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How To Use Periphery In A Sentence

  • There's the Parthenon, built in 446 B.C., with its colonnade of Doric columns extending around the periphery of the entire structure.
  • Briefly, the initially adsorbed liposomes seemed to collapse from the outer periphery toward the center of the liposome.
  • It is the structural nature of centre-periphery relations that explains the nature of international politics and economics.
  • Young axes have higher values of structural Young's modulus than do older stages and this is reflected by the presence of fibre tissues, primary phloem fibres and collenchyma placed near the periphery of young axes.
  • In the periphery of the oxidation, copper mineralization occurs as chalcopyrite, bornite, tennantite and mispickel.
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  • At the local level, one's home represented the center as well, a microcosm of ordered space. 31 One of the adages recorded by Sahagún, otimatoiavi, otimetepexiuj, "thou hast cast thyself into the torrent ... from the crag," is said of someone who has crossed into the periphery with his or her behavior, one "who has placed [themselves] in danger ... who brings about that which is not good. Pestilence and Headcolds: Encountering Illness in Colonial Mexico
  • In both types of feather, the barbules that extend from the barb ramus grow from a single layer of cells, called the barbule plate, on the periphery of the barb ridge.
  • The floral meristems are formed acropetally and are initiated on the periphery of the inflorescence meristem, being protected by bracts.
  • The abdominal aortography could show streak like vessels supplying the tumor in the periphery of vena cava.
  • Economists were most concerned by the disparity between the core and periphery nations. Times, Sunday Times
  • The breezy, colourful days of fall are well past, but winter is still hanging on the periphery.
  • He believes it to consist in a pachymeningitis combined with a certain degree of sclero-gliosis of the periphery of the cord. Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
  • Blood flow to the periphery is restored soon after, followed by breathing and then skeletal muscle activity. Archive 2004-09-01
  • These commence to grow towards the periphery, and, in so doing, grow through the cicatricial tissue that has formed at the seat of the operation. Diseases of the Horse's Foot
  • So now we come to the fateful month of July 1944, when the waters were rising along the whole periphery of the Nazi empire, where everywhere, in Speidel's words, "... the floodgates are creaking," to the day, the 20th, of the attentat; a climacteric in the history of the Third Reich of Hitler's relations with the Army, and of the rational direction of the German war effort. Barbarossa
  • Is speech that advocates violence at the center of the First Amendment, or at its periphery?
  • The underdevelopment of the periphery is a condition of the development of the center.
  • _ This portion of the fibrous membrane is enlarged, globous or flattened, irregularly thinned, particularly at the periphery, where it may be as thin as tissue paper, nebulous because of the stretching of its fibers principally, but in some degree (differing in different cases) to edema of the epithelial layer. Glaucoma A Symposium Presented at a Meeting of the Chicago Ophthalmological Society, November 17, 1913
  • Like other countries of the eurozone periphery, Spain has been through much pain. Times, Sunday Times
  • The corneal periphery scars, and this is why a flap can be lifted months later for enhancement.
  • The combustion of a vastly increased bulk of pulverized coal and a greatly enlarged combustion zone, extending about forty feet longitudinally into the kiln -- thus providing an area within which the material might be maintained in a clinkering temperature for a sufficiently long period to insure its being thoroughly clinkered from periphery to centre. Edison, His Life and Inventions, vol. 2
  • The villages and small towns - which we call the "periphery" - identify with the south and are alienated from the north. Palestine Blogs aggregator
  • The periphery of the original blank must form the top circle of the cup.
  • It remains to be seen if the buoyancy of the eurozone's core spills over to the periphery, or whether the periphery drags the core down. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hotels on the city's periphery also have significant lettings.
  • On the periphery of the print, I can see the living room décor as it used to be.
  • Houses have been built on the periphery of the factory site.
  • In later use, the country's name indicates its location on the northern periphery of Europe.
  • The ward is no longer on the periphery of the town.
  • Eight fortified guard towers ringed the eight-sided central keep, lining its periphery like the spindly legs of a gigantic spider.
