How To Use Regenerate In A Sentence

  • Believers, regenerate persons, who believe in Him, and rely on Him, have put on Christ.
  • These cells change their ultimate destiny, or fate, as the disc regenerates tissue so that, for example, instead of regenerating leg structures they form wing structures.
  • Fortunately, skin regenerates constantly, which is the reason why the strategy of eliminating some cells is a good one.
  • We routinely portray them as grim, doctrinaire, religious killjoys who lived in a didactic world of the Saved and the Unregenerate.
  • A large fraction of these embryos aborted on the germination medium and were not able to regenerate plantlets.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • I tell you, Mary, I found out from reading the Bible that I was an unregenerated man, and needed Autographs for Freedom, Volume 2 (of 2) (1854)
  • As it is, whenever sport-led regeneration is proposed in this country, the public is fobbed off with stat-free waffle about how it will benefit and regenerate local communities – and in some cases, we seem to be dispensing with even that fig leaf. Stanley Park will bring little benefit to local community in Liverpool
  • The result is a movement of the transfected blastemal cells to more proximal regions in the intercalating regenerate.
  • Since silica can only limit diatoms, other forms of phytoplankton might dominate if nitrogen is regenerated more rapidly.
  • The Word must have a central place - for by it God regenerates sinners and reaffirms his authority over men.
  • Yorkshire miners facing redundancy are set to benefit from an £11m Government package to help them find another job and regenerate the area.
  • Seeing the snake cast its old slough and glide forth renewed, he conceives, so in death man but sheds his fleshly exuvia, while the spirit emerges, regenerate. The Destiny of the Soul A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life
  • Original sin, he said, turned the human heart into a fomes peccati (tinderbox or powder keg of sin), operative at all times, even in the regenerate.
  • a regenerate sinner
  • Now that scientists understand that brain cells can regenerate, there may finally be a glimmer of hope in treating the horrible ailments that destroy them.
  • Tired and discontented housewives found their vague sorrows and vaguer longings were only the result of their "unregenerate" state; the lazy country youths felt that the frustration of their small ambitions lay in their not being Trent's Trust, and Other Stories
  • If God is going to choose and regenerate a person spiritually then why do we need to share the gospel with others?
  • To regenerate data in storage units where the process of reading data results in its destruction.
  • And dispite that, it isn't "regenerated" - it just looks a bit nicer. HuwTube
  • Scott: I think that dungeon is pregenerated .. but they will be rendomly generated in the full game, I think. EXTRALIFE – By Scott Johnson - Some things we know and don’t know about DIII
  • The "I" here, though of course not the regenerate, is neither the unregenerate, but the sinful principle of the renewed man, as is expressly stated in Ro 7: 18. 15, Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • So forgive me if I say phooey to the fashionable PR twaddle which claims that casinos can regenerate our urban landscape.
  • Nerve cells have limited ability to regenerate if destroyed.
  • The labouring poor of Shakespeare's London, deformed by drudgery, illness, and accident, tormented by vermin, illiterate and unregenerate, must have presented a certain Calibanesque aspect.
  • It became a main force that would regenerate society.
  • The Prius is peppy enough, and the car's video game-like display encourages you to drive with a light foot, rewarding you with a green leaf symbol for every 50 watt-hours of electricity you regenerate during braking and coasting.
  • The NIE now confirms what was reported last week: the al-Qaeda we failed to finish off in Afghanistan and Pakistan has 'regenerated' and remains intent on attacking us at home," said Biden. Bob Geiger: Bond Continues Misleading Constituents About Iraq
  • Engelsma also rejected the charge in a listener's question that the Protestant Reformed person seeks to determine whether a person is regenerate before reaching out to them.
  • By baptism we be regenerate, and when we shall have passed the time of this exile, he shall clothe us of double vesture, that is to wit of body and soul in glory. The Golden Legend, vol. 1
  • It seems that the failure of the axons to regenerate is partly the result of an inhibitory effect exerted by central nervous system glial cells, associated with the myelin of nerve fibers.
