How To Use Inert In A Sentence

  • All phospholipids are hygroscopic and pick up water if they are not handled properly under inert gas atmosphere.
  • Often called gyroscopic stabilization, inertial stabilization enables the telescope to continually point at a celestial object while the aircraft maneuvers in flight. PhysOrg.com - latest science and technology news stories
  • A reaction induced on the laboratory bench may, like yeast in inert dough, leaven the whole of mankind, lightening and lifting it to heights undreamed of by its ancestors. The Contribution of Creative Chemistry to the Humanities
  • The scrutinizing artist and his exposed sitters are all committed to the inert artifact that will outlive them: a photograph.
  • Because it is chemically inert, helium was not identified on Earth until some time later, in 1895.
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  • The capital city needs at its helm a person with ideas and energy who can combat the forces of inertia and inefficiency, and who can initiate and manage urgently needed change.
  • If land-filled, PLA is inert – it contains no harmful toxins that can leach into the soil. Noble Juice PLA Packaging
  • Indeed, this is one retelling of the classic children's story that feels inert, unappetizing, and downright revolting.
  • My inertia in not pushing it backwards into a safe zone is as guilty for the shattered glass as the treacherous wind.
  • The narrative is inert and sloppy, as if the author had been writing half-asleep.
  • Authority is there to counteract the piggy part of the self, the part that wants nothing more than to wallow in muck, doing nothing, staying stubbornly inert and apathetic. An Education « Tales from the Reading Room
  • Christ was quickened, that is to say, was active, in His own spirit state, although His body was inert and in reality dead at the time; and that _in_ that disembodied state He went and preached to the disobedient spirits. Jesus the Christ A Study of the Messiah and His Mission According to Holy Scriptures Both Ancient and Modern
  • Kozel yelled, and the shuttle decelerated rapidly, for a moment overpowering the inertial dampers. Star Trek: Typhon Pact: Rough Beasts of Empire
  • The long, hot dusty afternoons, where time hangs still, and dry leaves fly in sad whirls before collapsing to the ground, the inertia and sloth that drives even the most energetic into a huddle, the sense of despair.
  • He turned and faced the inert form sprawled on the bed in its bathrobe. THE OUTSIDER
  • Suppose we have two observers A and B in different inertial frames, that is each is travelling at a constant velocity not acted on by any forces.
  • The gravitational mass and the inertia mass are not equal in the microscopic quantum behavior.
  • Reinertsen is a pompous ass who ragged on him terribly in his doolie year—the label for the freshman hell-in-residence period at Doolittle Hall. Orbit
  • Gold has been prized because it is the most inert metal, changeless and incorruptible.
  • The pods had no artificial gravity fields of their own to provide inertial dampening effects, so the Marines strapped themselves securely to the vertical backboards provided.
  • Armament underwing comprises a UV-16-57 rocket pod on the outer pylon and an inert AA-8 Aphid air-to-air missile on the inner pylon.
  • Threatened or now rare species also include blue monkey Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanii, yellow-backed duiker Cephalophus sylvicultor, sitatunga Tragelophus spekei, giant hog, hylochoerus meinertzhageni, bushpig potomochoerus porcus, the Rwenzori hyrax Dendrohyrax arboreus ruwenzorii and Ruwenzori otter-shrew Micropotamogale ruwenzorii (EN). Rwenzori Mountains National Park, Uganda
  • In addition, there are bushpig Potamochoerus larvatus, giant forest hog Hylochoerus meinertzhageni, bushbuck Tragelaphus scriptus, yellowbacked and blackfronted duiker Cephalophus sylvicultor and C. nigrifrons. Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda
  • In particular, argon is the cheapest alternative when diatomic nitrogen is not sufficiently inert. Argon
  • Threatened or now rare species also include blue monkey Cercopithecus mitis stuhlmanii, yellow-backed duiker Cephalophus sylvicultor, sitatunga Tragelophus spekei, giant hog, hylochoerus meinertzhageni, bushpig potomochoerus porcus, the Rwenzori hyrax Dendrohyrax arboreus ruwenzorii and Ruwenzori otter-shrew Micropotamogale ruwenzorii (EN). Rwenzori Mountains National Park, Uganda
  • We had a feeling of inertia in the afternoon.
