One binds people within communities and the other binds different communities together.
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"Nucleotide A binds weakly to nucleotide T, whereas nucleotide C binds strongly to nucleotide G," explains David Gareau, one of the researchers, in a press release.
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However, Cas12a appears to read up to 18 of the letters before it binds fully, and if it finds a mismatch, it will fall off before it binds.
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And we'll reflect on what truly binds us as Americans.
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What binds the 45% together is a sense of grievance.
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It surrounds us, penetrates us, and binds the galaxy together.
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Name Withheld How do we end up in these binds?
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She binds and tenderizes it, becoming more and more aroused.
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Women candidates face impossible standards of femininity and double binds.
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Financial red tape also binds more tightly in the West.
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What binds these people together, if only in their afterlives?
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That is what binds us to the rule of law.
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In raw eggs, avidin more readily binds and reduces biotin.
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And the mucin layer inhibits microbial growth and binds water.
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Today, there are close binds between art and sociopolitical engagement.
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The technique revealed exactly where the antibiotic binds to a bacterial ribosome, and why it binds more strongly to it, and the results suggested ways to make antibiotics that are effective against drug-resistant bacteria.
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This sort of talk binds Trump supporters ever more closely together.
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Denmark's tripartite system, for example, binds together employers, government and unions.
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A stitch that binds geography to history, monuments express community values.
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Energy is the thread that binds together all of modern life.
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" Orpheus Black says he only binds "as tight as a hug.
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BTW ... that's not the only tat that binds the engaged couple.
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A mixture of earth and glue binds the stone and plastic.
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Sure, David discovers Tessa's nature when she binds and gags him.
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Worrying about everything that could go wrong only binds your hands.
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"The gluten property of wheat binds the pasta together," adds Sangay.
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It surrounds us and penetrates us; it binds the galaxy together.
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This is really what binds everything in Dragons Conquer America together.
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The thing that binds us together is our love of theater.
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The egg binds the fluffy dried beef together, giving it creaminess.
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With just a few drops, Uhu glue binds metal rods together.
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Student Opinion What binds the members of a graduating class together?
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"Discrimination is what really binds Asian-Americans together," the reporter writes.
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Inequality, like slavery, is a chain that binds at both ends.
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That's what reading together in childhood does: It forever binds us.
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I believe money binds Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, and Trump.
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It's the one strand that binds two franchises with opposite trajectories.
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After all, it is the agenda that binds the coalition together.
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Saturn binds things and people together—but Saturn also symbolizes boundaries.
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But it is more than just this moment that binds them together.
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The fibers resemble natural tissue's "extracellular matrix"--the "glue" that binds tissue.
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He and the character have similar jobs, but little else binds them.
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The more it's pulled, the more tightly it binds to the surface.
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The free-floating neurotransmitter then binds to molecules on the receiver neuron.
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In Clinton's world, brotherhood is the glue that binds our people together.
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Her finding that Scottrade customers lack constitutional standing binds all federal courts.
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But don't add milk: It binds to the compounds, hindering their benefit.
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Usually we don't notice how the mind binds together these different inputs.
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Acute stress, as well as pain, binds us in solidarity with others.
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A promise is a moral contract that binds us to our word.
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"But it was not, by the law that binds us, a crime."
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|
And, like "Gilead," Faber's novel binds earthly affection with questions of faith.
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|
For now, the only link that binds them all is Mr. Drameh.
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|
It is also part, but only part, of what binds them still.
|
|
Another binds everyone else (even the runner) in a web of tape.
|
|
Because a web of ties binds politicians to the health care system.
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|
This amalgam of faith and cynicism still binds them to their president.
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|
Flour derived from orchid bulbs binds sahlab, a creamy Middle Eastern beverage.
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|
"For every nail in the coffin, it binds our connectivity," Luger said.
|
|
Glycogen also binds to several times its weight in water, the experts explained.
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|
Snobbery is the proud cement that binds the two mutually dependent worlds together.
|
|
He's the glue that binds the Cubs, and he commands the utmost respect.
|
|
It binds to tau as well as amyloid proteins, a signature for Alzheimer's.
|
|
They're coated in a protein called ZP2, which sperm recognizes and binds to.
|
|
That bizarre connective tissue binds these stories, which are set around the world.
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|
Another tie that binds: Mr. McConnell's wife, Elaine Chao, is his transportation secretary.
|
|
It is the chemical in tobacco and e-cigarettes that binds the user.
|
|
Hemoglobin, the protein that binds oxygen in the blood, has a thermal sensitivity.
|
|
Why then would we degrade or destroy an institution that binds us together?
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|
Society is, of course, a useful and valid concept that binds us together.
|
|
A drug binds to particular proteins in your body and changes their behavior.
|
|
That binds the consumer experience and the economics of an ad-based model.
|
|
But the physicality of McAvoy's performance binds them together into a single, menacing figure.
|
|
The sneaky sheath allows you to move but binds you like a rubber band.
|
|
Mullur explains that because it binds to steroid receptors, it can affect hormonal function.
|
|
And New York has a privacy policy that binds its city agencies and contractors.
|
|
The American system, in contrast, binds all potential claimants unless they explicitly opt out.
|
|
With Trump "breaking the binds" of regulation, "that's got to be great for business."
|
|
NAFTA, which came into force in 1994, binds the United States, Canada and Mexico.
|
|
Clearly, intellectual busking is the glue that binds Kristeva and Sollers to one another.
|
|
Fasinumab binds to nerve growth factor (NGF) proteins and block their activity, reducing pain.
|
|
It also may have an invisible, ancient energy that binds all the runners together.
|
|
When it binds to the CB2 receptor, it helps with inflammation and pain relief.
|
|
Vigorous opposition to Trump is the glue that binds the self-proclaimed resistance together.
|
|
A single ideology binds the individual extremist to the state that adopts extreme measures.
|
|
What binds the two is the ambiguous legacy of power projected onto foreign fields.
|
|
Once in the brain, it binds very tightly to opioid receptors in the brain.
|
|
Aducanumab binds to a different type of amyloid protein in the brain than BAN2401.
|
|
I had finally shaken the binds of convention I had been raised to accept.
|
|
The euro has not become a tie that binds, but a bind that divides.
|
|
After a tense moment, Ramsay cuts the rope that binds the youngest Stark child.
|
|
The receptors [Covid-19] binds to in the lungs aren't very mature in children.
|
|
Staying in Paris in no way binds the president to Obama-era climate regulations.
|
|
If you have found yourself falling into any of these binds, you're not alone.
|
|
The poorer the woman, the tighter the trap and the more cruelly it binds.
|
|
However, the agreement also binds the wildfire victims to support the company's reorganization plan.
|
|
And no tie binds a man to the heart of Vladimir Putin like Emelianenko.
|
|
AHR is a molecule that binds small environmental molecules together, including dioxin and agent orange.
|
|
Being aware, and acknowledging the people around you in public binds us together as communities.
|
|
But onscreen, The Nice Guys is deficient in whatever special sauce binds these ideas together.