  • In the next seven years I heard him on many occasions, and his brand of Christianity appealed to my unregenerate mind.
  • But amazingly, it kind of regenerated itself a little bit earlier this morning and strengthened and probably could have been labeled back to tropical storm status because we have sustained winds between 40 and 45 miles per hour. CNN Transcript Aug 19, 2007
  • Though her nose was long and unregenerate, and her lips thin, pursed like a minister's mouth, her color was good. CONFESSIONS OF AN UGLY STEPSISTER
  • This showcase is a way forward-thinking Georgians are trying to regenerate their country and support young Georgian designers, who don't know how to make their way into the larger world. Beth Arnold: Letter From Paris: Shame on Anyone Who Doesn't Vote!
  • Nerve cells have limited ability to regenerate if destroyed.
  • This long-held tenet, first proposed by Professor Cajal, held that brain neurons were unique because they lacked the ability to regenerate. Neurogenesis: How to Change Your Brain
  • Even more important, why can't we regenerate tissue to repair damaged organs like our heart or lungs?
  • Due to the colchicine-induced or spontaneous process of chromosome doubling that takes place during the early stages of embryo development, fertile double haploid plants can be easily regenerated within a short period of time.
  • The new charismatic fellowships have warm fellowship and regenerate church membership.
  • Birkerts speaks as an unregenerate reader; a book lover who still believes that ‘language and not technology is the true evolutionary miracle.’
  • Even in the case of severe damage to the entire intestinal wall, tissues seem to regenerate well.
  • Even though we are regenerated by the Holy Spirit of God, redeemed by the atoning work of Christ, and adopted as children of our heavenly Father, we still, so long as we draw breath in this world, have the residue of sin within us.
  • He kept an eye out for a surprise attack as he regenerated his wounds.
  • In a series of transformations, the four-carbon compound is regenerated, carbon dioxide is released, and ATP, NADH, and FADH 2 are formed.
  • If they are burned they can not regenerate, so fire is the greatest ally of the Troll fighter.
  • The drug, called Tissuegene-C, is used to treat degenerative arthritis, also known as osteoarthritis, by helping regenerate cartilage in joints.
  • The conclusion of the "Voluspa" is the following picture of the regenerated earth. Song and Legend from the Middle Ages
  • Did Edwards believe Socrates and Plato were regenerate?
  • The Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine, and sugar pine planted in this area will help regenerate an ecosystem inhabited by wildlife, including bald eagles.
  • A liver transplant would offer an 85 per cent success rate for curing Amy's condition, and could come from a child or part of an adult, as it is possible to split a liver and for the organ to regenerate.
  • But he too must perish, for life is a continuous process, and humanity an old man, refusing to be decompounded and rebuilt to the linear utopianism of the dreamer and theorist, come out of the silence with his ideal to be foisted on unregenerate society. Leonid Andreyev: 1871-1919
  • This generation of unregenerated vipers was still perverse, stiff-necked, and hardened in their iniquity. Barchester Towers
  • The mammalian liver can regenerate if a part of it is removed, the antlers of male deer regenerate each year, and fractured bones can mend by a regenerative process.
  • ‘Without cassowaries, over 100 native rainforest plants are not able to regenerate,’ he said.
  • He is 20 th-century's music's most unregenerate individualist, his teacher, Messiaen, not excluded.
  • unregenerate human nature
  • The government's plans to regenerate the area were announced in March last year by Tony Blair and John Prescott.
  • Like their cousins, they are hermaphroditic, but unlike them, they do not regenerate if cut up; they are more specialized, having suckers at their tail ends.
  • The word here rendered "delight" is indeed stronger than "consent" in Ro 7: 16; but both express a state of mind and heart to which the unregenerate man is a stranger. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Christ, only God such as unregenerate man would have him! What's Mine's Mine — Complete
  • Old railway sleepers have been laid along substantial stretches of the path to Coire Ardair: perhaps not the most sightly solution to the problem, but it has been successful in allowing vegetation on either side to regenerate.