  • She lay there inert; I thought she must be dead.
  • It is very fitting that Mr. Frederic's last book should be in praise of action, the thing that makes the world go round; of force, however misspent, which is the sum of life as distinguished from the inertia of death. A Collection of Stories, Reviews and Essays
  • She lapsed into inertia and lay there as if asleep.
  • They seem to you inert, flabby, weakly envious, foolishly obstinate, impiously mutinous, and many other things.
  • He speaks not for an educational establishment too often bound by its own inertia, but for a generation of reformers whose work is bearing fruit. Times, Sunday Times
  • From the dinky tin the adherent would peel back the paper lid and remove several spoonfuls of the inert powder, add tapwater, stir and watch in amazement as a lurid froth began to bubble away.
  • Initially, I guessed and told her they might package the salad in an inert or nonoxygen atmosphere of nitrogen or maybe argon.
  • Graham Burnett wrote a fascinating essay in Cabinet recently about otolithic organs, the pair of sensors in the inner ear that help us stay balanced and maintain inertia. Boing Boing
  • Clerks in dusty stores moved with the majestic inertia of tall ships becalmed. Michael Winship: Washington and Change: Cash You Can Believe In
  • Alternatively, we let inert hanging bug zappers slaughter any bug stupid enough to stumble in with a small shower of crackling blue light.
  • Developer Glinert looks at the four main elements -- learnability, simplicity, efficiency, and aesthetic -- that help game usability to flourish.
  • Faced with this situation, Smithson felt that the task of the artist was to cultivate a thoroughgoing acedia: ‘The artist should be an actor who refuses to act’ and ‘Immobility and inertia are what many of the most gifted artists prefer.’
  • In short, purposeful and disciplined policy and funding strategies will have to overcome political inertia and resistance.
  • Like so many, I am beyond fed up with an inert, intellectually lazy, nepotistic ALP that refuses to grasp the dangerous long term implications of the current government.
  • Owing to the restrictions from conventions , inertia, doctrinairism and subconsciousness, the new curriculum reform still remains on the surface of educational culture.
  • His distaste for big inert words - words like omniscient, impassable and imperturbable, which he finds other theologians using to describe God - inspires his own desire for accessibility.
  • entropy increases as matter and energy in the universe degrade to an ultimate state of inert uniformity
  • Could it be that the inertia of a bad system, already in place, sorely and irrevocably jaundices ideological perspectives? Matthew Anderson: Lower Case Capitalism
  • The moment of inertia is related to the mass of the molecule's atoms and to the bond distance.
  • By the force of its own inertia, the club flew towards the wall, breaking into pieces.
  • Other species include the endemic water chevrotain Hyemoschus aquaticus, African golden cat Felis aurata (K), giant forest genet Genetta victoriae, the endemic aquatic genet Osbornictis piscivora, leopard Panthera pardus, giant ground pangolin Manis gigantea, aardvark orycteropus afer, pygmy antelope Neotragus batesii, forest buffalo Syncerus caffer nanus, bush pig Potamochoerus porcus and giant forest hog Hylochoerus meinertzhageni (V) and great cane rat Thryonomys swinderianus. Okapi Faunal Reserve, Democratic Republic of Congo
  • When liberal economist John Kenneth Galbraith started using the term in the 1950s, his targets were not just any widely held wrong opinions, but those that were the product of inertia and convenience.
  • Technical incompetence may be part of the explanation but inertia and complacency are clearly factors too. Times, Sunday Times
  • Instead, he had to give some ground, admit that he's not going to meet this August deadline he's been demanding to combat what he calls inertia back in Washington. CNN Transcript Jul 23, 2009
  • Armament underwing comprises a UV-16-57 rocket pod on the outer pylon and an inert AA-8 Aphid air-to-air missile on the inner pylon.
  • As you push yourself to overcome inertia, you need to work against the tendency to feel discouraged and hopeless.
