Examples of using Mimics in English and their translations into Chinese
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Programming
The study of phosphotriesterase(PTE) enzymes and synthesis of its structural and functional mimics has been a long time interest of the lab.
Advanced Solutions and its customers are also using the technology to create mimics for lungs, hearts, kidneys, pancreases, bones and even human skin.
They also need to improve the tumor model so that it more accurately mimics real glioma tumors.
To make the upper, engineers use complex knitting structures to create a closed anatomical form that mimics the shape of the foot.
It creates marvellous devices and structures: artificial lakes, furnaces, engines, caves where alchemy mimics the natural production of metals.
Interestingly, this paper describes how sulforaphane mimics“the fever effect” in ASD.
Researchers at Duke University have developed another 3D-printed gel that mimics human cartilage when dried.
Revealed in a design patent, the mysterious model is a stylish coupe which features a front fascia that mimics the Escala concept.
The authors hope that this study can encourage others to develop similar approaches based on small molecule mimics of the first stage of stemness suppression.
Attardi believes that with more understanding of the p53-Ptpn14-Yap“axis,” it would be possible to invent a therapy that mimics the favorable mutation in p53.
They also need to improve the tumor model so that it more accurately mimics real glioma tumors.
A text-based expression of emotion created from ASCII characters that mimics a facial expression when viewed with your head tilted to the left.
This mimics the addition law for numbers we learn from childhood(i.e. the sum or difference of any two numbers is still a number).
This mimics mining, but does not offer unfair advantages to large purchasers.
The image sequences were imported into image processing software(Mimics 10.01, Materialise Inc., Leuven, Belgium) for 3D reconstruction.
It instead mimics the massively parallel communication architecture of the brain, and sends billions of small amounts of information simultaneously to several thousand destinations.
Researchers have developed an artificial structure that mimics the cell membrane, which can switch on immune cells to attack and destroy a designated target.
It mimics natural instances of shared blood supply, such as in conjoined twins or animals that share a placenta in the womb.
Since this stretch mimics single-arm overhead work, it is better suited for problems arising from one side being tighter than the other.
That is, it mimics a future API providing fallback functionality to older browsers.