  • Concrete public housing projects evoke their counterparts elsewhere and shanty towns exist on the urban periphery.
  • The unstained region around the periphery of most cells was almost certainly an artefact of plasmolysis, indicated by occasional contact points between plasmalemma and cell wall plasmodesmata.
  • The distribution of soil pressure normal to the culvert periphery is plotted against the central angle in Figure 7.
  • When nocodazole was used to depolymerize microtubules in the cell periphery, we observed a significant increase of failures to initiate compared to untreated cells.
  • Some stellate cells located at the periphery of the tumor sheets were strongly immunostained for S100 protein.
  • KROVANH is expected to travel NNE to NE in the northwestern periphery of the subtropical ridge.
  • As we discuss in the September update to our 2010 Global Economic Outlook, the standout performance of the core and Northern European economies, particularly Germany, alongside renewed weakness in the periphery is giving rise to a multispeed recovery. Multiple Risks From A Multispeed Eurozone Recovery
  • Traps should be hung in sunny locations around the periphery of the area to be protected.
  • I can see it now, future intervals at English National Opera being characterised by hordes of opera-loving smokers surreptitiously tippling their Tennants Super as they overspill into the periphery of Trafalgar Square.
  • Poised on the western periphery of Europe, Portugal has always been on the edge, looking outwards.
  • Many women feel they are being kept on the periphery of the armed forces.
  • It is the structural nature of centre-periphery relations that explains the nature of international politics and economics.
  • New housing developments dot the city's periphery.
  • VAMCO is expected to recurve in the northwestern periphery of the subtropical ridge, and is expected to accelerate.
  • The limitations of bronchoscopic removal of foreign bodies are usually manifested in the failure to find a small foreign body which has entered a minute bronchus far down and out toward the periphery. Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery
  • The unstained region around the periphery of most cells was almost certainly an artefact of plasmolysis, indicated by occasional contact points between plasmalemma and cell wall plasmodesmata.
  • It was on the periphery that the idea of ‘the British Empire as a congeries of territories linked by their commerce, united with common interests and centred politically upon London’ was most compelling.
  • Through what I termed its "muscarine" action, it reproduced at the periphery all the effects of parasympathetic nerves, with a fidelity which, as I indicated, was comparable to that with which adrenaline had been shown, some ten years earlier, to reproduce those of true sympathetic nerves. Sir Henry Dale - Nobel Lecture
  • The very construction of his native constituency that permeates "the human form divine" involve those agitative and sleepless precipitants that ever stir, stimulate, and woo him on to investigate, to weigh, and measure principles of the universe that draw his chariot from the individual center to the impalpable periphery. Autobiography, sermons, addresses, and essays of Bishop L. H. Holsey, D. D.,
  • Despite the potential savings, modular construction remains on the periphery of mainstream housing.
  • Using the handle of a fork, make about 5 'chutes' from top to bottom of mound of rice: one in the center, and 4 around the periphery. Archive 2008-03-01
  • Filaments of material at the periphery are cooler strands of gas, called cometary knots - each about as long as the Solar System is wide. Wired Top Stories
  • The cries of ‘Fore!’ ricocheted around the course like wayward drives bouncing between the trees that line this course at its outermost periphery.
  • The idea that people are just moving out of the core of their cities to the periphery is now too simplistic. Matthew Yglesias » Command and Control
  • At the periphery of the tumor, the crystal-laden cells infiltrated the interstitium and also occupied the alveoli in a desquamative interstitial pneumonia-like pattern.
  • Vimentin filaments are more prevalent in the central regions of the cell than in the cell periphery.
  • Also, the border plates that make up the periphery of the shells have jagged outer edges.
  • To assess for undermined and tunneled areas, use a moistened cotton-tipped applicator to probe the wound periphery.