  • Another way of understanding the situation is to remember the equivalence Einstein explained between gravitational and inertial forces.
  • The difficulties with agents include conflicts of interest when the same agent acts for competing principals or is simply inert.
  • The test apparatus to friction disc of wet clutch in automatic transmission can change some test parameters, such as sliding velocity, turning inertia, normal applied force and lubrication volume.
  • Classical terrain navigation systems usually consist of three parts: a barometer, a radar altimeter and an inertial instrument.
  • An expectation can act as an inertial fulcrum in the morphogenic field, shutting out possibilities for emergent learning, rather than encouraging spontaneity and creativity. Willow Dea: Habit #5 Intention and Expectation: The Impact on the Class
  • Such an option would be far more acceptable to environmentalists than launching even an inert reactor from Earth.
  • Research on collision rate of finite inertial particle with preferential concentration is one of hotspots in gas-particle flow mechanism and aerosol dynamics.
  • After many experiments he finally married it successfully with the inert claylite, otherwise known as diatomaceous or infusorial earth.
  • The subsoil is a store of inert fertility that should not remain dormant. Crops and Methods for Soil Improvement
  • All the waste is used completely as the small amount of ash residue; which is inert, can be used in by-products.
  • The energy is bound up in the cellulose (especially the hemicellulose), which has to be freed from the inert lignin and then converted into sugars (a process called, naturally enough, saccharification), which can then be fermented into ethanol. Spinning straw into liquid gold
  • A better way to measure the mass of a microscopic sample is to quantify the sample's inertia as it is forced into motion.
  • The nitrogen we breathe is chemically inert and takes no part in the chemical or metabolic reactions in the body.
  • The sherardizing process again uses zinc, this time in the form of zinc dust mixed with an inert filler which, together with the parts to be coated, is placed in a sealed container.
  • Inside is a guidance control unit with inertial navigation and global positioning systems.
  • And looking down on the unthinking city, the Cathedral kept watch alone, beseeching pardon for the inappetency for suffering, for the inertia of faith that her sons displayed, uplifting her towers to the sky like two arms, while the spires mimicked the shape of joined hands, the ten fingers all meeting and upright one against another, in the position which the image-makers of old gave to the dead saints and warriors they carved upon tombs. The Cathedral
  • A projectile is an object that has been launched, shot, hurled, thrown or by other means projected and which continues in motion due to its own inertia.
  • Just as deadlines and precommitment can fight the inertia of myopia, they can also help beat hyperopia. The Gift-Card Economy
  • But whatever the smart individuals inside these organizations might think, bureaucratic inertia is killing those golden-egg geese.
  • The figures suggest that sweeping reforms to a system riddled with bureaucracy and inertia are beginning to bear fruit. Times, Sunday Times
  • the inertia of an object at rest
  • Though intelligent and readable, it is dramatically inert and buckles under the weight of its own themes. Times, Sunday Times
  • The products that on paper seemed to be bombproof and virtually inert turned out to be part of a system that propagates mold, mildew, and rot.
  • But Earth is very massive compared to the object, so its inertia or resistance to acceleration is much greater.
  • After all, the image of politically inert women reinforces cherished myths about motherhood.
  • The well-known hoard of chemically inert gold, whose nuggets are not sharp enough to pierce the delegate membrane of a dragon's outer hide, forms a safe and comfortable nesting place.
  • With its obvious punk references - London Calling is the name of a famous Clash song - the piece situates itself within the groundswell of populist resentment that is currently challenging the torpid inertia of the times.
  • A: Most potting soil or seed-starting media that you purchase in a garden center is pasteurized and contains inert material, such as vermiculite or perlite, which is sterile. Homepage | INFORUM | Fargo, ND
  • It encourages the network's inertial tendency in programming, which is to treat (and pay) the stars like stars but be ruthless the minute their popularity begins to flag, and not to get locked into a large permanent payroll for any show. Anchors Away
  • Inert vats have no effect on the taste of Chablis and allow the wine to express the terroir of a particular cru, without any external influence.
