles were in programs such as “The Thirteenth Year” and “The Safety Of Objects” and her first major role was in a movie called “Panic Room”.
+ He was the thirteenth White House Press Secretary for President Gerald Ford from 1974 to 1977.
+ Dhanteras is celebrated on the thirteenth lunar day of Krishna Paksha in the Vikram Samvat Hindu calendar month of Ashwin.
+ The thirteenth edition.
+ House of Commons, House of Lords and was mentioned for the first time during the early thirteenth century, and the first meeting one knows of was in 1235, during the reign of Alexander II of Scotland.
+ In the thirteenth century Venice took the island from Byzantium.
+ Until the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S.
+ They had 3 albums, Mer De Noms, The Thirteenth Step, and eMOTIVe.
+ Scotland took its present form when it regained territory from the Norse between the thirteenth and the fifteenth centuries.
+ In the thirteenth century, Larestan briefly became a center of trade and commerce in southern Persia.
+ Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö says that he is the reincarnation of Tertön Sogyal, a teacher to the Thirteenth Dalai Lama.
+ Lisa and the 8th Commandment” is the thirteenth episode of the second season of “The Simpsons”.
+ Wilma was the twenty-second storm, thirteenth hurricane, sixth major hurricane, and fourth Category 5 hurricane of the record-breaking Atlantic hurricane season.
+ Yasmin Khan is a companion of the Thirteenth Doctor.
+ He was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1997 until 2014 and representing the Thirteenth Suffolk district.
+ The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery.
+ Until the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1865, only the states had power to end slavery within their own borders.
+ On October 1 her thirteenth album, “Gold Dust”, was released in the UK.
+ The Thirteenth dynasty of EgyptThirteenth Dynasty ruled from 1802 to around 1649 BC.
+ Hurricane Marilyn was the fifteenth tropical depression and thirteenth named storm of the 1995 Atlantic hurricane season.
+ Plessy argued that the state law which required East Louisiana Railroad to segregate trains had denied him his rights under the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
+ Barrio Fino and Barrio Fino on Directo have been the seventh and thirteenth best-selling Latin albums in the United States.
+ In the thirteenth century, the Venetians took control of the island.
+ The thirteenth installment in the “NBA 2K” series, it is the successor to “NBA 2K11” and the predecessor to “NBA 2K13”.
+ The Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution abolished slavery and Slaveryinvoluntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime.
+ This was when it was banned in the entire country by the Thirteenth Amendment.
+ That was the thirteenth time John won the title and the sixteenth time he won a world championship.
+ It is their thirteenth album and went on sale on 8 September 2003.
+ It is the thirteenth film of the X-Men film series and it was released on August 28, 2020.
+ During the Middle Ages Livadeia was an insignificant town until about the thirteenth century when it became the capital of the Catalonian knights’ domain.
+ It was the thirteenth WrestleMania event held by the WWF.
+ The “true” or actual thirteenth pope Benedict identified himself with the ordinal number XIV.
+ The Thirteenth United States Census was done by the Census Bureau on April 15, 1910.
+ Among cities of Poland, Białystok is second in terms of population density, eleventh in population, and thirteenth in area.
+ It is the eleventh of the thirteenth presidential libraries in the United States.
+ Under the leadership of military leader Commander Adama, the Battlestar “Galactica” and its crew lead and protect the fleet of survivors into space in search of a fabled Thirteenth Colony and its home planet, Earth.
+ En is the thirteenth letter in the Cyrillic alphabet.
+ It is not allowed to have “part” of a month, so a thirteenth month is added seven times in every cycle of nineteen years.
+ The Thirteenth Amendment, which made slavery illegal everywhere in the United States, was passed late in 1865, eight months after Lincoln was killed.
+ He became the thirteenth driver to finish on the podium in his first F1 career race.
+ Some scholars include the Eleventh, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Dynasties in the Middle Kingdom.
+ He served as the thirteenth President of the Philippines from 1998 until 2001.
+ Earliest thirteenth named storm.
+ He served as Emporia State University’s thirteenth president in Emporia, Kansas.
+ Sophie Belinda Jonas She plays Sansa Stark in “Game of Thrones”, She played Young Adeline March in “The Thirteenth Tale”.
– He eventually earned a BMM degree from CHM College in Thane and a degree in journalism from Mumbai University.
– A writer for a PBS group blog named the awards as “one of only a couple of journalism prizes that means anything”.