  • It generally takes up to a week for your eye to regenerate the surface tissue that was removed.
  • The trust, set up in 1990 to safeguard the site, is leading a scheme to regenerate the former coalfield area.
  • Transplants of stem cells from either the same person or another person are used to repopulate and regenerate the bone marrow, ‘rescuing’ the patient from aplasia.
  • Each felt that they were but faint expressions of the joy and gratitude demanded of a disinthralled and regenerated nation Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln
  • The process of client-centered therapy is to regenerate the self and reintegrate the personality penetrating unconditional positive regard in counselor and client's relationship.
  • As the acceptor is consumed during the fixation reaction it must obviously be regenerated from the assimilation products. Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1961 - Presentation Speech
  • Whatever his successes with the fictional Tom Brown, Scud East and generations of real English schoolboys who followed them, Thomas Arnold thought he had failed with Flashman who lived unregenerate to the last.
  • Furthermore, so long as human greatness is not a pronounced feature in their religious beliefs, one may rightfully conclude that their crude religious agencies, rioting in impiousness and revelling in infamy, can never function that moral and spiritual potency required to regenerate the negro race. The American Negro: What He Was, What He Is, and What He May Become: A Critical and Practical Discussion
  • When one has these three attributes, then does he come to be called a regenerate person. The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 4 Books 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18
  • an unregenerate criminal
  • But for those of us with the wisdom and the will, the power to regenerate the flesh was there for the taking. NIGHT SISTERS
  • I've lost count of the number of times down the years I've been draughted in to discuss how to regenerate a community which is often in its turn steadfastly resistant to any hint of such a thing being done to it. Crusaders : Progress report
  • He came to see the Soviets as ‘sincere enthusiasts trying to regenerate a people who had been shockingly misgoverned.’
  • The business park will help regenerate this area disadvantaged by years of industrial decay and dereliction.
  • Though the extent of destruction of the forest cover all over the world cannot be matched with the efforts undertaken to regenerate green cover, efforts to revive forestlands have been taken up from time to time.
  • In this world the soul of the regenerate is a gracious soul; and in that world it shall be a glorious one. The Riches of Bunyan
  • It has been demonstrated using pulse radiolysis that ascorbate can regenerate [alpha] tocopherol from the tocopheroxylradical and that such regeneration may occur in the skin.
  • Was it a lack of mental ability, foresight and imagination that was needed many years ago to regenerate what was once a fine city?
  • Their main task is to regenerate Chinese coal industry.
  • Sheffield Council leader Jan Wilson said the Park Hill apartments were listed buildings so the only option was to regenerate them.
  • Thereafter the excess barbotine becomes diluted in the tank 11 and is discharged through the outlet 30 in order to be regenerated and recycled.
  • Won't ordinary people benefit if the Olympics come to London and areas are regenerated?
  • Their main task is to regenerate Chinese coal industry.
  • Goldfish retinal axons are able to regenerate and grow over isolated fish oligodendrocytes in vitro.
  • Thus previously authoritarian government officials joined with previously suspicious villagers to successfully regenerate the degraded sal forests of southwestern Bengal.
  • The point is that once upon a time we didn't think that brains could regenerate.
  • At the colloquy of Worms, 1557, Melanchthon, interpellated by Brenz, is reported to have said that the passage in his _Loci_ of 1548 defining free will as the faculty of applying oneself to grace referred to the regenerated will (_voluntas renata_), as, he said, appeared from the context. Historical Introductions to the Symbolical Books of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
  • There, the açaí (ah-SIGH-ee) palm also provides hearts, though because it is multistemmed, harvesters can hack off a stem or two, allowing the plant to regenerate. At the Heart of the Meal
  • Unlike many body tissues, nerve cells and fibers in the central nervous system cannot regenerate.