  • ‘We're looking for people who in 15 minutes can make an inert audience move,’ explains Jonny Rocket, who, with his wife Lisa, has organised the free event.
  • It lay there, inert under his jacket sleeve, throbbing gently like a time bomb. IN REMEMBRANCE OF ROSE
  • Among the plastics materials used for prostheses, silicone elastomers, also known as silicon rubber or silicones, have been particularly favoured as they combine flexibility with chemical and thus physiological inertness.
  • Yet Shield limps out of the gate, inert from the first frame and devoid of suspense. VinceKeenan.com
  • The demineralized (De-ash) and de-pyrite (Dep) raw Yima coal was pyrolyzed in a fluidized-bed reactor in inert atmosphere to examine the sulfur removal efficiency.
  • They are used primarily because they do not react with anything " chemically inert". The Residue Report - an action plan for safer food
  • So, whereas what was required under a dictatorship was exceptional courage, what citizens in democracies have to do is overcome apathy and inertia.
  • The novel itself remains oddly inert.
  • Fast ignition offers a potentially simpler method to achieve thermonuclear fusion without some of the technical hurdles facing conventional inertial-confinement fusion.
  • The aligned nanotube thin films are substantially strong, and chemically inertial with their onset field low and the emission current strong.
  • It represents a major step forward for the heavy-ion approach to inertial-confinement fusion, in which small pellets of thermonuclear fuel are compressed to the point of burning by beams of heavy ions.
  • Organisations have enormous inbuilt political and cultural inertia. Times, Sunday Times
  • The "huge tabular masses" typical of ice islands "tend to have a lot of inertia" compared with conventional, "pinnacled" icebergs. Nunatsiaq News - Online
  • I'm unable to throw off this feeling of inertia.
  • First, the excessive concentration of arbitrary powers, inclusive of the supervision of the police, in the hands of appointed sub-sovereigns with no local roots contributed to unresponsiveness and inertia.
  • This is a chamber that can be evacuated and purged with inert gas until all active gases are removed.
  • According to Packard and Hoskinson, the purity of the tone may lead to the development of rotation sensors that are sufficiently sensitive to be used for Earth science, seismology and inertial navigation.
  • His hat of brown felt slouches over bright red hair; one cuffless hand, lank and long, hangs down inert, the other sleeve falls loose; he is one-armed. The Woman Who Toils Being the Experiences of Two Gentlewomen as Factory Girls
  • What perversity would inspire a busy corporate spokesman to lavish devotion on such an inert and - let's face it - steadfastly unlovable personage for more than two decades?
  • This survey will argue that disgruntlement persists because Brazil is a battleground between progress and inertia.
  • But the inertron shell of my swooper was impervious to the disintegrator ray. The Airlords of Han
  • We Wyomings possessed one swooper completely sheathed with inertron and counterweighted with ultron. The Airlords of Han
  • It can be brazed in an entirely inert-gas atmosphere.
  • This fine body of Indian cavalry and camelry reported that affairs seemed serious up the Tiban valley; then inertia reasserted itself and they were recalled. Pan-Islam
  • Missiles are guided using a combination of inertial navigation and terrain contour matching enhanced with highly accurate speed updates provided by a laser Doppler velocimeter. The Air Force Cover-Up of that Minot-Barksdale Nuclear Missile Flight
  • Then you have widespread fear and ignorance, the inertia of these giant bureaucracies and the timidity of politicians. Times, Sunday Times
  • The stage is lusterless, the direction inert, the action scrappy, and every invitation for theatrical excitement turned aside.
  • Electrons possess inertia, so remain at rest or in uniform motion in the same direction unless acted upon by some external force.
  • This miracle compound, made from inert natural substances found only in lawn clippings and cedar tree bark, acts like a reverse biased Zener Diode, but for your metabolism. Archive 2007-01-01
  • We are failing them, through a mixture of political neglect, bureaucratic inertia and cultural bias. Times, Sunday Times
  • Si nous ne vivions pas dans un temps oú toutes les prévisions sont trompées par une certaine inertie générale qui amortit toutes les passions et ralentit le cours naturel des événements, je croirais qu'une crise violente est assez prochaine, les éléments extrêmes se trouvant réums et rapprochés dans l'Assemblée nouvelle, de manière à former un mélange explosible comme la chimie redoute d'en amener. Memoirs of the Life and Correspondence of Henry Reeve, C.B., D.C.L. In Two Volumes. Volume II.
