Examples
1. In 1971 scientists loaded atomic clocks on board commercial airplanes.
2. Neutrons and protons make up atomic nuclei.
3. Because atomic theory explains things.
4. Satellites’ atomic clocks get 38 microseconds ahead of ground clocks every day.
5. The smallest sound you can perceive moves your eardrum just four atomic diameters.
nucleus
/ˈnukɫiəs/
noun(biology) the part of a cell that contains most of the genetic information
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Examples
1. The nucleus has a crazy-high density.
2. The nucleus has a net positive Coulomb charge.
3. Neutrons and protons make up atomic nuclei.
4. This nucleus also has high concentrations of serotonin and melatonin receptors.
5. The nuclei form a nice periodic array.
bond
/ˈbɑnd/
nouna linking force that holds atoms or ions together in any molecule or crystal
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Examples
1. Those two discrete eras give Bonds a striking list of achievements and accolades.
2. Bonds had famous blowups and dugout brawls.
3. Bonds produced.
4. Bonds had absolutely obliterated a pitch from K-Rod.
5. Bonding the river?
charge
/ˈtʃɑɹdʒ/
nounthe physical property in matter that causes it to experience a force in an electromagnetic field
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Examples
1. His attorney called the charges wholly without merit.
2. This vehicle here is charging the pedestrian on the left-hand turn, automatic fail.
3. Television, print, radio, outdoor billboards charge you.
4. Took charge.
5. Charge your phone.
density
/ˈdɛnsəti/, /ˈdɛnsɪti/
noun(physics) the degree to which a substance is compacted, measured by dividing its mass by its volume
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Examples
1. For one, without the stress of Earth's gravity, her bones lose density.
2. And density has a huge effect on vibrations.
3. Okay, so the keyword here is density.
4. Densities are different states of consciousness.
5. Density is about unconditional love and acceptance.
gravity
/ˈɡɹævəti/, /ˈɡɹævɪti/
noun(physics) the universal force of attraction between any pair of objects with mass
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Examples
1. Gravity is.
2. Gravity always gives you a straight line.
3. Gravity is applying a force here.
4. Gravity separated away from the other forces.
5. Our hair defies gravity without any products.
particle
/ˈpɑɹtəkəɫ/, /ˈpɑɹtɪkəɫ/
noun(physics) any of the smallest units that energy or matter consists of, such as electrons, atoms, molecules, etc.
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Examples
1. When Snow observed the situation in London, he therefore concluded that cholera was spread by tiny fecal particles in the water.
2. Particles are modes of interactions with the field.
3. Particles are local.
4. Those particles, then, can start an inflammatory response.
5. Additional particles usually trigger a hyperactive sensation in your brain.
instinct
/ˈɪnstɪŋkt/
nouna reaction or behavior whose reason is innate, not a result of thinking
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Examples
1. so your most base instincts in what they call the lizard brain.
2. - Sometimes instincts fail.
3. Instinct told me.
4. Obviously mother's instinct knows best.
5. The instincts came.
metabolism
/məˈtæbəˌɫɪzəm/
nounthe chemical processes through which food is changed into energy for the body to use
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Examples
1. Metabolism is rather complicated.
2. Metabolism is rather complicated.
3. Walking can boost metabolism.
4. So my husband, his obsession has always been metabolism.
5. Skipping meals slows down metabolism.
evolutionary
/ˌɛvəˈɫuʃəˌnɛɹi/, /ˌɛvoʊˈɫuʃəˌnɛɹi/, /ˌivəˈɫuʃəˌnɛɹi/, /ˌivoʊˈɫuʃəˌnɛɹi/
adjectiverelated to evolution or the slow and gradual development of something
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Examples
1. And these ranks reflect evolutionary relationships.
2. Evolutionary biology is one of them.
3. Can evolutionary theory explains multiplicity or complexity?
4. They have evolutionary significance.
5. The new governments in both countries are heavily restricting evolutionary teaching.
organic
/ɔɹˈɡænɪk/
adjectiveproduced by or from or related to living things
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Examples
1. The organic component of soil, called humus, is mostly made up of broken down lignin.
2. Because the conversations, the series, my show is organic.
3. Real change is organic.
4. It has organics.
5. Their crops are organic.
evolution
/ˌɛvəˈɫuʃən/, /ˌɛvoʊˈɫuʃən/, /ˌivəˈɫuʃən/, /ˌivoʊˈɫuʃən/
noun(biology) the slow and gradual development of living things throughout the history of the earth
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Examples
1. Evolution is probably playing a pretty big role.
2. Evolution can create information.
3. So evolution is having a gigantic impact on the number of species within these lakes.
4. So evolution gave us a solution.
5. Evolution developed a solution for that.
mutation
/mjuˈteɪʃən/
noun(biology) a change in the structure of the genes of an individual that causes them to develop different physical features
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Examples
1. Mutations are random changes in DNA.
2. The raw material for evolution by natural selection is mutation.
3. So mutations occur.
4. Mutations are the ultimate origin of all genetic variation.
5. Mutation brings things into the population.
embryo
/ˈɛmbɹiˌoʊ/
nounan unhatched or unborn offspring in the process of development, especially a human offspring roughly from the second to the eighth week after fertilization
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Examples
1. An embryo swims for its life.
2. An embryo is extremely complex.
3. The embryo stems from the sperm and egg of the prospective parents, or donors.
4. - Remember, viable embryos.
5. Does embryo come next?
hybrid
/ˈhaɪbɹəd/, /ˈhaɪbɹɪd/
nounan animal or plant with parents that belong to different breeds or varieties
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Examples
1. The company introduced its first production plug in hybrid.
2. But hybrids, the offspring of two species, do happen.
3. The French onion soup hybrid meets pot roast.
4. Hybrids have special abilities as a result of their animal genetics.
5. Hybrids are a mix of classic and volume.
clone
/ˈkɫoʊn/
nouna cell or a group of cells created through a natural or artificial process from a source that they are genetically identical to
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Examples
1. Clones could exist.
2. Now, do clones count?
3. We also clone horses.
4. These guys are growing freakish clone meat in a lab.
5. Some people are clones.
to reproduce
/ˌɹipɹəˈdus/
verb(of a living being) to produce offspring or more of itself
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Examples
1. Animals sexually reproduce.
2. Snails that aren’t infected reproduce super quickly.
3. In contrast, British money reproduced stores of pre-existing money perpetually.
4. Surtsey's hot volcanic cracks and seams closely reproduce the environment of early Earth.
5. That virus is reproducing inside cells of your respiratory tract.
stimulus
/ˈstɪmjəɫəs/
nounsomething that encourages an activity or causes a reaction in a person or thing
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Examples
1. More stimulus is needed.
2. We passed the stimulus.
3. Pair the stimulus with your bad habit or craving.
4. The stimulus passed.
5. They have stimulus checks.
synthesis
/ˈsɪnθəsəs/
nounthe act of producing a substance that exists in living beings
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Examples
1. We see protein synthesis.
2. So convergent synthesis has real advantages.
3. But so has synthesis.
4. The synthesis occurs mainly in the liver.
5. Prof: Oh, the synthesis of mesitylene formed a ring.
to accelerate
/ækˈsɛɫɝˌeɪt/
verbto increase the velocity of something
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Examples
1. Hardware accelerated video decoding for web browsers.
2. Learning accelerates.
3. The next month’s events accelerated matters significantly.
4. A new global currency could accelerate dollarisation, or Libraisation.
5. Anyway, large raindrops can accelerate up to 20 miles per hour.
Examples
1. Dissolve the guilt and the shame.
2. Our stomach acid dissolves the flea but not the larvae, the parasite.
3. On this view, again, a solution to the meta-problem dissolves the hard problem.
4. Consciousness dissolves subconscious walls.
5. Dissolve the yeast in the warm water.
acid
/ˈæsəd/
nouna water-soluble chemical substance that contains Hydrogen and has a sour taste or corrosive feature with a PH less than 7
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Examples
1. Number one, acid affects the flavor in food.
2. Number two, acid affects the structure in food.
3. In this dish, acid affects the flavor in food.
4. In this dish, acid affects the structure in the food.
5. The few aides and staff on the ward between them unwittingly took acid to the amount of around 100 tabs.
aluminum
/əˈɫumənəm/
nouna light silver-gray metal used primarily for making cooking equipment and aircraft parts
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Examples
1. So like back here is aluminum.
2. Oh balls, does it do aluminum?
3. The back metal is aluminum.
4. The bigger arrows are aluminum.
5. Aluminum, high performance reinforced non-stick coatings.
copper
/ˈkɑpɝ/
nouna metallic chemical element that has a red-brown color, primarily used as a conductor in wiring
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Examples
1. Copper plays a very important role in your immunity.
2. Copper directly impacts your brain’s development and functioning.
3. Bone tissue also needs copper.
4. Copper boosts the production of these cells.
5. And copper directly impacts the production of melanin.
lead
/lɛd/
nouna heavy soft metal, used in making bullets, in plumbing and roofing, especially in the past
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Examples
1. A culinary choice in South China led to a fatal infection in Hong Kong, subsequently 8,000 cases of SARS, nearly 1,000 deaths, 30 countries, six continents.