|
|
Darker hair also contains more melanin, which cocaine binds to, experts told the Associated Press.
|
|
It binds to the same receptors as opiates and renders them ineffective, according to experts.
|
|
One side binds very well to the gold and keeps the serum proteins at bay.
|
|
It also inhibited the neural receptor that binds cortisol and aids in recovery from stress.
|
|
The interplay between Halvorson and steel guitarist Susan Alcorn is the tie that binds throughout.
|
|
Blood here becomes something that binds and connects us, as does the need for care.
|
|
Christian was on the verge of breaking up with Dani, but the tragedy binds them.
|
|
Like the sauce that binds its pilchards, it brings a community together in culinary melody.
|
|
Gold in the ore binds with the mercury to produce an amalgam of the metals.
|
|
Every record of every transaction binds to the history of transactions that came before it.
|
|
Over time, those small interactions build up into a connective tissue that binds us together.
|
|
This is the protein that binds the top layer of skin to the bottom layers.
|
|
"It binds people that have been serving in that organization till now," the veteran said.
|
|
It is the strength of the female characters, though, that truly binds this collection together.
|
|
The blood ritual binds the community together as surely as the pounding of the drums.
|
|
Naloxone, for example, binds to opioid receptors, but is actually used to reverse opioid overdoses.
|
|
The company then binds their notes in a book at the end of the trip.
|
|
Nothing in the Constitution, or in federal law, binds electors to vote a particular way.
|
|
"A lot of that comes down to how it binds to human cells," says Andersen.
|
|
An emotionally affecting work, "Ties" explores what binds people together and what forces them apart.
|
|
Milk debt is an arrangement that binds us to our history and to the earth.
|
|
Blood "selfishly binds" with oxygen and doesn't release it to the tissue where it's needed.
|
|
Government spending is the principal glue that binds each of us to all fellow Americans.
|
|
Anger at corruption binds AMLO's motley coalition, which ranges from left-wing activists to evangelicals.
|
|
"There's no language in the trade deals that binds Congress' hands," Oyama testified to lawmakers.
|
|
A common interest can bind us as friends , but a common Father binds us as family .
|
|
Yet another exorphin, deltorphin, binds to your delta opioid receptors, which can also induce pain relief.
|
|
They feel every polarity and resonance as a wave, ready to rupture their fragile molecular binds.
|
|
So this mutated LSD still binds, but the trip probably both starts and ends more quickly.
|
|
What binds these often disparate settings and moods together is the sense of surprise and discovery.
|
|
But there's been no clear edict here, nothing that actually binds those in power to act.
|
|
But if he is the link which binds the western alliance together, he might be acceptable.
|
|
The generals' 20-year strategic plan, enshrined in law, binds future administrations to its development policies.
|
|
The core of Desktop Metal's tech binds powders into polymers and cook them in a furnace.
|
|
It's a chemical the binds to the receptor and causes a chemical reaction in the cell.
|
|
One thing that binds together all Angelenos, celebrities, and mortals alike, is the city's horrendous traffic.
|
|
Not God, but something that binds people together, or at least lets them find each other.
|
|
No EU law binds member states to red passports, and fellow member Croatia uses blue ones.
|
|
This overarching focus on safety spans and binds together our entire global aerospace industry and communities.
|
|
The compound [11c]Martinostat binds to three of the 11 types of HDAC known to exist.
|
|
Such outcomes could force voters to re-examine what binds England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
|
|
The assumption that our compatriots are trying to lead us to better places binds Americans together.
|
|
It binds Vietnam to countries where the rule of law is arbiter rather than authoritarian diktat.
|
|
The sugar in the bananas binds to proteins in the bananas nonenzymatically, even in dead tissue.
|
|
But they had trouble filtering out an isotope called tritium, since it binds easily to water.
|
|
But perhaps my favorite one is this: Romance writing binds women into community with one another.
|
|
President Salvador Sánchez Cerén warned that the ruling threatened the "fragile coexistence" that binds Salvadoran society.
|
|
Conquering a crossword puzzle with a friend creates a sticky fiber that binds two people together.
|
|
Don't worry about the peppers falling open on the plate; the bulgur filling binds them together.
|
|
Howe said it could be because tobacco reduces receptors in the brain to which THC binds.
|
|
Death is part of the connective tissue that binds humans across time and culture and place.
|
|
It binds to the ACE-23 receptor 22 times more tightly than a SARS virus does.
|
|
Maybe we need to stare at a simple, everyday family snapshot to remember what binds us.
|
|
The one quality that binds together all of ITs psychologically manipulative powers, and makes IT possible?
|
|
Such spikes affect the way that a virus binds onto a host cell and infects it.
|
|
Lu told reporters during a regular briefing on Friday that the document no longer binds China.
|
|
Richardson has a habit of putting his heroines in harrowing binds, and "Clarissa" is no exception.
|
|
Although Ms. Peretti is hipper and droller, and Mr. Peretti is geekier, their wit binds them.
|
|
Two things binds these characters together: insisting that they are both real and fake, and sex.
|
|
For all the betrayal and resentment that binds them, Magariel's characters feel neither typecast nor pitied.
|
|
In bankruptcy, when a majority of creditors support a restructuring plan, the plan binds every creditor.
|
|
Subcultures are popping up all over, and clothes are part of the glue that binds them.
|
|
Gene thinks the concept of isolationism in music is absurd, because it's what binds people together.
|
|
"An individual with EB lacks a critical protein that binds the layers of skin together," says Silver.
|
|
Muslim homesteaders are part of that legacy as well, a fact that binds them not only to
|
|
They are my jailers, yes, but they are also fellow inmates, maybe even in some tighter binds.
|
|
Another emotionally charged issue that binds Trump and Sanders supporters is a visceral dislike for Hillary Clinton.
|
|
But in this town where local journalism literally binds the community, the sense of loss hit hard.
|
|
For Hindus however, the link that binds the two bodies of water is strong; spiritual and essential.
|
|
Food is part of the fabric that binds us, across age, across accents, across oceans, across nations.
|
|
Bandhan Tod - meaning "break the binds" - includes classes on child marriage and dowries, and their ill effects.
|
|
Last night, Clinton offered a message of inclusiveness and warmth, declaring that "love" binds the country together.
|
|
In mice, the molecule binds to a receptor that triggers a shutting off of various inflammatory processes.
|
|
They're the fabric that binds our culture to itself, the very stuff that dreams are made of.
|
|
But how can justice truly prevail if law —created to incite fear and intimidate— binds the truth?
|
|
They'll be the connective tissue that binds together your digital life across multiple rooms, appliances, and services.
|
|
While Keytruda and Opdivo do that by binding to PD-1, Tecentriq instead binds to PD-L1.
|
|
Nations arise telling a story that binds people together in sacrifice and cooperation, allowing for remarkable feats.
|
|
Charcoal binds to poison in the gastrointestinal tract and stops it from being absorbed into the bloodstream.
|
|
But it is entanglement, which binds the fates of particles together, that really makes quantum computers sing.