  • But behind the expressed reasons for antagonism or inertia in the face of proposals for harmonization lies a more fundamental consideration.
  • Why does the amount of matter affect the amount of inertia?
  • Elaborately he swung back his buskined foot, aimed and planted a kick in the middle of the inert body, with force enough to drive it a handsbreadth across the slimy floor. Conan The Warlord
  • What remains inert is the part of the brain which provokes and enables actions. Times, Sunday Times
  • A: Most potting soil or seed-starting media that you purchase in a garden center is pasteurized and contains inert material, such as vermiculite or perlite, which is sterile. Homepage | INFORUM | Fargo, ND
  • The Doc, our resident inventor, e-mails to say that his heart experiments are not going well, he has tried everything from a car ignition to 10,000 volts to reanimate an inert organ, but it is not responding.
  • CBF imaging is based on the scintillation detection of the rates in which inert freely diffusible radioisotopes e.g., krypton 85, 133xenon are cleared from the brain following intracarotid injection or inhalation. The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry
  • Again, faith seems to me to be manifest in both a commitment to believe and mere mental inertia.
  • The zinc sulphide is then transferred to a vessel through which passes an inert gas, such as nitrogen or carbon dioxide.
  • He lay there inert, as the room whirled past and Ellwood slipped the needle into his arm.
  • Clerks in dusty stores moved with the majestic inertia of tall ships becalmed. Michael Winship: Washington and Change: Cash You Can Believe In
  • Momentum results from movement against the inertia. Christianity Today
  • Moment of inertia is a fundamental property in rotational mechanics.
  • When gravity has been turned off at the socket, objects seem to have no inertia and vanish when they are out of view.
  • It takes me five to ten minutes to start enjoying it, to break through the creaky straight-jacket of inertia and hit my stride, but I did and took the lead up hill and down path and up hill again, where we spied saddlebacks and other birdlife.
  • Moreover, if birth rates were the whole story, then evangelical growth should have been visible between successive birth cohorts, not within them, but that is also not the case.37 Finally, the long-term inertia of demographic arithmetic should have continued to push up the evangelical share of the population for at least several decades more, even after the evangelical birth rate converged to the nonevangelical birth rate. American Grace
  • In fact, the inertial mass of any object exactly equals the gravitational mass of the object.
  • In a small enterprise or department, management by inertia is a deadly disease.
  • The levy, payable by landfill site operators, was initially set at £2t - 1 for inert waste and £7t - 1 for putrescible waste, and raised £420m in its first year.
  • What I have seen and heard during my stay among you has forced on me the belief that this slow change from habitual inertness to persistent activity has reached an extreme from which there must begin a counterchange -- a reaction. The Contemporary Review, January 1883 Vol 43, No. 1
  • Because of inertia, though, the air column continues to move up, leaving a partial vacuum in and above the glottis that acts to slam the folds more strongly together.
  • Both types of polymer contain strong C-F bonds and are thermally stable, chemically inert and ‘non-stick’, because of the low affinity of fluorine for other materials.
  • Mars's atmosphere is completely inert, no chemical reactions could go on there.
  • New concepts of force and inertia did not come about as a result of careful observation and experiment.
  • Thus, properties such as malleability, a high degree of hardness, poor cleavage, and chemical inertness are favorable.
  • a certain form of exertion and action, -- I shall grant, of course, that nothing whatever that exists is in that sense inert; but I shall affirm that you use the word inert in quite a different sense from the usual one. The Recreations of a Country Parson
  • In this paper a distance-inertial guidance system in boost phase of the launch vehicle is presented by means of system identification and parameter estimation theory.
