propagation

[ UK /pɹˌɒpɐɡˈe‍ɪʃən/ ]
[ US /ˌpɹɑpəˈɡeɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of producing offspring or multiplying by such production
  2. the movement of a wave through a medium
  3. the spreading of something (a belief or practice) into new regions
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How To Use propagation In A Sentence

  • By the use of the eigenfunctions, the formulas of the propagation of the transient wave along rod, beam and beam-rod structures are derived in the present paper.
  • In the third chapter, using the second-order momentum of beam radius, the Rayleigh range and beam propagation factor of three different polarized beam arrays are derived.
  • Other methods of propagation which are sometimes employed are inarching and shield-budding.
  • The assumption that gender parity in all things is inconducive to sustainable propagation arrives at the footstep of the ideas in Steve Sailer's article "The Return of Patriarchy?". The Audacious Epigone
  • DBN in an unsupervised manner and fine tuned it with backpropagation. Planet Lisp
  • Sexual reproduction is the predominant force in the propagation of animals and many plants.
  • This manipulation was initially restricted to embryo culture and nodal micropropagation, but it has recently been extended to somatic embryogenesis.
  • Taking the visual image promotion of 2008 Beijing Olympic Games as the breakthrough point, it analyzed the visual image promotion and the propagation path of our country during the Olympic Games.
  • Keathley takes a snippet from a bud and starts to clone it through micropropagation. Science Of The Season
  • The author found that 100 grammes of a Bucholze's solution for the propagation of bacteria, charged with 0.20 g. of chinoline hydrochlorate, had remained perfectly clear and free from bacteria after standing forty-six days exposed to the air, while a similar solution, placed under the same conditions, without chinoline, had turned muddy and contained bacteria after only twelve days 'standing. Scientific American Supplement, No. 315, January 14, 1882
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