physics

[ US /ˈfɪzɪks/ ]
[ UK /fˈɪzɪks/ ]
NOUN
  1. the science of matter and energy and their interactions
    his favorite subject was physics
  2. the physical properties, phenomena, and laws of something
    he studied the physics of radiation
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How To Use physics In A Sentence

  • In this regard, I offer a few guesses about some general directions in which statistical physics may change.
  • He taught us that the laws of physics were absolute.
  • Specialty disciplines, such as chemical physics and quantum, bioorganic, polymer, radiation, and nuclear chemistry, are available within the four major areas.
  • The scientist broke fresh ground in his recent book about physics.
  • My first explanation is my theory for the sci-fi physics of the electromagnetic storm.
  • I'm starting to slip back into my nocturnal, staying up very late self again because I was up ages the other night working on my Physics coursework.
  • I thought of biochemistry in our neighboring sciences and of psychophysics, and more recently of psychopharmacology, as examples of fruitful splitting and recombination in our own science.
  • The elements of physics are difficult to grasp.
  • It also has led us to rethink the notion of naturalness and the rock solid expectation this used to lead to, of finding new physics just beyond the electroweak scale. Two cheers for string theory
  • Such people often see their lives more effectively framed by the reality metaphors that modern quantum physics and chaos theory provide.
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