  • Half a dozen farm-estates formed a hectagon around it, but these belonged to ancient men who displayed themselves only as inert, gray-thatched lumps in the back of limousines on their way to the station, whither they were sometimes accompanied by equally ancient and doubly massive wives. The Beautiful and Damned
  • The superdreadnought Chicago, as she approached the imaginary but nevertheless sharply defined boundary, which no other ship had been allowed to pang, went inert and crept forward, mile by mile. First Lensman
  • Also, there are large mammals which are endotherms, not inertial homeotherms.
  • The inertness of Fluorinert liquid FC-770 permits its use as a direct contact single and two-phase coolant in certain supercomputers and sensitive military electronics.
  • It also polarizes two kinds of knowledge: a truth that is grounded in meaning and perception, and a truth that is based on inert fact and prosaic reality.
  • Retrospective condemnation is easy — this was a largely anti-Semitic population that had embraced the psychological and material benefits bestowed by a homicidal regime, and that remained inert in the face of what we now call genocide. Hitler's Co-Conspirators
  • There was, he added, a danger that exclusions might come about not deliberately but simply through inertia or administrative error.
  • I must find a source of fibre or some inert packing.
  • Rayleigh is perhaps most famous for his discovery the inert gas argon in 1895, work which earned him a Nobel Prize in 1904.
  • The inert gases are so called because they do not readily form chemical compounds.
  • NO, with its unpaired electron, is a free radical capable of undergoing various oxidative and reductive reactions, whereas CO is relatively inert.
  • But now it appears we have a return of the "old" Jerry Angelo -- the man who defines the word inertia. News - chicagotribune.com
  • An inert gas then propels the liquid through an ultrasonic nozzle that atomizes it.
  • He comments on her "cowy oblivion", her "cow inertia", her "cowy passivity" and her "cowy peace" and he wonders where she goes to in her trances. The emotional depth of a cow | Hannah Velten
  • There was a lot of inertia to overcome. Times, Sunday Times
  • The bold but subtle planes of the robust little head suggest mobility; a distinct person animates the inert material that Rodin manipulated so skillfully. A Most Revealing Face
  • A rocket's inertial guidance system measures acceleration along three principal directions.
  • It is not restricted to inertial frames, and it encompasses a broader range of phenomena, namely gravity and accelerated motions.
  • In a crowded, stuffy room, overhead fans strained to circulate the inert air.
  • With the force of inertia, the suits continued to float out in space like simple debris.
  • Flux injection is a relatively new process in which fluxing compounds are introduced into the molten metal by a mechanical device using an inert gas carrier.
  • This is best seen when the gas is turned low -- with a batswing burner, for instance -- turned so low that only a small non-luminous flame is left, the space between burner and flame will appear as great as the flame itself, while, if the gas is mixed with an inert diluent like carbon dioxide, the space can be very much increased. Scientific American Supplement, No. 795, March 28, 1891
  • However, while synchronizing distant clocks is a problem, they nonetheless run at the same intrinsic rates as each other when held in the same inertial frame.
  • But Arctic Bay residents have received little help and support in advancing their proposal, and their aspirations are now drowning in bureaucratic inertia.
  • However, the triple N-N bond makes N2 almost inert, and only a few microorganisms have the capability to utilize (fix) N2, converting it to the more easily utilizable combined nitrogen forms – initially ammonia (NH3), or its protonated species, ammonium (NH4+) that is terminally oxidized to nitrate (NO3 -) by nitrifying bacteria. Marine nitrogen cycle
  • He speaks not for an educational establishment too often bound by its own inertia, but for a generation of reformers whose work is bearing fruit. Times, Sunday Times
  • The relatively large mass and thermal inertia of female desert tortoises usually prevents winter activity but facilitates their relaxed homeostasis.
  • The dermal barrier composition is moisture activated, and remains inert until the hydrophobic and hydrophilic polymer emulsions contact a suitable substrate such as human skin.
  • The denizens, be they peers or peasants, are weighed down by tradition and inertia, living out their lives according to exactly the same patterns as their ancestors.