|
|
Acid flashbacks in particular could result from the way LSD binds to the neurotransmitter serotonin, Giordano says.
|
|
The thrill of victory and deflation of defeat binds fans around the world regardless of team affiliation.
|
|
The pledge binds signatories to oppose all increases in marginal income tax rates for individuals and businesses.
|
|
And in some ways it feels like we're still stuck in the tired old binds of patriarchy.
|
|
More than a line but not quite a volume in space, the tail binds its colors loosely.
|
|
Avid makes a molecule, called a ligand, that binds to proteins, in this case in the brain.
|
|
As they say in 12-step recovery, it's weakness, not strength, that binds us to each other.
|
|
The protein binds to daptomycin, sending a signal back telling the cell that it's time to reorganize.
|
|
CO2 in the flue gas binds to the ammonia forming a salt, while inert gases are released.
|
|
There is nothing that inherently binds valuing family, security and the American dream to conservative economic policies.
|
|
I really had no way out, no way to escape the Underground or the binds of memory.
|
|
The library system also has an Espresso Book Machine, a device that prints, binds and trims paperbacks.
|
|
We get caught up in minutiae and risk losing sight of what binds us, rather than divides us.
|
|
Grisly as it is, the death binds Jay to Fauna, which is helpful for this show moving forward.
|
|
It was sharp, he was able to use it a couple times to get out of some binds.
|
|
A pill taken every other day, Galafold binds to the enzyme to help it break up the fat.
|
|
In the mouth, capsaicin bypasses your taste buds and binds to pain receptors on the tongue called TRPV1.
|
|
Words are the binds that keep communities together, but many of Australia's First Languages are rapidly being lost.
|
|
It argued that the UNRefugee Convention, which binds countries to house refugees, did not apply to the bases.
|
|
Garcia said 25% of the mixture is calcium carbonate and 703% is resin, which binds the powder together.
|
|
Fentanyl is an opioid that moves from the blood to the brain, where it binds to opiate receptors.
|
|
It's often been said that music is the great unifier, speaking a universal language that binds people together.
|
|
They also found that the hardy water bear expresses a tardigrade-specific protein that binds itself to DNA.
|
|
It also employed a deactivated version of Cas9, meaning that enzyme binds to, but no longer cuts, DNA.
|
|
For bonobos, sex acts as a glue that binds together all of the members of a social group.
|
|
The small molecule binds to one of the core clock proteins responsible for stabilizing the 24-hour cycle.
|
|
How does natural law theory square with constitutionalism, which binds judges to the terms of a written document?
|
|
Growing polarization is jeopardizing even the foundational assumption of common truths, the stuff that binds a society together.
|
|
What hasn't changed, and what binds the pediatric and the geriatric, is the obsession with their bowel movements.
|
|
It's this shared sense of responsibility for the safety of flight that spans and binds us all together.
|
|
The researchers reported that the Zika virus binds consistently to a protein in different placental cells called TIM1.
|
|
"(Garcia) really is that type of guy that binds it all together in the team room," Bjorn said.
|
|
When a human takes MDMA, it binds to a serotonin transporter in the brain to do its magic.
|
|
Though the thread that binds the collection is masculinity, twined in its fibers is the question of freedom.
|
|
" An old German Blüthner, in this instance an upright, binds the plot of "The Weight of a Piano.
|
|
What binds the stories are the tight relationships of Varg and his colleagues and their hilariously human crotchets.
|
|
But then there is the grout, that porous mixture of sand and cement that binds the tiles together.
|
|
"China — at least on the defense and security relationship — is the tie that binds us together," said Rossow.
|
|
The bond that binds the West is freedom — the cry of revolutions on both sides of the Atlantic.
|
|
A protein built into its nervous system binds with the toxins injected by the scorpion and blocks them.
|
|
Both the general and Saint Ursula are wearing red, which binds them together, as well as separates them.
|
|
They typically remind Americans of the values and the history that binds them and of the nation's historic mission.
|
|
Self-determination—complete control over the design and production of labor's products—necessarily binds a worker and their work.
|
|
"What binds us to our neighbors is our common geographical destiny and common interests," he said in a statement.
|
|
She binds her breasts, glues on some sideburns, and steps into her new life as a high school boy.
|
|
They took images of how the LSD binds to various serotonin receptors — including the receptor in the Preller study.
|
|
It seems we will ever want what we cannot have; that's what binds us; that's what keeps us apart.
|
|
This starts off as a thick gel, but then hardens into a solid matrix that binds the aggregates together.
|
|
These lies are the lubrication that keeps social interaction from becoming painful, the Machiavellian web that binds us together.
|
|
But the sinew the binds the show together, between jump scares and gray-hued ghost creatures, are family ties.
|
|
This original trauma is the thread that binds their testimonies, which stretch from 1940s Germany to present-day Zimbabwe.
|
|
The latter contains a heavy metal (osmium), and through this two-stage process, it binds to internal tissues. Voila!
|
|
Black Dove, to me, represents letting go of the cultural binds and shackles that kept me from breaking out.
|
|
"Nothing going on in these international discussions binds us to carry out things in our rulemaking process," Yellen replied.
|
|
These simulations consist of math equations that describe how the strong force binds quarks together using particles called gluons.
|
|
What binds them together is not a core belief or a goal, but instead the commitment to the binding.
|
|
This incident of violence binds the five kids—who call themselves the "Fantastic Four Plus One"—together through trauma.
|
|
That shared sense of purpose binds us together as friends and is the basis of our call to action.
|
|
Through Xie's eyes, we can see the binds and paradoxes of being stuck inside a single point of view.
|
|
All were injected with the chemical that binds to new neurons, making them easy to identify and number microscopically.
|
|
According to Ars Technica, OHA contractually binds members from building non-Google approved devices that run competing Android forks.
|
|
Another example of applying sports analytics poorly is one that binds the 49ers and the Browns: quarterback Colin Kaepernick.
|
|
Here's what binds these five races together: They're the ideal place for Democrats' blue wave to crash in 2018.
|
|
In people with a healthy stress response, cortisol eventually binds to receptors in cells around the body and disappears.
|
|
"I love this place because it binds the generations," said Joey, a waiter who has been here since 1997.
|
|
There is an attitude constructed in opposition to each other, which in no way binds a sense of society.
|
|
What binds these individuals together is an abiding belief that their presence overseas is making China better and stronger.
|
|
Never soak them in water, or you'll wash off the necessary starch that binds the potatoes to one another.
|
|
We do not need to enter into another massive international agreement that ties us up and binds us down.
|
|
Schiff and I initially had a casual relationship, the kind that binds two new members trying to navigate Congress.
|
|
You could even say anti-Mexican violence is what binds the history of law enforcement agencies across the Southwest.
|
|
The long history that binds China and the United States should strengthen the relationship, not doom it to failure.
|
|
The cement is a fine powder that, when activated by the water, binds the aggregates into a rigid mix.
|
|
It is something that binds itself to a community and its identity, and it follows residents wherever they go.
|
|
Nevertheless, the transport of these commemorative figures from North to South, and their existence in near replica, binds us.