  • Water is stored the way nature stores it in regenerated wetlands, recharged aquifers, and along recovered flood plains that are also refuges for wildlife.
  • Sadly, churchgoers are not necessarily the same thing as regenerate believers, even if numbered in thousands in a particular locality.
  • It should have required less energy for the crinoid to regenerate the damaged pinnules than to regenerate a lost or damaged tegmen containing part of the gut tract.
  • The publication of the Gambling Bill has been accompanied by claims that new casinos will regenerate rundown areas and be good for the economy.
  • The excitement created by an arena will boost and help regenerate the whole borough.
  • In the presence of reduced glutathione, the recombinant protein is able to reduce in vitro substrates, such as hydroxyethyldisulfide and dehydroascorbate, and to regenerate the glutathionylated glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Journal of Biological Chemistry current issue
  • But I say that, after it has been impressed and inculcated on the minds of hearers or readers that the apostle is treating about a regenerate man in Romans 7, it is not in our power to hinder such persons from understanding the rest of those things which are attributed to this man in a different manner from that in which they ought to be understood, that is, from receiving them in an acceptation which is not agreeable to the text and design of the apostle, and as they are not received when they are explained as relating to a man who is under sin, and under the law, especially when the inclination is a persuasive to such an interpretation, and when the concupiscence of the flesh gives a similar impulse. The Works of James Arminius, Vol. 2
  • In what respects does the way God regenerates us resemble and differ from the way we regenerate ourselves?
  • If humans could undo differentiation, though, doctors might not have to hunt for rare and elusive stem cells within the body or try to force stem cells from one tissue to regenerate tissue of another type.
  • An overland journey would keep her off the pirate-infested sea, but the south of Italy was a gloomy enigma, the haunt of unregenerate pagans and lawless outcasts from the coastal towns.
  • Specifically she develops two areas, feminist theory and liberation theology, as potential candidates to regenerate the social group work movement.
  • The last step is to regenerate the catalyst.
  • It's great to be reminded of the recklessness of Murray's work, but it's also telling when an unregenerate painter, of all things, appears as that period's renegade.
  • This text speaks explicitly of those whom the Lord (has) deigned to regenerate of water and the Holy Spirit, granting to them remission of their sins. Compendium of the 1955 Holy Week Revisions of Pius XII: Part 7 - The Vigil of Pentecost and the Holy Week Readings
  • For example, the sun may stimulate existing melanocytes to regenerate, and the selectively whitened areas may require frequent "maintenance" with the monobenzone.
  • This contains flavonoids and glycosides to regenerate collagen and elastin in the skin. The Sun
  • Tissue regenerates after skin is scratched.
  • Studies have shown that mammalian cells appear to maintain the pathways required for tissues to regenerate.
  • Since believers are regenerated into new creatures that have hearts that love God, sin must come from another source.
  • The mixture of interdependence and irritation is well caught: Leo, the unregenerate leftist, is, though burned out, still an intellectual; Leonora, her charms faded, is now only a habit and a nuisance.
  • Only a few years ago, the concept of blood cells transmuting into lung cells would have been no less heretical because it was widely accepted that the human lung had a limited capacity to grow and regenerate.
  • Collagen hydrolysate is a protein that helps regenerate and synthesize the cartilage in humans and animals, and supplements come from pigs, cows, oxen, chickens or sheep.
  • He has "regenerated" ten times so far; a process in which a Time Lord can change his physical appearance and cheat death. Marvel Database - Recent changes [en]
  • It is the same unregenerate self that is manifested both in the intimate gestures and public actions, the madness of love and the frenzy of rabble-rousing: there is no difference between the private and the public self.
  • Let the word "unregenerate" be taken for a man who is now in the act of the new birth, though he be not yet actually born again; let "the pleasure" which God feels be taken for an initial act; let the impulsive cause be understood to refer to the final reception of the sinner into favour; and let secondary, subsequent, cooperating and entering grace be substituted for "saving grace;" and it will instantly be manifest, that we speak what is right when we say: "Serious sorrow on account of sin is so far pleasing to God, that by it, according to the multitude of his mercies, he is moved to bestow grace on a man who is a sinner. The Works of James Arminius, Vol. 1
  • The money raised from the events would be used by the parish council to regenerate the area.