  • You do not need to be'at the very periphery' of the country to have an utterly dire service. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ireland is expected to be the first eurozone periphery country to exit its bailout programme. Times, Sunday Times
  • I sipped a glass of candied champagne, and peered out a grimy window at the periphery of the eastern seaboard. In God's Country: travels in the Bible belt, USA.
  • He says in so many words that the periphery of the dodecagon is greater than that of the circle; and that the more sides there are to the inscribed figure, the more does it exceed the circle in which it is. A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume I (of II)
  • Consequently, the pituitary receptors would be preserved, and the pituitary would erroneously sense that the thyroid status in the periphery is normal.
  • The corpuscles with their processes were very distinct in most parts; but in some parts, especially near the periphery of the hyoidal bone, none could be seen. Insectivorous Plants
  • He also suggested an expiratory wave of peristaltic smooth muscle contraction starting from the periphery to aid in exhalation.
  • The ideas are also expressed by minor poets on the periphery of the movement.
  • They are the “contact periphery,” that is, a frontier with little or no sustained connection to a core after initial contact; the “marginal periphery,” which participates in an intersocietal division of labor while retaining a separate corporate existence; and the “dependent periphery,” whose economy requires sustained involvement in unequal exchange relations with the core. Archive 2008-10-01
  • Dr. Julian Bashir stood on the periphery of the command circle, his large eyes and tender expression pleated with concern. The Search
  • Increasingly, the core-periphery model fails to capture the diversity, in terms of economic performance, of both the periphery and the core.
  • Rather than deal with this dangerous lack of faith, Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are concentrating on what they term a competitiveness pact, but which is essentially a budgetary straitjacket that governments on the periphery of the eurozone are to be strapped into. Eurozone crisis: The pain in Spain | Editorial
  • If the phenomena of exteriorization of _motivity_ be true (the phenomena produced by Eusapia Palladino, for example) then we have here nervous energy or "fluid" existing beyond the periphery of the body -- that is, in space, detached from the nerves. The Problems of Psychical Research Experiments and Theories in the Realm of the Supernormal
  • Summer dwellings seem to have been tents weighted down by stones around the periphery.
  • VAMCO is expected to recurve in the northwestern periphery of the subtropical ridge, and is expected to accelerate.
  • They may stay on the periphery watching the recess-time basketball games and jump-rope competitions from the sidelines of the playground.
  • I had hoped to see plenty of pelagics here and sure enough, below us and at the periphery of our vision, a small school of jacks was being circled menacingly by several grey reef sharks.
  • The southern Zomba area consists mainly of syenite surrounded by a periphery of alkaline granite.
  • Moreover, attacks on Victorianism could come from the periphery as well as the centre.
  • On the periphery of her hearing Kate could pick out the strains of something by Enya. FALLEN WOMEN
  • Either one or both parapodia were cut free from the body wall, taking care not to cut the parapodial nerves that connect the pedal ganglia to the periphery.
  • On the periphery of my hearing, I caught a high pitched keening sound - the sonic pulse.
  • Houses have been built on the periphery of the factory site.
  • One morning, a village on the periphery of a city wakes up to find itself bifurcated by the construction of a National Highway.
  • Lights both overhead and around the periphery make the courtyard magical at night.
  • In these pumps, the impeller is a wheel with blades radiating from the centre to the periphery which, when rotated at high speed, impart movement to the water and produce an outward flow due to centrifugal forces; the angle between the direction of entry and exit of water flow is 90 degrees. 7. Pumping equipment
  • The figures populating the works of Hamsun, whether centrally placed or moving shadowlike in the periphery, are first of all themselves — agressively, inevitably, unconsciously so, Knut Hamsun: From Hunger to Harvest
  • The spatial, in-and-out movement derives from the tension between a core and a periphery, or borderline area.
  • If the object is not too far out to the periphery it may be grasped by the upper-lobe-bronchus forceps (Fig. 90), guided by the collaboration of the fluoroscopist. Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery
  • But, of course, neither Marx nor the anti-capitalist movement expect or have expected absolute immiseration to be the rule for either the advanced capitalist core or the increasingly excluded periphery.