|
|
In "The Triumph of Chastity," Petrarch writes, Chastitie binds the winged god, And makes him subject to her rod.
|
|
It's not what binds the relationship; it's not what defines the relationship, even though it is a romantic relationship.
|
|
It's his affective and emotional approach, together with his reactionary stance on identity issues, that binds his supporters together.
|
|
We will move forward, united in solidarity, as we continue this crucial work that binds all of our struggles together.
|
|
They also inserted a special fluorescent probe that binds to the DNA, and watched the cells get ready to replicate.
|
|
Little binds the incoming SP MPs beyond the banner they ran under; Mr Zelensky may struggle to control his party.
|
|
What has made this possible, more than anything else, is the strength of the ideology that binds these groups together.
|
|
"With all of their differences, they still have a cohesive aesthetic that binds them to the same world," Ishikawa says.
|
|
No one quite knows what unifying strategy binds these situations – nor what President Trump's end game might be on each.
|
|
Its survival through 850 years of political turbulence—through war, revolution and Nazi occupation—binds the present to the past.
|
|
The four natural bases in DNA pair up in a specific way: guanine binds to cytosine and adenine to thymine.
|
|
There is very little in the way of philosophical conversation about what binds us -- and ails us -- as a country.
|
|
Drake sang about them, Hitchcock made a film about them and they form the inspo glue that binds Pinterest together.
|
|
For now, the idea of resistance may be what binds the left—which is perhaps more than it had before.
|
|
CBD binds to both of these receptors as well, but it has a weaker signal and won't get you high.
|
|
People get stoned when an ingredient in marijuana called THC binds to a receptor called cannabinoid receptor 1, or CB1.
|
|
Intergenerational equity, a basic tenet of the social contract that binds workers and plan sponsors, has been given short shrift.
|
|
It's an important protein naturally found in our bodies that binds tissues and keeps the skin looking youthful and plump.
|
|
It cuts out the work of making a sauce, and it binds the roasted chicken, raw shallots and peas beautifully.
|
|
They are the duty that binds us to one another, investing in the government functions that we all rely on.
|
|
America is false to the past, false to the present, and solemnly binds herself to be false to the future.
|
|
At that time, Brazil had no targets to pursue, as the Kyoto Protocol binds only developed countries to cut emissions.
|
|
It isn't always brute force that binds us to other people, and the invisible compulsions are what interest Edugyan most.
|
|
That's notable because he has spent the better part of this year working to better understand what binds American communities.
|
|
This molecule would be held together by the strong nuclear force rather than electromagnetism, the force that binds most molecules.
|
|
Touch, ultimately, is the thread that binds all Ren's photographs, and not simply between humans, but the touch of humans.
|
|
Germany sold nearly 4 billion euros of five-year binds at a record low yield at auction of -0.24 percent.
|
|
Nikola Jokic is also ahead of his time, but there is also an athletic thread that binds him and Manning.
|
|
The mutant form of this protein accumulates and binds together to become toxic to certain brain cells, eventually killing them.
|
|
N-acetylcysteine, called NAC, binds to the toxins that result from the breakdown of acetaminophen before they injure the liver.
|
|
As a result, the amount of electrical attraction between the two decreases, reducing the energy that binds the atom together.
|
|
For instance, although we know it crosses the blood-brain barrier, we don't know where it binds in the brain.
|
|
Throughout our history, the American identity has been shaped by nature, by how our wilderness molds, inspires and binds us.
|
|
In the case of Herceptin, the antibody binds to a protein called HER2 on the surface of breast cancer cells.
|
|
His resulting report, "Through the Outback," explores the land and its people — and the complicated, evolving relationship that binds them.
|
|
The man binds her, gags her and violently rapes her at knifepoint for hours, snapping graphic photographs all the while.
|
|
Mr. Cosby's lawyers say Mr. Castor promised never to prosecute Mr. Cosby, a promise that, they say, now binds his successors.
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Oh, look, the right message then and now is that we have far more that binds us together than separates us.
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In South Sudan, where 5.8m need food assistance, the government binds delivery of aid in red tape and frequently denies deliveries.
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That's the stuff that cements relationships: the breezy back-and-forth that caps off a long day and binds you together.
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Playing up the power dynamics, the rope that binds the sculptures is the soft, supple fiber used in S&M bondage.
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Ultimately, the thing that binds the story together, and gives a relevance and context, is 1980s approach, that colorful neon feel.
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The simple bit of string (or occasionally chain) that binds the two pieces of wood has become an obsession to chuckers.
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And it will consider what might be done to nudge the two rivals away from the vicious circle that binds them.
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It isn't just the fact that both Trump and Kanye are pop-culture celebrities hungry for the spotlight that binds them.
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Hit play above to learn more about Ze'ev and Hadassa's "old-fashioned" courtship and the ancient religion that binds them together.
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An extremely powerful and buggy program that binds itself to the browser, Flash is a favorite target of attackers and malware.
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Tai's idol is a symbol that binds him to Scot, who shares his secret – and who also realizes its hidden superpower.
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And the results may not be the same as a drug that binds to only one type, or to all 11.
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Alig then binds Angel with tape, injects him with Draino, dismembers his body, and dumps the remains in the Hudson River.
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For "Corner Time," Despina Zacharopoulou, 33, binds and unbinds herself with rope and carries out a series of actions and rituals.
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And then, there's the tin—an integral metal used in small amounts, especially in the solder that binds the components together.
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"This happens because low-carbohydrate diets deplete stored glycogen, and glycogen binds large amounts of water," explained obesity researcher Stephan Guyenet.
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What binds the imagery together is that recurring theme: the sublimation of his own ego to the forces that surround him.
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But when doubt becomes pervasive, it can erode the glue that binds society together, and the medicine that keeps us healthy.
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And yet, if you listen to Romans — in the wealthy center or the gritty periphery — you hear a disgust that binds.
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There is no structural reason; the phrase is full of vowels, which function as the mortar that binds the crossings together.
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Composer Danny Elfman is the tie that binds them all, creating some of the finest music of the past 45 years.
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We get into the mental health struggles, racial binds, and essential yearning that make these people the characters we see today.
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When portland cement is mixed with water, it forms a paste that binds sand and rock together and hardens into concrete.
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"Soluble fiber binds to extra LDL cholesterol in the body and disposes it in the form of waste," Al Bochi said.
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Morgan places her characters in these binds and asks what it would take, in the face of them, to be moral.
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This means it binds to fats not water, making it unlikely that the marijuana-infused water had any effect on Roscoe.
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Obama's China 'climate' deal binds America with language of 'will' curb emissions now while China only 'intends' to curb in 2030.
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What contempt for the law means is you don't care about the set of legal norms that binds the country together.
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It is an opioid antagonist—meaning that it binds to opioid receptors and can reverse and block the effects of other opioids.
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It binds itself to opioid receptors in the brain, thereby blocking the drugs and stopping an overdose within two to five minutes.
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One would hope that the masks, ropes, binds, and fire used within the safety of a happy, consensual relationship wouldn't be newsworthy.