  • Meanwhile, so much of the bureacrazy stateside is still in a deep state of denial or inertia … full speed ahead, damn the torpedoes of science and social responsibility. andrea PREFAB FRIDAY: The RuralZED Zero Emission Home | Inhabitat
  • Trimming extraneous material from the mirror to reduce inertia results in the typical elliptical or polygon-shaped galvo mirror.
  • When mixed into a slurry with water it sets rapidly into a uniform, solid, inert mass.
  • Most current machines can therefore rely on inertial cooling - in other words the components are simply allowed to heat up adiabatically and then cooled slowly between pulses.
  • Those laws provided the law of inertia governing motion of atoms in between collisions and laws of impact governing collisions.
  • The interposition of the inert sub-coat is said to be the obvious step…
  • There is evidence here of a denegation, a strong disavowal of the body in its inert, contemplative and Hegel on Buddhism
  • CFCs are also safe, inert and nonpoisonous-until they reach the ionosphere, that is. Ecoology Breakthrough: A Cfc-Less Fridge
  • [K] Natura infirmitatis humanae, tadiora sunt remedia quam mala; & ut corpora lente augescunt, cito extinguuntur, sic ingenia studiaque oppresseris, facilius quam revocaveris; subit quippe ipsius inertiae dulcedo, et invisa primo desidia postremo amatur. 'Of Genius', in The Occasional Paper, and Preface to The Creation
  • He covered the inert body with a blanket.
  • A nearly inert material, concrete is suitable as a medium for recycling waste or industrial by-products.
  • Simulation of wander-azimuth strapdown inertial navigation system using sphere earth model and ellipsoidal and rotating earth model was done with C program.
  • He covered the inert body with a blanket.
  • Zipped up in a full-body Velcro suit, eighth-grader Alla Kocheryan volunteered to demonstrate the concept of inertia by splatting herself against a Velcro wall.
  • Your clocks are equally valid only if you each continue to occupy an inertial reference frame.
  • But as an intellectual exercise, and an allegedly serious meditation on the nature of spectatorship, it is specious and inert. Times, Sunday Times
  • The new Winchesters feature inertial triggers and a conventional tang safety that also doubles as a barrel selector.
  • This is testament to the inert nature of gold; the metal is commonly deposited hydrothermally as grains, wires, and crystals in quartz veins.
  • Einstein warmed to the idea that the gravitational field of the rest of the Universe might explain centrifugal and other inertial forces resulting from acceleration.
  • I think the first lesson I would learn out of that is that the inertia involved in that is immense.
  • The alcoholized brute could not stand up, became sleepy and stupid, and, when set on his legs, trembled in an inert mass: the other dog experienced at once frightful attacks of epilepsy. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 11, No. 24, March, 1873
  • Armament underwing comprises a UV-16-57 rocket pod on the outer pylon and an inert AA-8 Aphid air-to-air missile on the inner pylon.
  • Europe has no such excuse; only its own inertia to overcome. Times, Sunday Times
  • This definition does not include any additional or secondary oxygen blows made after the primary blow or the introduction of nitrogen or other inert gas through tuyeres in the bottom or bottom and sides of the vessel.
  • During this time it is absolutely inert, but at last the sac -- for such it is -- opens gently, and there is poured out a brownish glairy fluid. Scientific American Supplement, No. 470, January 3, 1885
  • The students explained that this involved use of inertial sensors to sense the aircraft acceleration and angular rates.
  • Do we suffer petrification through continued stasis and inertia or do we trust our inner, creative, inspirational, communal selves and take on the challenge of change?
  • 'Inertia' does not mean want of vigour, but may be metaphorically described as the inexpugnable resolve of everything to have its own way. Logic Deductive and Inductive
  • So it is handled within a negative-pressure-ventilated hot cell with an inert atmosphere of argon to prevent oxidation. FLOATING CITY
  • She lapsed into inertia and lay there as if asleep.
  • Nature's primal fury, man's unbridled fear, political apathy, bureaucratic inertia, rural angst, urban unconcern all found their way into the cascade of grief unleashed by the twenty-one poets.

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