  • It's fascinating that text is such a visible genre within art because, perhaps a little like decorative minimalism, it seems to exist on the periphery, but where this particular art fair is concerned, more is better.
  • Geographically, the UK is on the periphery of Europe, while Paris is at the heart of the continent.
  • Fire sparked, rose to a peak and danced under heated fumes that rose, tore at its periphery and crumbled to ashes.
  • The rest of the root forming the central core is the stele and at its periphery there is a single layer of cells called the = pericycle =. A Handbook of Some South Indian Grasses
  • The lone human being in the area, a trapper living near the periphery of the blast, was blown off the porch of his shack, but survived.
  • Flechzig has developed this law, that "medullated nerve fibers appear first in the region of the pyramidal tracts and corona radiata, and extend from them to the convolutions and periphery of the brain," being practically completed about the eighth year. Scientific American Supplement, No. 520, December 19, 1885
  • By its periphery it is continuous with the ciliary body, and is also connected with the posterior elastic lamina of the cornea by means of the pectinate ligament; its surfaces are flattened, and look forward and backward, the anterior toward the cornea, the posterior toward the ciliary processes and lens. X. The Organs of the Senses and the Common Integument. 1c. 1. The Tunics of the Eye
  • And tunnels are being expanded in the system's periphery to the north and south from Aubervilliers to Port d'Orleans. Secret Stations And Boyhood Love On The Paris Metro
  • But they are those on the periphery of the eurozone. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is also deeply flawed by the lack of development of Charlotte's character - she is portrayed simply as a nagging harridan on the periphery of the story.
  • On the positive side it has assisted in moving issues about ageing from the periphery to the centre of political debate.
  • The penalty for such a violation was for the immediate surrender of the paper, which was soon retrieved by the stealth "tattletale" who was hovering on the periphery as his rival was subjected to disciplinary action. Timesunion.com: Local Breaking News
  • When some of those inlands were submerged, the provincial government put thousands of flood refugees on trains to Karachi, where they now spill out of tent camps on the city's periphery and have moved into ethnic Sindhi neighborhoods. Flooding deepens age-old fissures in Pakistan
  • Producers used to be the overlooked bunch of gearheads toiling away at guitar levels and fade-outs and other such periphery, while the songwriter did the actual creative work and the band did the technical stuff.
  • The products exported by the periphery are important to the extent that... the return to labour will be less than what it is at the centre. The Sociology of Modernization and Development
  • The center may need to pay attention to the periphery and accept its influence simply in order to survive.
  • When the ECB began the program in May, it pledged to "sterilize" its purchases of Greek and other debt in Europe's troubled periphery by accepting an equal amount in interest-bearing deposits from banks, so that the total overall money supply would remain unchanged. ECB Misses Deposit Goal And Euro Bears the Brunt
  • This illustrates around the periphery the effects of vignetting - loss of brightness and focus - and curvature of straight lines, typical of camera obscura images generally.
  • Blood flows from the heart to the periphery of the body in arteries. How to Lower High Blood Pressure
  • Living at a German mission station on the periphery of a British colonial town peopled by Africans from different backgrounds, she became familiar with a range of cultures and languages.
  • The base plate may include flanges disposed along the outer periphery of the base plate.
  • In sum, the prefect was the indispensable link between the centre and the periphery.
  • Most part-time positions are located in the periphery of the organization.
  • Before adding this, be opposite in Guangzhou periphery of characteristic agriculture step on a dot, lavender, cherry, frog, goose, holothurian , rose, even firedrake fruit he has studied.
  • Change, in industry, commerce, and agriculture, was most evident and most rapid in the periphery.
  • In foreign-exchange markets, the euro recovered a little after falling sharply against the dollar on Monday as investors continued to fret about the debt problems bedevilling the euro-zone periphery. Asian Stocks Are Mixed; BOK Rate Cut Hits Seoul
  • The principal business houses are headquartered in the city, even though many have moved to malls on its periphery.