  • The creature's cells can regenerate thanks to built-in time machines that revert cells to early versions of themselves in a process called dedifferentiation. Cells That Go Back in Time
  • Regenerate eye collagen fiber, activate cells, improve eye vigor, effectively tighten eye pouch, improve the eye aging of black eyes, grease granular and fishtail lines etc.
  • There is in the minds of unregenerate persons a moral impotency, which is reflected on them greatly from the will and affections, whence the mind never will receive spiritual things, -- that is, it will always and unchangeably reject and refuse them, -- and that because of various lusts, corruptions, and prejudices invincibly fixed in them, causing them to look on them as foolishness. Pneumatologia
  • It is possible to split the liver into two segments that can be shared between two recipients because the liver regenerates.
  • Mithraism, which spread widely in the West as a religion of the soldiers and officials under the Roman Empire, persons initiated into the mysteries were designated "regenerated" (renatus). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
  • That I was born in a Christian land, of pious parents, who gave me religious instructions; brought up under faithful, lively ministers, and in religious society; exposed to few temptations but what arose from the corruptions of my own heart, are aggravations, which, perhaps, many are mourning over, as heightening the sin of unbelief in their unregenerated state. The Power of Faith Exemplified In The Life And Writings Of The Late Mrs. Isabella Graham.
  • Longer term there were plans to regenerate the area with residential, retail and leisure developments.
  • This kind of animal's tail will regenerate if it is cut off.
  • regenerate by redemption from error or decay
  • On this medium, somatic embryos regenerated from the calli.
  • English Heritage also warns today against the wholesale destruction of old homes as part of efforts to regenerate the housing market in areas such as South Yorkshire and Hull.
  • Specifically she develops two areas, feminist theory and liberation theology, as potential candidates to regenerate the social group work movement.
  • The Reverend Meredith, however, was blind to these manifestations of regenerate life. MR GOLIGHTLY'S HOLIDAY
  • But the other part judges that the term necessary should by all means be retained, inasmuch as this obedience is not left to our mere will, and therefore is not free, but that regenerate men are bound to render such service. The Creeds of the Evangelical Protestant Churches.
  • And even an org could be regenerated if one had 'outlived' its usefulness or gotten too bad a name for itself.) Research Shows E-Voting Favored Bush, but Disputes Irregularity Argument
  • Fluoroscopy after orthotopic transplantation of a regenerated left lung construct. Naturejobs - All Jobs
  • It is often stated that Scripture is "perspicuous" (clear) and able to be understood in the main by the committed, regenerate layman, and that by comparing Bible passage with Bible passage, the truth can always be found. Biblical Evidence for Catholicism
  • So forgive me if I say phooey to the fashionable PR twaddle which claims that casinos can regenerate our urban landscape.
  • Some plant species can regenerate from seemingly unpromisingly small fragments (as I know from moving an acanthus in my garden).
  • The Pentagon hopes to sustain and "regenerate" -- to replace those who disappeared after the first paycheck or two -- an additional 105,000, for a total of 305,000 by Fiscal Year Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
  • An axon which has degenerated through injury or disease can sometimes be regenerated, provided its neurilemma has remained intact. The Human Brain
  • The govern-ment will continue to try to regenerate inner city areas.
  • I do not turn to Clarissa in times of duress, but then I am an unregenerate reader, too enthralled by Lovelace's legerdemain to linger over Richardson's edifying sentiments.
  • In Edinburgh, the city's traditional red-light district was regenerated and the scheme moved elsewhere.