– She received a master’s degree in journalism at the University of Southern California.
– There have been many criticisms of the ethical standards of the video game journalism industry.
– In 2015, she graduated from Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts where she studied broadcast journalism and also participated in several different on campus productions.
Example sentences of journalism
Example sentences of “journalism”:
- The name of the documentary has been taken from the name of the 1974's "All the President's Men", a book based on investigative journalism that revealed the Watergate scandal of America's President Richard Nixon in 1972.
- He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize twice and the National Book Award once on his journalism career.
– The name of the documentary has been taken from the name of the 1974’s “All the President’s Men”, a book based on investigative journalism that revealed the Watergate scandal of America’s President Richard Nixon in 1972.
– He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize twice and the National Book Award once on his journalism career.
– Academy of Achievement biography Retrieved 2014-02-26 He won a Pulitzer Prize for journalism in 1964.
– After studying journalism and communication at the University of Vienna, he worked as a business journalist and a civil servant.
– Before working in journalism and online media, Strecker was a music teacher and a performer.
– Their $30 million donation to the two schools will be used to develop journalism in the context of new technologies.
– Thus the lines between autobiography, reportage, an eye-witness genre of journalism fiction and political observations are tied up together, more so than with most writers.
– He was the San Paolo Professor Emeritus of International Journalism at Columbia University.
– She studied journalism and economics in Cologne.
– An entire article that presents as an attack piece or hostile journalism can be nominated for gives details on how biographical articles on living persons should be written.
– Both of his children went into journalism careers.
More in-sentence examples of “journalism”:
– In the years 1984-1985 Alsterdal studied journalism at Kalix Folkhögskola in the north of Sweden.
– The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University is named after Walter Cronkite.
– She went to East Carolina University and got degrees in journalism and dance.
– Their Sunday entertainment features included the first color comic strip pages, and some think that the term yellow journalism originated there, while as noted above, the “New York Press” left the term it invented undefined.
– He earned a BA in journalism from Washington Lee University in Lexington, Virginia.
– Cynthia also earned a journalism degree at University of Southern California.
– He began his journalism career with “The Times.” Later, he moved to “The Daily Telegraph” where he was assistant editor.
– In 2010 she received the Courage in Journalism Award.
– Pulitzer left the university $2 million in his will, which led to the creation in 1912 of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, but by then the first school of journalism had been created at the University of Missouri.
– In 2007 he was awarded the Stora journalistpriset for his journalism work.
– On March 3, 2007, Andrew Lih, Assistant Professor and Director of Technology Journalism and of the Media Studies Centre at the University of Hong Kong, said on his blog that a part of Essjay’s comments on the incident entered “the dangerous domain of defamation and libel” against Stacy Schiff.
– Harvey began his career in journalism for the newspaper “The Daily Telegraph”.
– Sometimes tabloid journalism is also for women.
– Welteroth holds bachelor’s degree in journalism from California State University, Sacramento.
– He then studied television production and journalism at the University of Illinois.
– After schooling, she studied journalism and art at the University of Texas at Austin.
– The building is now Stauffer-Flint Hall, where the journalism school is.
– The Pulitzer Prize is an United StatesAmerican prize given to journalism and literature.
– She studied philosophy and journalism at the Universitat Autònoma, and received a master’s degree in Catalan philology.
– Moser was best known for her work as the director of the Austin Music Awards in the South by Southwest festival and for her over thirty years of music journalism and criticism.
– In 2002 Politkovskaya won the Courage in Journalism Award.
– New Games Journalism is a term that was first used in 2004 by journalist Kieron Gillen.
– The George Polk Awards in Journalism are United StatesAmerican journalism awards given every year by Long Island University in the U.S.
– Yates attended the University of Georgia, receiving her Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism in 1982.
– Luc-Adolphe Tiao studied journalism at the University of Dakar, graduating in 1980.
- In the years 1984-1985 Alsterdal studied journalism at Kalix Folkhögskola in the north of Sweden.
- The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University is named after Walter Cronkite.
- She went to East Carolina University and got degrees in journalism and dance.
– He attended the African Investigative Journalism training at the University of the Witwatersrand.
– In 1995 she received the Courage in Journalism Award.
– He entered the first school of journalism that existed in Venezuela, at the Free University “Augusteo”, founded in October 1941 by Monsignor Rafael Lovera, at the time of the General Isaiah Medina Angarita.
– Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism remains one of the most prestigious in the world.
– Michaels has won many awards during his career, including the Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Personality five times, the NSSA Award from the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association three times, and “Sportscaster of the Year” once each from the American Sportscasters Association and the Washington Journalism Review.
– He studied at the Columbia UniversityColumbia University Graduate School of Journalism and at Harvard University.
– The Courage in Journalism project is a little more difficult.
– He has degrees in law, journalism and Islamic studies.
– French began his career in journalism in the late 1950s, before becoming a BBC Radio producer, and later a movie critic.
– That same year she was awarded the International Women’s Media Foundation’s Courage in Journalism Award.
– After that, he earned an MS in journalism from Columbia University in New York.
– The George Polk Awards in Journalism are prizes given every year by Long Island University in New York.
– He moved from business journalism to investigative sports reporting in the 1990s, editing the Inside Track column for the “Sunday Times”.
– In 1983 he won the Saint Vincent award for journalism and in 2006 received the Capo d’Orlando prize even for journalism.
– He also won many journalism awards.
– People who work in journalism jobs are called journalists.
– Their objectives are to build a network of women to share ideas, to give women the skills to become leaders, to help women expand their careers, and to honor bravery and courage with the Courage in Journalism and Lifetime Achievement Awards.
– He was a pioneer of investigative journalism, and one of the most controversial figures in British journalism during the Victorian era.
– Metz was inducted into the University of Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame in 1989.
– Sale worked initially in journalism for the leftist journal “New Leader”, “a magazine founded in 1924 in part by Socialismsocialists Hunter, Jack, “The American Conservative” and the “New York Times Magazine”.
– She started working in journalism in 1973.
– Yellow journalism might include exaggerating facts or spreading rumors.
– Singer began her career in journalism as an ABC radio trainee in 1984.
+ There is a statue of Millard Fillmore at City Hall in Buffalo, New York.
+ Tydings moved to Maryland after he was adopted by Millard Tydings, U.S.
+ In 1828, she had a son, named Millard Powers Fillmore.
+ John Tyler, Zachary Taylor, Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, and James Buchanan are often considered to be among the worst because they failed to prevent the growth of the slavery which resulted in the Civil War.
+ When Abigail Powers was around 19 years old and a student at an academy at New Hope, New York, she met Millard Fillmore.
+ Historians have credited his wife, Phoebe, for convincing her husband to secure a clerk’s position for Millard in the office of their landlord, Judge Walter Wood.
+ Such was his stature that, in 1852, the United States Whig Party passed over its own incumbent President of the United States, Millard Fillmore, to nominate Scott in that year’s United States presidential election.
+ He died alone in Millard Fillmore Hospital in Buffalo, New York of heart problems.
+ Toll-like receptors are proteins which act in the innate immune system and the digestive system.
+ Like all living things, people have inherited innate qualities.
+ They are part of the innate immune system.
+ Antimicrobial peptides, or host defence peptides, are part of the innate immune response.
+ Natural killer cells, or NK cells, are a part of the innate immune system which does not directly attack invading microbes.
+ Dendritic cells are very important in the process of antigen presentation, and serve as a link between the innate and adaptive immune systems.
+ Cerri is currently considered the most authoritative Italian guitarist in the jazz field, and his innate sympathy has meant that many viewers, seeing its shares on TV, come close to jazz, and studying guitar.
+ The innate system is the evolutionarily older defense strategy.
innate some example sentences
Example sentences of “innate”:
+ The cells of the innate system recognise, and respond to, pathogens in a general way.
+ Adaptive immunity is triggered in vertebrates when a pathogen evades the innate immune system and generates a threshold level of antigen.Janeway C.A "et al" 2001.
+ If a pathogen breaches these barriers, the innate immune system provides an immediate, but non-specific response.
+ The cells of the innate system recognise, and respond to, pathogens in a general way.
+ Adaptive immunity is triggered in vertebrates when a pathogen evades the innate immune system and generates a threshold level of antigen.Janeway C.A “et al” 2001.
+ If a pathogen breaches these barriers, the innate immune system provides an immediate, but non-specific response.
+ The type of immunity which is triggered by the toll-like receptors is called innate immunity.
+ Dutch research showed this to be an innate behaviour pattern which developed early and without maternal teaching.
+ It is an innate behaviour of humans and many animal species.
+ The adaptive immune system is switched on by the evolutionarily older innate immune system.