  • Dominating the space between the two front seats are two grey painted wooden vertical wheels with chunky cut-outs around their periphery.
  • Forefeet and hindfeet each have 5 digits, and the surface area of the forefeet is increased by the addition of a fringe of stiff hairs around the periphery.
  • Almost everywhere there are new churches, mosques, synagogues, and temples springing to life along our vast exurban periphery.
  • Asian migrants can gain access into the nation - at least into the nation's widening periphery - by approximating blackness (or brownness or redness, for that matter) rather than whiteness.
  • In contrast, fibrosing alveolitis is a disease that starts in the periphery of the lung.
  • These students, coming down for the first time, would interact with the local public, as homestays had been arranged for them in villages in the periphery.
  • The trend is bad news for businesses in the eurozone 's periphery, shrinking credit supply just when it is most needed to fuel growth. Times, Sunday Times
  • In hyperopia, the laser indirectly steepens the central cornea by removing tissue from the periphery, thus increasing the cornea's focusing power.
  • Before adding this, be opposite in Guangzhou periphery of characteristic agriculture step on a dot, lavender, cherry, frog, goose, holothurian , rose, even firedrake fruit he has studied.
  • Furthermore, to judge from the reports that have been written about a global black market in fissile materials, perhaps you could sit on the periphery — say in Istanbul — and with relatively little risk allow the uranium to come to you. How to Get a Nuclear Bomb
  • The ring road runs around the periphery of the city centre.
  • The first movement is from the world to the Church, from the periphery to the centre. Paul VI - The First Modern Pope
  • In non-dividing cells, DNA is associated with proteins to form the so-called chromatin, with more condensed “heterochromatin” at the periphery and less condensed “euchromatin” in the interior. Secret To Night Vision Found In DNA’s Unconventional ‘Architecture’ | Impact Lab
  • The sociological study of religion moved from the centre to the periphery of sociology.
  • Although he makes the point that the periphery is "hardly to be called keeled", to me "carinated", "angular" and "keeled" all mean more or less the same thing, especially when the degree of carination is variable. Anguispira alternata angulata
  • Like many sunbelt cities, Miami is more sprawling mosaic than urban core and periphery. Discourse.net: Ten Reasons Why You Should Teach Here -- And Three Why You Shouldn't (v. 3.0)
  • Creaky pylons and insect chirrups fill the periphery; Frisell is beginning to be unpredictable again…
  • The scattered region of sympathetic postganglionic neurons of those organs were located respectively in the periphery of respective concentrative region.
  • A CCD periphery circuit consists of a time order circuit and signal processing circuit.
  • It would be a mistake to identify the metropolitan districts as urban-industrial and the periphery as rural.
  • The flowers of the outer whorl of the head generally have five elongated petals united to form straplike structures and are restricted to the periphery of the radiate head.
  • Anti-inflammatory drugs may play an important role in perioperative pain management by reducing the inflammatory response in the periphery and thereby decreasing sensitization of the peripheral nociceptors.
  • However, there are several different kinds of centre-periphery relationships that significantly influence the implementation process.
  • For shade around the periphery, she planted a locust, a pepper tree, and ‘Swan Hill’ olive trees.
  • I admire women very much, see women as the centre of life whereas I see the male on the periphery.
  • Giving something away and earning money on the periphery is the same idea proffered by Wired editor Chris Anderson in his recent best-selling book, Free: The Future of a Radical Price. Management Secrets of the Grateful Dead
  • The limb that is left to gangrene normally has to be cut off, and that would be a sad indictment on yourselves and a very poor response to the residents of the periphery of town.
  • Increasingly, the core-periphery model fails to capture the diversity, in terms of economic performance, of both the periphery and the core.
  • a look back at the jfk assassination* roscoe museum displays one-of-a-kind jfk artifacts* dallas marks 45th anniversary of jfk assassination* huckabee to present dan rather talking about jfk assassination* former dallas sheriff jim bowles pens novel about jfk assassination* remembering jfk in dallas* jfk assassination viewed from the periphery in arresting new novel* jfk conspiracies: should we care? Media monarchy
  • Around 1915, Shapley decentered the solar system by placing it toward the periphery of our galaxy.