  • Spirit, with which quality, when the inward man is considered, he is then correctly called regenerate and a new man. The Works of James Arminius, Vol. 2
  • Meuli-Simmen C, Meuli M, Hutchins GM, Yingling CD, Timmel GB, Harrison MR, Adzick NS: The fetal spinal cord does not regenerate after in utero transection in a large mammalian model. CHOP publications spina bifida
  • The party soon regenerated under her leadership.
  • For ordinary, healthy Germans the eugenicist vision of the regenerated nation foundered on the realities of a war which left the country in ruins.
  • Buck-Morss possesses an unregenerate belief in dialectical Utopia, and holds out the possibility of these dreamworlds eventually being converted into reality.
  • Was it a lack of mental ability, foresight and imagination that was needed many years ago to regenerate what was once a fine city?
  • A few hours after it detached, the cell regenerated its filopodia and once again adhered to the matrix.
  • As the acceptor is consumed during the fixation reaction it must obviously be regenerated from the assimilation products. Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1961 - Presentation Speech
  • Some animals also show great ability to regenerate: small fragments of animals such as starfish, planarians, and Hydra can give rise to a whole animal.
  • He had been kept by two factors - he had been regenerated by the Spirit of God and he heard Dr Martyn Lloyd-Jones preach on his regular sorties into Wales.
  • However, it keeps on functioning, regenerates itself, and discovers new limits.
  • I prefer "unregenerate" to Riesman's implicit "immature" ( "As we shall see, not all other-directed people are inside-dopesters, but perhaps, for the lack of a more mature form of their type, many of them aspire to be" [p. 200]) in the light of the subsequent hijacking of AFF Doublethink Online
  • He had awakened regenerated and he was now standing in the kitchen doorway, the crest of his hat not an inch from the lintel. DANSVILLE
  • And older persons, not yet altogether regenerate, are apt to have a weakness for a man who was willing to be knocked up at three in the morning by some young roysterers, and turn out with them for a "frisk" about the streets and taverns and down the river in a boat. Dr. Johnson and His Circle
  • The studies suggest that only embryonic cells have the potential to regenerate diseased tissues.
  • The four-carbon succinate undergoes a series of rearrangements to regenerate oxaloacetate.
  • In this passage, we see the state of the unregenerate, which is ignorance. WordPress.com News
  • I will not say that the Kingdom of Heaven was within us, for we were just as troublesome and unregenerate as any boys that ever lived on earth before or since, but the word ennui was not in the lexicon of my youth. In the days of my youth when I was a student in the University of Virginia, 1888-1893.
  • Growing tumours do not regenerate epidermal layers and cuticles.
  • His ministry is to glorify the Lord Jesus Christ, and during this age to convict man of sin, regenerate the repentant sinner, to indwell, guide, instruct, sanctify and empower the believer.
  • I will leave the lights off until the tank cycles, discouraging any green diatom growth while dosing with calcium to regenerate the varying reds of coralline algae.
  • Thus the sulphocarbonate of a 'hydrocellulose' is formed with lower proportions of alkaline hydrate and carbon disulphide, gives solutions of relatively low viscosity, and, when decomposed to give a film or thread of the regenerated cellulose, these are found to be deficient in strength and elasticity. Researches on Cellulose 1895-1900
  • If they are burned they can not regenerate, so fire is the greatest ally of the Troll fighter.
  • Existing osteoporosis drug may keep joint injuries from causing long-term osteoarthritis WASHINGTON - Preliminary findings of a study suggest that an existing osteoporosis drug can prevent cartilage loss from osteoarthritis following injury to a joint, and also regenerate some cartilage that has been lost. Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • But for those of us with the wisdom and the will, the power to regenerate the flesh was there for the taking. NIGHT SISTERS
  • The catalytic enzyme is regenerated after each activation and able to react anew with additional prodrug molecules.
  • At the same time they would like to regenerate the sulfuric acid to minimize costs.
  • In Greek mythology, he had been torn apart by Titans but was always regenerated, like the vines in spring.
  • Of practical interest to humans, said Carroll, is the salamander's ability to regenerate limbs.
