Localize Sentence Examples

localize
  • I am also investigating the ability of listeners to localize sounds in reverberant conditions.

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  • A space heater will help to localize the heat near the model.

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  • Decreases or increases in muscle tone can help the examiner localize the affected area.

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  • Brain imagining studies (MRI and fMRI) include development of an automated method to localize cortical tubers.

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  • A careful neurological evaluation can help to determine the cause of impairment and help a clinician begin to localize the problem.

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  • The fact that a poem of the 13th century (the Alexandro), and certain redactions of the oldest Spanish code, the Fuero Juzgo, have a Leonese origin has been made too much of, and has led to a tendency to localize excessively certain features common to the whole western zone where the transition takes place from Castilian to Gahician-Portuguese.

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  • Kritzinger, Hertzog and bodies of Cape rebels raided Cape Colony as soon as they were able to cross the Orange, and Hertzog penetrated so far that he exchanged shots on the Atlantic coast with a British warship. All that the British forces under Sir Charles Knox and others could do was to localize the raids and to prevent Botha's .

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  • The aim of this study was to confirm the presence of these enzymes and localize them precisely in the rat brain.

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  • Thus one can not localize the entropy on the horizon, which is just like the axis in ordinary three dimensional space.

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  • The cells also localize proteins at the cellular interface.

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  • Not only so, but the physician, thus fascinated by "types," and impressed by the silent monumentsof the pathological museum, was led to localize disease too much, to isolate the acts of nature, and to forget not only the continuity of the phases which lead up to the exemplary forms, or link them together, but to forget also that even between the types themselves relations of affinity must exist - and these oftentimes none the less intimate for apparent diversities of form, for types of widely different form may be, and indeed often are, more closely allied than types which have more superficial resemblance - and to forget, moreover, how largely negative is the process of abstraction by which types are imagined.

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