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"I believe that us honoring our flag and our anthem is part of what binds us together as a nation," he said.
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Danny Hong, a partner at the firm's New York office, told Business Insider that teamwork is what binds the company culture together.
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"I believe that us honoring our flag and our anthem is part of what binds us together as a nation," Obama said.
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A "fever of unity" slowly binds the Palestinian elite and the peasantry into a campaign against the injustice of the British Mandate.
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Researchers say that the compound binds to a receptor in the brain and makes the nerve cell linked to seizures less active.
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An oversized safety pin binds a wound bisecting the top of the emerging figure's head, while smaller safety pins line his chest.
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That is the cause that binds us and is so much more powerful and worthy than the small differences that divide us.
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The GM ruling only binds U.S. Bankruptcy Courts in one of 11 U.S. judicial circuits, and Takata may look to other courts.
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Silken tofu and nutritional yeast are what binds this casserole together, and you won't miss eggs or cheese even a little bit.
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Migrant workers in Lebanon and much of the Middle East work under the kafala sponsorship system, which binds them to one employer.
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Our appreciation for each other's service and dedication to country binds us together as we fight for our values here and abroad.
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Along with a certain relentless tone, the thing that binds all of the various Blackout experiences together is one simple concept: immersion.
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"Distant Mandate" is partly about the binds of middle age, when one's obligations compete, like a nest of hungry robins, for attention.
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"Each deed you do, each act, binds you to itself and to its consequences, and makes you act again," Ged tells Arren.
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Once succinate binds to a tuft cell, it triggers the release of IL-25, which alerts the immune system to the problem.
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Once a claw binds to a target protein, it needs a molecule to signal the T-cell to go into killing mode.
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The claw is called a receptor and the protein it binds to on the cancer cell, the target, is called an antigen.
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The boys could not be less alike, but they can't do without each other, and what binds them together is their job.
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It is rare, it is precious, and it binds us into one people on November 9, together in peace, together in freedom.
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When an Italian-American cop resists fining her, she feels justified in believing that "there is much that binds Italians with Nigerians."
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A protein called Tenascin-C, naturally present in all breast milk, binds to the virus and prevents it from attacking human cells.
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Yet the engineering feat they undertook was "every bit as consequential as the digital revolution that binds the world" today, she said.
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Methamphetamine has been shown to produce significant pulmonary damage since it binds heavily to pulmonary tissue, Volkow explained in a phone interview.
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It is time for the civilization to become new once more, a home void of sexuality, binds, and addictions of their world.
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This binds the pigments together, but it&aposs also made with 50% water, which makes the primer feel super lightweight and refreshing.
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Parrots and many other animals consume clay to treat an upset stomach; clay binds to toxins, flushing them out of the body.
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"There's no language in the trade deal that binds Congress's hands," Katherine Oyama, Google's global head of intellectual property policy, told lawmakers.
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It's all more Hostess than homemade, but, in a country of regional cuisines, it is also the sugary, sticky stuff that binds.
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A cage of light even appears halfway through the dance, further establishing the swan's inability to escape the darkness that binds him.
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But, as she has aged, she is at least as often in colloquy with herself, her memories, the nagging binds of conscience.
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Danny Hong, a partner at the firm's New York office, told Business Insider that teamwork is what binds the company culture together.
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THC binds to the brain's cannabinoid receptors, releasing the neurotransmitters dopamine, serotonin, and GABA, a neurotransmitter that stops neurons from firing, Giordano explains.
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The protesters' and activists' loyalty, though, is to their causes -- not to Democrats -- and what binds them is their strident opposition to Trump.
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Instead, there is a more fundamental thread that binds these disparate and heinous stories together: the increasingly noxious alchemy of complexity and capitalism.
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Although each one stands alone, together they form a system that binds America to its allies and projects its power across the world.
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But in severe cases, medical professionals can help clear the system using a type of therapy that binds to, and removes, the toxins.
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The fabric that binds the Chinese digital economy and has fostered its seemingly boundless growth is the magic combination of commerce and mobile.
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But because it's wrapped in the larger conservation narrative of Pandora, it serves as glue that binds the film and theme park together.
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But since no one knows how the petro will work and nothing binds the new currency to it, this peg inspires little confidence.
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Kratom, which has been consumed in Southeast Asia for centuries, binds to the same opioid receptor as morphine — so it can treat pain.
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He has worked to enforce and broaden the legislation that binds American governments to monitor and promote liberty of belief in all countries.
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It then travels down the respiratory tract and binds to epithelial cells lining the lung airways via specific molecules on the cell surface.
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As the video explains, that's all because caffeine binds to receptors in your brain that are normally occupied by a neurotransmitter called adenosine.
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Each small animal has a central mouth and feeding tentacles, and secretes a stony substance around its base that binds the colony together.
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Tar sands oil is a mixture of clay, water, and a thick, heavy oil called bitumen, the sticky stuff that binds asphalt together.
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His example pushes us to acknowledge that, in America, what we have in common binds us to one another and to our ideals.
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Seeking validation from others in hopes it will set you free from the binds that still tie you to the memory of me
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When the exterior part of the receptor binds to a molecule, it changes shape, and the cell sends a message to your brain.
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"About half of all tin mined today goes to make the solder that binds the components inside our electronics," Bloomberg reported in 2014.
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What binds the two directors, though, is how fanatically each is determined to let nothing—nothing witnessed, heard, or felt—escape her grasp.
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An inordinately bloody ordeal, it's one of the most unforgiving meta-commentaries on action games and their binds to the male power fantasy.
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Like other opioids, fentanyl binds itself to the body's opiate receptors, producing feelings of euphoria and relaxation that make it prone to abuse.
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Depending on your perspective, the new wall gapes like a wound or binds like a bandage as it rises against the falling sun.
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To carry that extra weight over deep crevasses with precipitous drops and erratic weather would put even more climbers in life-threatening binds.
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There's also no one cultural touchstone or trauma that binds Asian immigrants: no event on a national scale that has brought us together.
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The mixing process is arduous: Hand-grinding pigment can take hours, and the linseed oil, which binds the pigment, must be added carefully.
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Constant criticism of the temperature, space, and snack selection is something that binds a workforce and helps everyone to get through the day.
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Muzin has admitted culpability," the complaint charges, and "as its registered foreign agent, Mr. Muzin's admission also binds the defendant State of Qatar.
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"Egypt considers this step as a misjudgment of the nature of the strategic relations that binds the two countries over decades," it said.
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That's the one where, if something binds to alpha, it may increase the risk of breast cancer, because it makes breast cells grow.
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Teeth are made up of three layers: the outer enamel, an underlying dentin layer and connective tissue that binds it to the gum.
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Concrete, and the cement that binds it, is the most widely used material in the world, and its usage is on the rise.
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Orb's researchers analyzed the water using a dye that binds to plastic, a method that two of the bottled water companies say is unreliable.
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I learned from the years pavement-pounding writing The Secret Life's stories that one of the things that binds these figures is their carelessness.
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Immunoassay tests work by using an antibody that binds with a target drug to measure its presence in a sample of urine or blood.
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THC, explains Earleywine, is a partial agonist of the CB1 receptor, which means it binds to that receptor and causes it to fire differently.
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The other was armed with a protein that binds to the cancer cells and makes them commit suicide in an orderly process called apoptosis.
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But what really binds people together is the general frustration at the right-wing policies of the supposedly left-wing government of President Hollande.
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Also weighing on the currency is the uncertain fate of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which binds Canada, the United States and Mexico.
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Pranic healingPrana is India's equivalent of Qi—a mystical, totally unprovable life force that surrounds us and penetrates us and binds the galaxy together.
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Here too a simple symbol "binds" the target entity in place, where ideally it would remain until its makers got there and… salvaged it?
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Taljaard frames the ora as an extension of the bank, a symbol of independence that binds the town together more closely with each transaction.
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In the case of Cryptotora, however, the pelvis is a broad plate joined to a sacral rib, which in turn binds to the vertebrae.
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I want you to bea student of impossible binds,a magician ofa bloom from a fist,a dove from a dove from a dove.
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That's enough to convert a compound in the plant into a psychoactive form (delta-9-THC) that binds with endocannabinoid receptors in your brain.
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But the ensuing discourse was also a reminder of what's lost when Americans obscure what binds them together and elevates what sets them apart.
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In laboratory experiments, the researchers found that the less a variant of APOE binds to that compound, the less it is linked to Alzheimer's.
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It binds the ideals and principles on which we have stood for nearly 250 years to the plight of people yearning for freedom everywhere.
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Take NAFTA, another favorite punching back of the President's as he tries to renegotiate the trade deal that binds the US, Canada and Mexico.
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On contact with water, the balm turns into an oil that lifts and binds with the day's grime so I can wash it away.
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Republicans can't survive without the support of their white base, which binds them, for now, to the grievance politics that put Trump in office.
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In some cases of the syndrome, nitrogen binds to the hemoglobin in a baby's blood and makes red blood cells unable to carry oxygen.
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What binds the 10 images is a story of these two characters meeting at a certain point but then going beyond a simple meeting.
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Nicotine, the naturally occurring chemical in tobacco, is the addictive element that binds smokers to cigarettes and vapers to Juul and other e-cigarettes.
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It's based on passion, which differs from love because you can love many, but passion is what binds you to that one special person.
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Another downside: Exchanging trading commissions for research binds an investor to a firm regardless of how well or poorly it executes an investor's trades.
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We believe in a love that remembers the humanity that binds us together, that opens us to hear the other's voice, the other's mourning.
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" — Second-year MFA student Travis Austin "We're all making completely different types of work in different medias but somehow our 'otherness' binds us together.
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In this way, Abu Hamdan formally binds his audiovisual musings to the necessary clarification of words, emphasizing essential themes of language, power, and understanding.
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After DDT is absorbed through an insect's feet, it binds to nerve cells, causing them to become stuck in the "on" position, firing continuously.
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" He went on to add: "The oil market binds the world together and what happens in Saudi Arabia does not stay in Saudi Arabia.
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This cat litter is highly absorbent, and it binds directly to ammonia odors, keeping your litter box smelling pine-fresh for days on end.
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By a cultural elite that ignored the plight of the working class and thus broke faith with the basic solidarity that binds a nation.
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Instead of building an escalating triangle of plot, "Judas" lets the reader gradually understand things, most important the past that binds Wald and Atalia.
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So far I haven't been able to loosen the cord that binds a man to his own earth—and pulls him back to it.
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And so that is the glue that binds the consumer experience, which is revolutionized in the last 10 years, like nobody could have anticipated.
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The wave function "combines—or binds—distant particles into a single irreducible reality," as Sheldon Goldstein, a mathematician and physicist at Rutgers University, has written.
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So, when THC binds to receptors there, it makes food smell better and taste more delicious, which is part of the munchies phenomena, McDonough says.
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Capsaicin binds to heat receptors located on pain nerve fibers throughout your body, tricking your brain into thinking parts of your body are literally burning.
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When the EGCG binds to the protein, it makes the protein more soluble and therefore less likely to have a damaging effect within blood vessels.
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There is seemingly little connecting us together—people of all walks of life express their devotion to FNL—but something immaterial binds the FNL fandom.
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On Monday, it was decided that ROSA be released from its binds and allowed to float off to deorbit, and burn up in the atmosphere.
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Microsoft has some instructions on how to configure your settings and key binds in the JSON file, and you can even change the background image.
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And leeches have several adaptations to protect themselves from iron, including a type of tissue that binds iron to proteins to make it less toxic.
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Oshoosi is recently paroled from prison, and a shared history binds the two men together, as does a hard-earned love, which has its frictions.
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That code binds Lynch but possibly not the former president, whose law license was suspended by Arkansas for five years after the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
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Each of these compounds binds to opioid receptors — specific proteins found in the brain, spinal cord and other organs in the body — just like morphine.
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Federal ethics regulations prohibit government employees from using their position to endorse any product or business, a rule that formally binds Conway, but not Trump.
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We are susceptible not because of Facebook or Twitter, but because we are losing grip on the common thread that binds us together as Americans.
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He said repeatedly over the past week that leaving the 28-member bloc would undercut Britain's influence and weaken the democratic alliance that binds Europe.
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Altuve was originally signed by the previous management, but he signed an extension under Luhnow in 2013 that binds him to the Astros through 2019.
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Knowing that my own need for money and health insurance binds me to a job in which I condemn others to a lifetime of debt?
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Donald Trump's supporters know exactly what he stands for: hatred of immigrants, racial superiority, a sneering disregard of the basic civility that binds a society.
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Eppin is another drug that's thought to replace a protein that binds to sperm cells' surface, keeping it from swimming until an enzyme removes it.
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According to the researchers, this suggests that the serotonin transporter that binds to MDMA works similarly in octopuses and humans insofar as it promotes sociality.
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But one constant that binds the vast majority of scientists and science advocates, regardless of nationality, is an aversion to political interference with their work.
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As you will read in this article, one scholar calls the feat "every bit as consequential as the digital revolution that binds the world" today.
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San Francisco's ordinance is not perfect — although it binds local government entities, it does nothing to protect people from facial recognition deployed by private entities.
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Their bodies will produce more hemoglobin — the molecule in blood to which oxygen binds — and more oxygen will be carried to their brains and bodies.
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"I think it is a time when we remember the presidency itself, the whole institution of the presidency as something that binds us," she said.
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A 17-year-old in Phoenix who binds daily and asked to be identified only by the initials J.M. said he started binding at 13.
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What remains constant, though, is a free-floating anxiety that binds the boys (all nonprofessional actors) closer together, moving as if sharing a single skin.
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In reality, the NIH states that the amount of fat it binds is probably not enough to help you lose a significant amount of weight.
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The temptation is to find some sort of broad, overarching theme, something that binds all of the failures together, some fatal flaw in Russian soccer.
