ADJECTIVE
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of or relating to the sequential performance of multiple operations
serial processing
How To Use in series In A Sentence
- For example, the aspirated series of stops and affricates are written by adding a horizontal stroke to the letters for the plain series.
- For example, the aspirated series of stops and affricates are written by adding a horizontal stroke to the letters for the plain series.
- Maybe in series three the chief goes rogue! The Sun
- On the remiges the markings are quite regularly hexagonal in shape; and on the upper coverts of the tail and on the rectrices they are accompanied with numerous ferruginous blotches, some of which are irregularly scattered over the whole surface of the vane, while others, marked in the center with a blackish spot, are disposed in series along the shaft and resemble ocelli. Scientific American Supplement, No. 360, November 25, 1882
- Richard Gibson (who played Herr Flick in series 1-8, but not 9 when he was replaced by David Janson, apparently) used to subedit the shoddy magazine I worked on. April 28th, 2007
- In Series Two and Five, they were squashy and smelled of fish, which made sense since both those Anywheres had so much water in them. THE LIVES OF CHRISTOPHER CHANT
- Mercer was a mathematical analyst of originality and skill; he made noteworthy advances in the theory of integral equations, and especially in the theory of the expansion of arbitrary functions in series of orthogonal functions.
- For this reason the alicyclic series has, since the middle of the eighties, assumed such size and importance as to make it the equal of the other three main series within organic chemistry. Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1910 - Presentation Speech
- Zoosporangia formed from their tips, generally cylindrical or slightly clavate, rarely short and in series; the later ones arising within the empty membranes of preceding ones by upward growth of their basal walls, or rarely beside them by cymose branching. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society
- On the remiges the markings are quite regularly hexagonal in shape; and on the upper coverts of the tail and on the rectrices they are accompanied with numerous ferruginous blotches, some of which are irregularly scattered over the whole surface of the vane, while others, marked in the center with a blackish spot, are disposed in series along the shaft and resemble ocelli. Scientific American Supplement, No. 360, November 25, 1882