2. My ego is leading the way.
3. The royal always leads the way.
4. Lead your partner.
5. - Lead the conversation.
conductor
/kənˈdəktɝ/
nouna substance that permits heat or electricity to pass through it or along it
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Examples
1. the conductor shouted angrily.
2. the conductor asked.
3. 'Yes,' said the conductor.
4. The conductor wore a fake Handle wig.
5. The conductor is definitely on the bottom of this hierarchy.
crystal
/ˈkɹɪstəɫ/
nouna substance of small size and equal sides, formed naturally when turns to solid
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Examples
1. People love crystals.
2. You got crystals.
3. Crystals are great for energy.
4. Better yet, do crystals actually have healing properties.
5. Crystals are wonderful.
gunpowder
/ˈɡənˌpaʊdɝ/
nouna type of powder that is explosive, used in making bullets, bombs, etc.
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Examples
1. Both types of cannons, by the way, relied on gunpowder, a Chinese invention.
2. They had gunpowder, catapults, siege engines.
3. Gunpowder and lead ♪ -
4. The men are out of gunpowder.
5. I could smell the gunpowder.
Examples
1. - Another answer could have been dynamite.
2. [Voice On Phone] And boom goes the dynamite.
3. And then the dynamite explodes.
4. Dynamite, from the point of view of anarchists, leveled the playing field.
5. All right, in goes the dynamite.
composition
/ˌkɑmpəˈzɪʃən/
nounthe different elements that form something or the arrangement of these elements
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Examples
1. The sun’s composition is similar.
2. Interestingly reflex tears and emotional tears have very different compositions.
3. The composition is superbly balanced.
4. His all-over compositions betray a keen awareness of the edges.
5. Composition notebooks are great.
Examples
1. Incinerators still emit harmful pollutants, especially in countries with lax environmental regulations.
2. Even the telescope itself emits too much heat.
3. Smartphones emit harmful radiation.
4. One car emits four tons.
5. Both plants and trees emit aerosols.
laser
/ˈɫeɪzɝ/
nouna device that produces a powerful and concentrated beam of light that can be used in medical procedures, for cutting metal objects, etc.
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Examples
1. Lasers are OK.
2. Kid: Shoot lasers eyes out of my eyes.
3. Lasers are pretty cool.
4. Many other forms of liposuction exist, certain forms involve lasers.
5. That has lasers.
magnet
/ˈmæɡnət/
nounan object that makes iron come toward it because of the magnetic field that it produces
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Examples
1. Well, magnets have two sides.
2. So magnet will absolutely kill a hard drive.
3. Magnets, never causes any problems.
4. Arming magnet.
5. Magnets can do no permanent damage to your phone.
Examples
1. Thermal cameras report a temperature value, the effect of temperature.
2. Thermals, unfortunately, didn't redeem the Core i5 version either.
3. Thermal cam Before After His tongue got hotter Pad prik khing, Thailand - Oh, Thai food!
4. The other ones for me are thermals.
5. Thermals are kind of like the gas for a car.
to compress
/ˈkɑmpɹɛs/, /kəmˈpɹɛs/
verbto press two things together or be pressed together to become smaller
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Examples
1. This book compressed an eternal being with a universe of lore into a person with a story.
2. They compress the words together.
3. Each one of these is actually compressing the image.
4. The bacterium compresses your chest.
5. Underwear and PJs compressed in another cube.
generator
/ˈdʒɛnɝˌeɪtɝ/
nouna machine that produces electricity by converting mechanical energy into electrical energy
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Examples
1. So early on you may need generators.
2. Charge the generator!
3. Start the generator!
4. - We have generators.
5. Because the generator supports the combustion engine.
Examples
1. Water evaporates.
2. My perfect youth, evaporated.
3. His considerable forward momentum completely evaporates.
4. The deciduous trees evaporate water from their leaves.
5. Their confidence evaporates.
Examples
1. CSIs might even vacuum the entire area to collect tiny samples.
2. If the carpet isn’t too dirty, the safer play is probably to just vacuum.
3. Ride a horse, vacuum at the same time.
4. Dust then vacuum.
5. Now Matt is obviously just vacuuming our little landing and hallway.
residue
/ˈɹɛzəˌdu/
nouna small remaining amount or part of a thing after it has been taken, used, etc.
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Examples
1. - It's leaving residue.
2. Quarters leave a residue.
3. Look, no residue.
4. The acetone will remove residue in about 10 minutes.
5. Scrub away any soap residue.
