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rearrangement

[ US /ɹiɝˈeɪndʒmənt/ ]
[ UK /ɹˌiːɐɹˈe‍ɪnd‍ʒmənt/ ]
NOUN
  1. changing an arrangement

How To Use rearrangement In A Sentence

  • After the rearrangement of boundaries that followed the decisive battle of Ipsus (fought in Phrygia 301 B.C.), these principal states had the outlines shown by the accompanying map. General History for Colleges and High Schools
  • Together with other Brassica species, it likely descends from a hexaploid ancestor followed by extensive rearrangements, making its genome essentially a triplicated A. thaliana genome.
  • His rearrangement of the furniture left an important room, the anteroom to the drawing room, without a centrepiece.
  • Yet it was only by selection, editing and rearrangement that the facts of nature were marshalled.
  • We fly often enough that it is marginal if it is worth paying the rearrangement fee.
  • In the case of electrons, nine alleles had point-like mutations and three had rearrangements.
  • Plow land rearrangement in Guanzhong area is divided into three types to analyze their pattern, which are suburb, plain, mountainous areas (foothill and diggings).
  • More generally, there is a need to discriminate between the effects of chromosomal rearrangements and linked genic incompatibilities in both plants and animals.
  • By prearrangement, Mike Mansfield took the floor next to challenge our premise, arguing that standing rules of the Senate do carry over from one session to the next. The Good Fight
  • Rearrangements can occur during the recombination event, with duplications of the wild-type counterpart of the mutant locus producing a recombinant that would otherwise be inviable.
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