  • Truth told, lipreading isn't all that effective anyway, only a small percentage of vocalized sound changes are visible on the lips, notwithstanding signers focus on lips while signs fall to the periphery in order to make out the exact word being conveyed. "As was the case with Chavez's tendentious present, Ortega's speech was intended as a slap."
  • The condition makes it difficult for patients to see objects at the periphery of their vision.
  • In cross-section, they form a ring of tubes inserted at the periphery of aerenchymatous tissue.
  • As further shown in Fig.4. surface curvature can also be characterized by a simple center/periphery intensity ratio calculation.
  • In this month's election, President Bush carried 97 of the nation's 100 fastest-growing counties, most of them "exurban" communities that are rapidly transforming farmland into subdivisions and shopping malls on the periphery of major metropolitan areas. Archive 2004-11-01
  • Where access to this space becomes restricted by an exodermal resistance, a greater proportion of the total flux of a material may be absorbed at the root periphery and pass from cell to cell via the symplast.
  • From a sport that existed on the periphery of Irish consciousness his name entered the mainstream.
  • All the measures that have been taken so far to overcome the crisis merely aim at socialising losses so as to ensure the survival of a system based on privatising strategic economic sectors, public services, natural and energy resources and on the commoditisation of life and the exploitation of labour and of nature as well as on the transfer of resources from the Periphery to the Centre and from workers to the capitalist class. Global Week of Action against Capitalism and War: March 28��April 4
  • History suggests that empires that do not stabilise their periphery end up being destabilised by it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Geographically, the UK is on the periphery of Europe, while Paris is at the heart of the continent.
  • As a consequence, they would have come in contact with a vast array of other animals at the periphery of their habitat, which conceivably could have transferred a disease contagion to the great herds of the plains.
  • Some of the greatest discoveries in history resulted by chance or accident and many as an unexpected periphery to the original intent.
  • There were violent tugs at his own periphery to randomize, but he clung to himself and resisted them. METAPLANETARY
  • There were few, if any, contributions from the periphery to the core. The Origins of Economic Inequality between Nations: A critique of Western theories on development and underdevelopment
  • In addition to differentiated retinal cells, the amphibian eye contains a population of self-renewing retinal stem cells located in the retinal periphery in a region called the ciliary marginal zone or CMZ. PLoS Biology: New Articles
  • Indeed, to locate a firm on the periphery of a major metropolitan region is a way both to benefit from agglomeration economies and to reduce the diseconomies of central location.
  • Though he wanders on the periphery, a liminal position of inside and outside, he endeavors to integrate into the Irish community with his pragmatic actions rather than windy words.
  • In hyperopia, the laser indirectly steepens the central cornea by removing tissue from the periphery, thus increasing the cornea's focusing power.
  • Greece's problems infected the eurozone periphery. Times, Sunday Times
  • The second goes from the Church to the world, from the centre to the periphery. Paul VI - The First Modern Pope
  • So there is, as we might put it, a core of invariability surrounded by a variable periphery. Moral Particularism
  • The body is globular with but slight differentiation into ectoplasm and endoplasm; one nucleus in the latter; contractile vacuoles one or many; pseudopodia on all sides, thin, and with peripheral granule-streaming; surrounded by a globular, rather thick coat of jelly, which is hyaline inside and granular on the periphery. Marine Protozoa from Woods Hole Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission 21:415-468, 1901
  • Officials from all 17 euro area governments discussed mechanisms to ease pressure on the two periphery nations, a person familiar with the talks said. Times, Sunday Times
  • For her, the struggle with leukemia had become so deeply personalized, so interiorized, that the rest of us were ghostly onlookers in the periphery: we were the zombies walking outside her head. The Emperor of All Maladies
  • Either a mechanism has to be found to allow a two-speed Europe where the countries of the periphery are not hobbled by an exchange rate that is totally inappropriate for their economic wellbeing, or the eurozone must consider political union where the more prosperous areas routinely help the less well-off. We need strong leaders in the eurozone | Editorial
  • The only way to do that with a laser and then a subtractor procedure is removing it in the periphery.