  • Grown on a disused china clay pit, the project has helped regenerate the area.
  • To adapt to the reformation of retirement pension system, the enterprise should regenerate the pension accounting.
  • The researchers identified and harvested stem cells from the brains of adult mice and encouraged them to grow by mimicking the way the brain naturally regenerates.
  • The police need to be able to regenerate from the most serious wounds, travel through time, and be really telekinetic. Archive 2007-11-01
  • But figuring out exactly how to regenerate ammonia borane from the residuum left after hydrogen has been extracted remains a stumbling block.
  • unregenerate conservatism
  • Most of the remaining plants regenerated are sterile haploid plants while a few partially sterile plants could be polyploid or aneuploid.
  • To show in vivo function, we transplanted regenerated lungs into orthotopic position. Naturejobs - All Jobs
  • It became a main force that would regenerate society.
  • Despite little reproduction by seed, N. antarctica plays an important role in the post-fire restoration of plant communities because of its ability to regenerate vegetatively from burned stumps by coppice and root suckers.
  • From London's Millennium Dome and Olympic zone, to northern England's "regenerated" city centres, to the windswept out-of-town tracts turned into transport hubs and hospitals, to the sheltered middle-class streets bursting with loft extensions, much of the UK spent 1997 to 2010 behind construction hoardings. A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain by Owen Hatherley – review
  • From such studies as those of Be and Spero and Wilde, we know that foraminifera sometimes regenerate their tests after injury.
  • He brought to our attention the tiny zebra fish which could fully regenerate even severely damaged myocardium.
  • If they refused the Saviour whom Paul preached, if they continued morally unregenerated, then the mere fact of being The Doctrines of Predestination, Reprobation, and Election
  • But for those of us with the wisdom and the will, the power to regenerate the flesh was there for the taking. NIGHT SISTERS
  • After deleing this file it was regenerated and the protocols are available.
  • The resin then must be ‘regenerated’ with a salt (sodium chloride) brine solution before further treatment can occur.
  • Regeneration frequency is the average No. regeneration shoots that a leaf regenerated.
  • Poverty cannot degrade, nor ignorance bedwarf, nor persecution crush, nor dungeon enthral the free, glad spirit of a child of God, erect in its regenerate strength, and rich in its eternal hopes and heritage. The Riches of Bunyan
  • In the begining of the series Hiro finds peter on the subway and he says "you look diffrent without the scar" so I don't think that peter is going to regenerate. no doubt he is going to get away from Sylar, but he's not going to regenerate thus Peter getting the scar. HEROES: Can This Show Get Any Better? | the TV addict
  • So the significance of these NT saints is not that they eventually professed faith in Christ but that Edwards says they were regenerated before they made that explicit profession.
  • The used absorbent can, therefore, be "regenerated". 5. Methods for removing hydrogen sulphide from biogas
  • This different insertion pattern of the regenerated tendon could explain how it acts mainly as a flexor muscle rather than as an internal rotator.
  • One of his hind legs was slightly smaller than the others, having regenerated after being lost in a molt. MINUTES TO BURN
  • They decided a housing co-operative was the way to regenerate Ormiston Crescent.
  • It is never clear how long any Doctor will remain unregenerated or who will come after him. Archive 2009-06-01
  • Gospel preaching is God's ordained way of reaching men and women, regenerate or unregenerate.
  • This ought not to be passed over without some animadversion; because this notion about the word "unregenerate" which many persons have previously formed, is no small cause why they think they must reject the opinion, which declares that this passage of The Works of James Arminius, Vol. 2
  • New biomaterials could regenerate and repair human tissues.
  • On top of these 3 Rs, i will add a 4th R "regenerate" - we should perhaps start to plant some fruits and vegetables in our garden for those of us living in landed property. Dr. Hsu's forum
  • One of his hind legs was slightly smaller than the others, having regenerated after being lost in a molt. MINUTES TO BURN

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy