bioscience

[ US /ˌbaɪoʊˈsaɪəns/ ]
NOUN
  1. any of the branches of natural science dealing with the structure and behavior of living organisms
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How To Use bioscience In A Sentence

  • As biosciences and associated technologies advance, and they will, so will be the need for enhanced capabilities to deal with their ethical, legal, social and economic consequences.
  • Engineering and medicine apart, the biosciences are throwing up lots of cushy jobs.
  • Illustrated in Figure 7 is the restriction enzyme and genetic map of a commercially available (BD Biosciences Clontech) bacterial plasmid derivative containing the coding sequence for enhanced yellow fluorescent protein fused to the endoplasmic reticulum targeting sequence of calreticulin (a resident protein). Archive 2005-10-01
  • A larger proportion of the workforce in future will be employed in areas such as the biosciences, technology and higher education.
  • The great thing about environmental genomics is that it has made it possible to form a much more complete picture of microscopic life everywhere on Earth, instead of being limited to the very small proportion of bugs" - microorganisms, that is - "that can be cultured in the lab," says Dylan Chivian of Berkeley Lab's Physical Biosciences Division SpaceRef Top Stories
  • Teaching assessments recorded perfect scores in biosciences, with nursing, anatomy and physiology close behind. Times, Sunday Times
  • Similarly, to bolster the sciences and technology, Summers is talking about launching an engineering school while expanding initiatives in the biosciences and other cutting-edge fields.
  • The Laureates introduce themselves and discuss great challenges in bioscience (4: 02); the complexity problem (8: 50); controversial ethical questions (17: 35); reproductive cloning (20: 38); and the Human Genome Project (24: 40). H. Robert Horvitz - Interview
  • Teaching assessments recorded perfect scores in biosciences, with nursing, anatomy and physiology close behind. Times, Sunday Times
  • Andrew Reynolds points out another interesting historical thread in bioscience: A Dubious "Opportunity" for IDers
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