Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Having, or affecting, multiple
components
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Second, suppliers should give operators better tools with which to pinpoint the sources of faults in multicomponent systems.
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Weight loss for women: studies of smokers and nonsmokers using hypnosis and multicomponent treatments with and without overt aversion.
Martin Rossman, M.D.: Manage Your Weight Through Cognitive Emotional Techniques M.D. Martin Rossman 2010
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Weight loss for women: studies of smokers and nonsmokers using hypnosis and multicomponent treatments with and without overt aversion.
Martin Rossman, M.D.: Manage Your Weight Through Cognitive Emotional Techniques M.D. Martin Rossman 2010
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In multicomponent DM scenarios, a dark force would preclude large shifts in the rate for Higgs decay to two photons associated with DM-multiplet loops that might otherwise lead to measurable deviations at the LHC or a future linear collider.
Dark Forces Revisited Sean 2009
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Koonin just proposed big bang scenarios in which things just spring into existence, they invented things like the neutral theory of evolution where functionalities just drift into existence, they came up with lateral gene transfer where genes are randomly reorganized to built complete multicomponent functional systems.
A critique on the endosymbiotic theory for the origin of mitochondria 2007
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The company is introducing a multicomponent system that it designed to send music over wireless networking connections to speakers in multiple rooms, a category already served by companies such as Sonos Inc.
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As for coding, to those of us who have studied it from a biochemical perspective, it seems fundamentally like an evolutionarily optimized form of multicomponent binding (A binds to B, B binds to C), perfectly consistent with what is known of organic chemistry.
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As for coding, to those of us who have studied it from a biochemical perspective, it seems fundamentally like an evolutionarily optimized form of multicomponent binding (A binds to B, B binds to C), perfectly consistent with what is known of organic chemistry.
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August 14th, 2006 at 11: 29 am trrll: As for coding, to those of us who have studied it from a biochemical perspective, it seems fundamentally like an evolutionarily optimized form of multicomponent binding (A binds to B, B binds to C), perfectly consistent with what is known of organic chemistry.
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When you are building a fine-tuned, multicomponent cellular structure, the problem gets exponentially more severe at each step, as many specialized components are required.
The Edge of Evolution Michael J. Behe 2007
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