+ The innate immune system is usually means all of the cells and systems that does not have to be exposed to a particular pathogen before they can work.
+ It first initiates an innate immune response, which then causes the activation of the adaptive immune response.
+ Similarly, the adjuvant component of vaccines plays an essential role in the activation of the innate immune system.
+ Unlike the adaptive immune system, the innate immune system does not give long-lasting immunity against specific infections.
+ But at the end of nineteenth Century, the American Eskimo Dog prevailed in the circus.They attracted a lot of people’ s attention because of their white coat, innate intelligence, trainability and amazing agility.
+ Ethology proved that much animal behaviour was heritableinherited, innate and permanent.
+ This ‘gestalt’ or ‘whole form’ approach sought to understand perception – seemingly innate mental laws which determined the way in which objects are perceived.
+ If pathogens successfully evade the innate response, vertebrates possess a third layer of protection, the adaptive immune system, which is activated by the innate response.
+ RNA interference is an important innate defence against viruses.
+ Other terms for instinct are fixed action patterns and innate behaviour chains.
+ The simplest innate system is the cell wall or barrier on the outside to stop intruders getting in.
+ Although it is an innate behaviour of many living beings, it is not thought of as an instinct because it is not a fixed action pattern.
+ Our innate immune system responds very fast to anything foreign that enters our body.
+ The accent marks the letter with a stressed syllable in words that do not usually have stress, such as “éxtasis” and “bebé”.
+ Her work on syllable structure is well-known.
+ Castrum is a fortification, and “Vesulium” has the syllable “ves” which meant hill or mountain in a language that was spoken before the Celts.
+ There, the accent is on the syllable “wa”.
+ Since words in languages like English can have many different complex syllables, writing such languages using a syllabary would be completely impractical, thus alphabets are much better suited to write languages with complex syllable structures.
+ Vowels are said differently on the if the syllable is “open” or “closed”.
Example uses in sentence of syllable
Example sentences of “syllable”:
+ To start with, one syllable per parameter does it.
+ Also, "mulberry" and "raspberry", where also the first syllable is a bound morpheme.
+ To start with, one syllable per parameter does it.
+ Also, “mulberry” and “raspberry”, where also the first syllable is a bound morpheme.
+ When the final syllable is stressed.
+ The sign “x” stands for a syllable with no stress, and the sign “/” stands for a syllable with stress.
+ Hiragana is a Syllabary, meaning each character represents a syllable or vowel.
+ The syllable string did not form words, the stream of speech was not internally organized, and – most importantly of all – there was no systematic relationship between units of speech and concepts.
+ The accent is always on the first syllable of the word.
+ In Latin and Greek verse, on the other hand, while the metrical units are similar, not syllable stress stresses but syllable lengths are the component parts of meter.
+ PIE had a “free pitch accent.” That means that the stress of a word could happen on any syllable and could change even for related words.
+ In music, a note is a small bit of sound, similar to a syllable in spoken language.
+ The first syllable — ” Ie-” — comes from the last part of the name of Minamoto Yoshile, who was a famous ancestor.
+ Thai has five tones, mid, high, low, rising, and falling, and the reader is supposed to figure out what tone a syllable has based on the consonant class, whether it is a live syllable, and whether the vowel is long or short.
More in-sentence examples of “syllable”:
+ A Tigrinya syllable may have a consonant-vowel or a consonant-vowel-consonant sequence.
+ It told the speaker when to say a syllable with a high pitch.
+ Finally he made one symbol for every syllable in the Cherokee language.
+ The results from the the algorithms that use syllable count, if you wanted that then use a something like Word.
+ If a syllable ends with a consonant, it is called a “closed syllable“.
+ In Japanese Braille, alphabetic signs for a consonant and vowel are combined into a single syllable block; in Korean Braille, the consonants have different leading and following syllable forms.
+ The second rule for vietnamization is that the sound of each syllable must be made a little closer to Vietnamese sounds.
+ A syllable means one vowel and a few consonants, like “han” and “geul”.
+ This marks the stressed syllable of polysyllabic words, that is, words with more than one syllable.
+ However the word will still have a tone, and for words that do not have tone markers, one can still figure out the tone by the class of consonant, whether the syllable is a live or dead, syllable, and the length of the vowel.
+ When they are alone, they have an “ah” sound, although people use the “uh” sound when another syllable follows it.