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But while accuracy binds the trust between reader and contributor, eccentricity and elegance and surprise are the singular qualities that make learning an inviting transaction.
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At a time of intense polarization on Capitol Hill, one belief binds Democrats and Republicans like no other: the need to punish and isolate Russia.
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Still, what may be most remarkable -- and promising -- about these new activists is not what separates them from one another, but what binds them together.
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His poetic images are more about feelings than facts, and through them we experience his family's anguish as well as the love that binds them.
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The drug, chemically known as selinexor, binds to and inhibits a protein called XPO1, leading to the accumulation of cancer-suppressing proteins in the cells.
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"We are not just designing objects of beauty but showing that we can develop technology that binds carbon dioxide rather than emitting it," Klarenbeek says.
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One pattern that binds all of these engineering disasters together is that they all had whistleblowers who were aware of the looming danger before it happened.
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When progesterone binds to a sperm cell, this leads to calcium signals being sent within the sperm, caused by changes in the concentration of calcium ions.
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Policarpio selected pieces from Barraza and Cervantes's robust poster series, decisively connecting historical and contemporary struggles and emphasizing intersectionality as the universal thread that binds them.
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His discovery led to the first drug that binds the CTLA-4 protein, called ipilimumab (or Yervoy), approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 33.
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The "early decision" process allows prospective students to apply to a preferred college or university with the understanding that an acceptance binds the applicant to attend.
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Mr Trump sees himself leading a fight against "globalism", by which he means any order that binds American sovereignty, or fails to put American workers first.
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NATO both binds Europe together and to the United States, and it is important for American national security interests -- no matter what Trump may tell you.
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Through his eyes, and his conviction that there are "no two halves" to humankind, Ms Erpenbeck binds the upheavals of past and present, Europe and Africa.
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C3J's drug, currently being tested for efficacy, is a non-specific antimicrobial peptide that has been joined with another peptide which binds only to S. mutans.
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Scientists have discovered that a receptor in the body that THC binds to is malleable, re-igniting the possibility of drugs that mimic cannabis, Wired reported.
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How it works: When someone smokes, THC binds to CB1 receptors on the surface of cells in the brain, liver, lungs and elsewhere in the body.
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To be disrupted, an unlucky star must venture close enough to a black hole that gravitational tides exceed the internal gravity that binds the star together.
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The most common treatment for severe cases, known as chelation therapy, involves taking a medication that binds with the lead so that it's excreted in urine.
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How do you become a kobold fire mage, I wonder, and then I pick up the scimitar and a curse binds it to my hand eternally.
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Kardashian West then broke free from her binds and called her bodyguard Pascal Duvier, who was out with the star's sisters Kourtney Kardashian and Kendall Jenner.
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The common thread that binds these figures is that they have ardently defended President Trump's counter-jihadist agenda, standing at odds with the national security establishment.
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During yesterday's Pyer Moss show, designer Kerby Jean-Raymond attempted to ask, What if double binds happen to a group of people, not just one person?
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Private insurers do so instead, but the government binds their hands, for example by requiring them to pay for six broad categories of drugs, without exception.
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"No matter where you come from, where you were born or raised, your race or religion, the tie that binds is being a woman," Nash says.
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A couple of small studies have found that magnesium supplementation improved sleep quality in older people, possibly because magnesium binds to GABA receptors similar to Ambien.
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The woman's mutation is in an area of the gene that binds with a sugar-protein compound that is involved in spreading tau in Alzheimer's disease.
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Although the precise details vary from receptor to receptor, when a GPCR binds to the proper molecule, it sets off a signaling cascade within the cell.
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What binds this particular set of architects together is practice: All but Mr. Fujimoto have worked in the offices of Mr. Ito, Ms. Seijima or both.
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The question is what binds these two groups together in a single party, and is the bond strong enough for that party to endure and prevail?
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"During its passage through the atmosphere, snow binds airborne particles and pollutants, which are eventually deposited on Earth's surfaces, a phenomenon termed 'scavenging,'" the paper said.
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Salt draws out of the meat a sticky protein called myosin, which binds to the fat and creates the stable emulsion required for proper sausage snap.
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One way to test a substance, for example, is to see if it binds to a specific receptor already known to be activated by psychoactive drugs.
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None of this benefits the players, nor does a provision that binds early signees to their letters of intent in the event of a coaching change.
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What they have in common is a history of athleticism and a passion for training with Mr. Foreman, who pushes them physically and binds them personally.
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How they work: You apply the gel to dry skin and the polymer-based liquid binds to the oil on your face, forming teeny little balls.
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One thing that has not changed is the legal document that binds Johnston and Hutton together: a nondisclosure agreement that Johnston signed at the mediation conference.
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If all were free to believe, they might find love, the love of God that binds humanity together and seeks the mutual beneficence of one another.
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Finally, the president, despite his rocky relationship with the truth and his potty-mouth, has done one thing that binds him closely to his political base.
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All of Europe's far rightists pay homage to the idea of a folkish, seamless nation that supposedly binds their countrymen regardless of class and other differences.
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The administration has long sought to overturn the court agreement, arguing the ways it binds the government's hands contribute to attracting undocumented immigrants to the country.
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Mr. Trump also created needless uncertainty with his threat to rip up the North American Free Trade Agreement that binds the United States, Canada and Mexico.
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When the RNA encounters a targeted strand of DNA inside the cell, it binds to it and the enzyme creates a break in the cell's DNA.
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Your brain goes nuts over that reward and releases dopamine, which binds to specialized receptors before proteins remove it from the synapse, recycling it for future release.
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There are five permanent members of the Security Council and one of those five permanent members can make a decision that binds the rest of the world.
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The transgene's RNA binds to the natural PPO-coding RNA, and the double-stranded sequence is read as a mistake and destroyed by the cell's surveillance system.
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Marrinan and Dewey insist that, biographical details notwithstanding, the glue that binds the two halves of Burden's career together are his enduring curiosity, "childlike enthusiasm," and determination.
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He was injected with a harmless, radioactive molecule that binds to clumps of amyloid and can then be detected with a positron-emission tomography (PET) brain scan.
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The best candidates were then recycled into another round of such "fishing" and the result, after several rounds, was an antibody that binds tightly to TNF-alpha.
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It's no secret that Uber wants to become the "One Ring" for transportation, the app that brings all other modes together and, in the darkness, binds them.
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From Copernicus to Kepler to Newton, understanding gravity and how it binds objects in the universe together was the project that launched physics as an intellectual discipline.
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Preservation Detectives: 'The Keeping Quilt': Stories, Art and Clues to the Past (Sunday) A quilt binds together not just material but also bits of history and memory.
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In this case, the collagen binds with other collagen in the skin, knitting the wound back together, which is exactly what doctors want when suturing a wound.
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Homophobia is the tie that binds a divided country; the one thing a nation of chronic ethnic loyalties, of religious tension, of failed government, can agree upon.
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"This peptide works against all influenza viruses of the H1 hemagglutinin subtype because it binds specifically to a conserved piece in this protein," explained Jacob to Gizmodo.
