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impinging

[ US /ˌɪmˈpɪndʒɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /ɪmpˈɪnd‍ʒɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the physical coming together of two or more things
    contact with the pier scraped paint from the hull

How To Use impinging In A Sentence

  • Yes, many ICC supporters claimed that opposition in the Senate or ASPA were paranoid delusions and that the ICC had zero intent of ever opening an investigation into the acts of the United States government or otherwise impinging on our right to make foreign policy. The Volokh Conspiracy » “Garzon and the Trouble with International Law”
  • The test problem is the initial stage of a two-dimensional diffraction and reflection of a plane shock wave, impinging on a rectangular obstacle.
  • Thus, cocaine modulates locomotion behavior in C. elegans primarily by impinging on its serotoninergic system. ScienceBlogs Channel : Life Science
  • The emission and capture of photons in the discharge cells as well as the distribution of impinging photons on the phosphor layer were simulated with Monte-Carlo model.
  • We live in a time of financial insecurity that is impinging on the lives of our children because we did not think about tomorrow. Nick Joy: Why Genetically Modified Salmon Affects My Rights as a Citizen
  • Other similarities between the suicide and the anorexic seem to me to relate to the individual's reactions to an impinging world.
  • The emission and capture of photons in the discharge cells as well as the distribution of impinging photons on the phosphor layer were simulated with Monte-Carlo model.
  • Other similarities between the suicide and the anorexic seem to me to relate to the individual's reactions to an impinging world.
  • Surgical removal of tonsils, nasal polyps or other tissue impinging on the airway also may relieve sleep apnea.
  • Mr Dave Kriby, chairman of the employer grouping in the auto industry national bargaining forum, said it was a fact that the Seifsa dispute was "impinging" on auto suppliers. ANC Daily News Briefing
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