+ All Japonic languages are agglutinative languages with a simple syllable structure and SOV word order.
+ In some verbs, the first syllable is open and so any vowel is long.
+ There is no shorter syllable than a single monophthong.
+ The 1989 edition of the “Oxford English Dictionary” describes “parallelopiped” explicitly as incorrect forms, but these are listed without comment in the 2004 edition, and only pronunciations with the emphasis on the fifth syllable “pi” are given.
+ Nouns based on adjectives end with the syllable さ.
+ When a syllable has a tone marker, different rules must apply alongside the ones already written above.
+ Would it be appropriate to indicate the pronunciation of foreign words by adding “rhymes with…” using words from the Basic Vocabulary? I’ve done this, typing the stressed syllable in all caps.
+ The title of the song is still the same and the syllable rhythms are similar, especially in the chorus.
+ Melismatic music is the opposite of music where each syllable has its own note.
+ A syllable is the smallest block of sound that a person can make when he or she speaks.
+ A word’s meaning can then change if a different syllable is stressed.
+ Láadan itself is a three-syllable word, LA-a-dan, where the first syllable is said in a high tone.
+ Do “not” separate every syllable with a pipe: join unstressed syllables with a hyphen, and only use a pipe to separate them from stressed syllables.
+ Without the small “tsu” the first syllable would sound like the word “knee”.
+ As in all classical verse forms, the last syllable can actually be short or long.
+ A Tigrinya syllable may have a consonant-vowel or a consonant-vowel-consonant sequence.
+ It told the speaker when to say a syllable with a high pitch.
+ Finally he made one symbol for every syllable in the Cherokee language.
+ The Japanese word “cow”, meaning “sound”, corresponds to a “mora”, a phonetic unit similar but not identical to the syllable of a language such as English.
+ The stress in a word is shown by writing the syllable in “.
+ Stressed syllables are counted “from the last syllable backwards”: the second-last, fourth-last, and sixth-last parameters are formatted as stressed.
+ Although in pinyin, “Shaanxi” is spelled exactly the same as “Shanxi”, the only difference in how the two words are pronounced is that the first syllable in “Shanxi” is said using the first tone in Mandarin, while the first syllable in “Shaanxi” is said with the third tone.
+ ABrowse is a free web browser for the SyllableSyllable operating system.
+ Cantonese Braille is also based on Latin braille for many of the initial consonants and simple vowels, but the blocks also have different values depending on whether they are in a leading syllable or following syllable position.
+ If a syllable ends with a vowel, it is called an “open syllable“.
+ The colloquial Arabic pronunciation of the name in some dialects often omits the unstressed second syllable and renders it as “Fatma” when romanized.
+ One source gives this explanation: a code is “a word, number or some other symbol used to represent a word, phrase or syllable in plaintext”.
+ Vietnamese also uses one syllable as a word.Like in English, people can say just ‘go’.
+ A long vowel is never followed in the next syllable by a short vowel.
+ Syllables are built up of consonants, each of which has an inherent vowel, which means a vowel is assumed to be pronounced in a syllable even if it is not written down.
+ In the “Alleluia Chorus” from Handel’s “Messiah” each syllable of the word “Alleluya” has its own note.
+ Because traditional characters have this dual property, nearly every syllable in modern Vietnamese has acquired a semantic meaning.
+ Each letter represents a different syllable sound.
+ For example, a syllabary would use one symbol to mean the syllable “ga”, instead of two letters of the alphabet “g” and “a”.
+ The song is infamous for vocalist John Lydon’s phrasing of the word “vacant”, emphasizing the last syllable making it sound like the vulgar word “cunt”.
+ This has caused confusion between syllable and vowel length in Latin, and most western dictionaries still cannot describe the nature of Latin vowels properly because of this.
+ Most syllables have only one tone marking, but the letters in the syllable can be altered by other markings.
+ In conversation, Indonesians who worked with her in the late 1980s and early 1990s referred to her as Ann Dunham, putting the emphasis on the second syllable of the surname.
+ Each syllable in Korean name usually has its Chinese character.
+ The second syllable — “-yasu” — comes from the name of his grandfather Kiyoyasu.
+ Although in pinyin, the name of the neighboring province to the west, “Shaanxi”, is spelled exactly the same as “Shanxi”, the only difference in how the two words are pronounced is that the first syllable in “Shanxi” is said using the first tone in Mandarin, while the first syllable in “Shaanxi” is said with the third tone.