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For better or worse, that often means marijuana strains with higher contents of THC — the natural psychoactive chemical that binds to your brain and produces a high.
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This is how we must honour Jo Cox — by rejecting bigotry in all its forms, and instead embracing, as she always did, everything that binds us together.
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Republicans are closely watching the Virginia lawsuit, filed by Correll, in federal court on Friday that challenges a state law that binds delegates to the primary winner.
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The core element of the CRISPR system is a small piece of RNA that binds to a specific DNA sequence in a genome and the Cas9 enzyme.
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The lessons you can learn from playing with your breakfast are so broad that astrophysicists have used them to better understand how gravity binds objects in space.
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The Proustian faith in memory—that it binds us to the past, that it gives a sense of unity to our otherwise desultory lives—has been shaken.
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Discomforting as it may be, there's reason to take a critical look at an even older accord that binds the nations of the West: the NATO treaty.
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Since then, Carlson has testified before Congress on forced arbitration, a common TV contract clause that legally binds parties to settle resolutions outside of the court system.
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In some cases, the tumor evolves so that it no longer displays on its surface what the claw binds to, making it invisible to the engineered cells.
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Such initiatives are also slowly making inroads in the Middle East, which is known for its notorious "kafala" sponsorship system that binds migrant workers to one employer.
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As Thompson lies on top of the 24-year-old and binds him in a chokehold, Hernandez flails beneath him, kicking out and groaning under his weight.
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"I think that what binds us is that we both have a pretty serious meditative side, but we're both working in New York City," Mr. Nichtern said.
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In a recent project typical of his approach, "The Tie That Binds," he used native plants to create eight drought-resistant gardens along the Los Angeles River.
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The answer was almost always the same: The people they knew would not speak on the record, or were caught in legal binds, or were simply afraid.
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NSAIDs might affect how Covid-19 binds to human cells, according to Dr. Yogen Kanthi, assistant professor of cardiology at the University of Michigan, who studies inflammation.
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"There is data from basic science studies that have shown that Covid-19 itself binds to a protein at the surface of cells called ACE2," he said.
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But what goth personally means to me is an obsession with the macabre, and the understanding that the only thing that binds the human condition is death.
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But a common goal now binds British Prime Minister Theresa May and her continental counterparts: getting a deal — perhaps any deal — to push withdrawal over the line.
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There were arm balances and binds and long chair pose holds that strengthened and toned my glutes and biceps – all in a room heated to 98 degrees.
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But a state dinner is also an important gesture of diplomacy, the pretty bow atop the package that binds one nation to another in friendship and alliance.
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These so-called anticholinergic drugs block the action of an important neurotransmitter called acetylcholine that normally binds to these special receptors to signal the glands to work.
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In addition, if you wear something that doesn't narrow your waist but binds everything else as well, you're not going to be shaping your waist very effectively.
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The agreement, or consent decree, binds Albuquerque to implementing reforms recommended in the report, and places the department under federal oversight until the reform process is complete.
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Mifepristone helps end pregnancies because it binds tightly to the hormone receptors that also attach to progesterone, he explained, and no amount of progesterone can unwind those bonds.
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In other words, if owning expensive sneakers or being fourth-generation Americans is what binds a group of friends, can they learn to live with others unlike them?
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Yet gilded recollection fortifies and binds the families; Iren and Balint, tetchily married in the end, have both "seen the same blue sky shining, before the thunder broke".
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The concern is reasonable: the Irish deny any designs on the north, but any scheme that binds it to the republic will inevitably mean drift from the mainland.
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The second quantum phenomenon, "entanglement", binds together the destiny of a quantity of different particles, so that what happens to one of them will immediately affect the others.
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These chemical bases recognize and bond to one another (A binds to T, and C to G) but are also very easy to unstick from their corresponding parts.
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The United States Postal Service provides the nation with a vital delivery platform that enables American commerce, serves every American business and address, and binds the nation together.
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In particular, the team was looking at AM6538, an chemical that binds particularly tightly to the CB1 receptor and is believed to be potentially useful for treating addiction.
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But since the treaty requires unanimous approval at the end of the two years, it may not be possible to secure a guarantee that binds future EU leaders.
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In both groups of animals, the B.D.N.F. gene was partially covered with clusters of a particular type of molecule that binds to the gene, though in different amounts.
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Indeed, our modern reliance on digital infrastructure for information makes trustworthy connection vital not only for democratic governing, but also for the social cohesion that binds a nation.
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Free trade, thus, morphed into a utopian dream in which commerce binds the nations of the world together in a manner that prevents global conflict and advances mankind.
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The theme that loosely binds the pieces in her latest collection, "Critics, Monsters, Fanatics, and Other Literary Essays," is the essential importance — the cultural necessity — of literary criticism.
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It's a quality that binds together many of the subjects in her book—and qualities that she admires are often ones that rear up in her own work.
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This strong vehicle of flesh and bones and fat that twists into complicated yoga binds today and might allow me to push out a human down the road.
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To do so, the researchers developed a radioactive imaging agent they called Martinostat, which binds with HDACs to make them visible in a PET (positron emission tomography) scan.
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This is part of the spike that binds to a human cell—for this virus it attaches to ACE-213, a cell membrane enzyme that regulates blood pressure.
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But "different" — yes, that may be the real thing that binds black people together, from the ones you know to the ones you've never seen or heard of.
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Cement is the glue that binds together sand and gravel to form concrete, a material used to build everything from roads, to homes, to water and sewage systems.
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They do not have a strong story to tell about what we owe to other Americans, how we define our national borders and what binds us as Americans.
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Many activists say they are concerned that Mr. Xi's tightening grip on the internet will dampen a thriving online culture that they say binds the gay community together.
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It is the invisible thread woven into the Constitution that binds a diverse people together in the cause of protecting our collective security and preserving our personal freedoms.
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The quartet "Where Is Evil" binds the opera's four voices into a tight matrix of counterpoint as the orchestra shifts from startling blasts to patches of elusive harmonies.
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Many Americans are unaware of an inescapable principle of constitutional law: With the exception of the Thirteenth Amendment's ban on slavery, the Constitution binds only the government's conduct.
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She panics less for her own self than for the safety of her love, Alifair, who binds his chest and is prettier than any other boy in town.
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Given how sacred cheerleading is to the Navarro team, it's not surprising that they also have a super special, and apparently pretty secret phrase that binds them together.
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Schiff's poems, with their Hitchcock-like distrust of appearances, their alertness to hidden binds and snares, offer something few poets ever discover: a vision of the whole world.
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As much as their personal relationships, it is the family cemetery that binds the descendants — not merely to honor and remember their forebears but also for tax reasons.
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I think that what one of the jobs of political leaders going forward is, is to tell a better story about what binds us together as a people.
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They are the continuity that binds one generation of Americans to the next and the beacon for how we work together to build an ever more perfect union.
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The individual objects reveal an obsessive-compulsive maker who welds steel, manipulates clay, and binds leather as an expression of plural identities and queerness in a binary world.
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