  • At cellular blastoderm most of the EAR protein is associated with cells at the periphery, while some protein is still associated with yolk nuclei.
  • But with respect, you are at the periphery; I would not say the margin, but you are at the periphery of that debate.
  • MITAG will travel WNW to NW in the next 36 hours along the southwestern periphery of the retreating subtropical ridge.
  • Geographically, the UK is on the periphery of Europe, while Paris is at the heart of the continent.
  • One morning, a village on the periphery of a city wakes up to find itself bifurcated by the construction of a National Highway.
  • There were signs of waning investor appetite for a range of euro area bonds, not only those issued by periphery nations, he argued. Times, Sunday Times
  • As in other cryptogam species, the effect of polarized red light implies that phytochrome acts at the cell periphery.
  • Yet while the right remains banished to the periphery of Scottish politics, the left has proven unable to create a narrative around its own hegemony, beyond aspirations towards the muzzy concept of social justice.
  • Around 1915, Shapley decentered the solar system by placing it toward the periphery of our galaxy.
  • Histologic evaluation of the tibial tunnel for the goats sacrificed after 18 weeks of healing showed all grafts to be revascularized and repopulated with viable cells, particularly at the periphery.
  • (a) He's still got what might in another guise be called a Eurocentric perspective - his world systems theory of core / semi-periphery / periphery - which I think has lost some of its explanatory value with the relative decline of the US (only some, mind you, and the tables in Wade are worth a look); Larvatus Prodeo
  • NM23-X4 is expressed at the periphery of the ciliary marginal zone of the Xenopus retina and the expression overlaps with p27Xic1 at the central side. BioMed Central - Latest articles
  • The condition makes it difficult for patients to see objects at the periphery of their vision.
  • From the periphery of his vision he noted that Ben had shoved most of his belongings into a holdall he was taking with him.
  • By evening, the grand edifice of the temple gopuram and the neon lights of the commercial area are reflected in the waters along with the five mandapams dotting the periphery.
  • Invertebrates sometimes use local circuits in the periphery, but many actions demand an integrated response of many parts of the body.
  • He furrows his beetle brows and fixes his stare on the turf in front, indifferent to the periphery.
  • They spin the story from an African American perspective, making us the center, not the periphery of the story.
  • As the osteogenetic fibers grow out to the periphery they continue to calcify, and give rise to fresh bone spicules. II. Osteology. 2. Bone
  • A CCD periphery circuit consists of a time order circuit and signal processing circuit.
  • Within families a lot happens on the periphery and the most telling details are often seen out of the corner of one's eye.
  • If she sees me in the periphery of her vision, I'm screwed.
  • The epiphyseal-metaphyseal regions are copiously supplied by vessels entering from the periphery and by the nutrient artery.
  • Glucocorticoids released during stress also exert profound effects on endocrine function by acting both in the periphery and in the brain.
  • The two levels above this are fully fitted out with studios for a variety of arts - painting, sculpture, silkscreen, graphics - and exhibit walls at the building's periphery.
  • In order to give Democrats their fair share of seats, you'd have to 'unpack' urban Democratic neighborhoods by drawing long, narrow districts that start in the urban core and extend into the outer suburbs and rural periphery," says Dr. Chen, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan. Redistricting Hype Blurs Reality
  • The periphery of the eurozone remains economically weak. Times, Sunday Times
  • # -- Three kinds of sensory impulses pass from the periphery to the brain; (1) deep, or muscular sensibility, (2) protopathic sensibility, and (3) epicritic sensibility. Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
  • (ketogenesis) for use in the periphery of the body, since those parts need insulin to make use of the glucose and there isn't any to be had. Sun Bloggers

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