Examples of using Replicable in English and their translations into Portuguese
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Financial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
-
Official/political
impartial and replicable literature review;
demonstrative and replicable.
Definitely not only indisputable and replicable results, through the aggregation of quantitative primary studies,
the present methodology is accessible and replicable in other Brazilian urban realities.
This would ensure a work of great beauty and hardly replicable, however, ha inspirado el diseño de numerosos proyectos posteriores dedicados a oficinas y espacios administrativos.
An important element of the scientific method is that any experiment to learn about the relationships between variables should be replicable.
will make the plant easily replicable in other geographical areas.
noninvasive brain imaging has provided robust and replicable evidence about the brain circuits that develop for spoken language.
using a transparent and replicable methodology.
the fittest athletes and not to produce an easily replicable workout program.
A prestigious international journal showed in a recent study that only 6/53 of the published methods are replicable.
Furthermore, Beischel said:" This research paradigm is ideal because the phenomenon of mediumship is easily replicable and can bring the phenomenon of mediumship to the laboratory".
For, this analysis provides a convenient way to decompose the returns of portfolios administered with identifiable benchmarks and replicable strategies.
however for the local context it is necessary to make adjustments that will result in replicable methods across brazilian agencies.
lasting, and replicable.
not replicable, lacking evidence- therefore, unacceptable.
community libraries is highly replicable in other areas of Colombia.
robust and replicable differences between clinical group
Once this recovery phase is over, if presented with a new replicable object, an instance of SCP-1536 will immediately change to replicate the new object.
Definition English: Methods which attempt to express in replicable terms the extent of the neoplasm in the patient.