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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a common suite of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a standard set of tools, applications, or features that are typically found together in a particular context.
Example: "The software package includes a common suite of applications designed to enhance productivity."
Alternatives: "a standard set of" or "a typical collection of".
Exact(9)
Each win-athena machine as a common suite of software including MS Office, Adobe Acrobat Professional, Matlab (8 concurrent licenses for use within Junior Lab), Full Shot 8 (A simple to use screen capture program), and WinEdt (A GUI based LaTeX editor and compiler).
Maize, rice, wheat, and many other domesticated seed plants exhibit a common suite of features collectively known as the "domestication syndrome" (Harlan et al. 1973; Heiser 1988; Doebley et al. 2006; Zeder et al. 2006a; Ross-Ibarra et al. 2007).
This is now known to be an oversimplification: certain sense organs in tunicates, for example, develop from placodes in a manner comparable to their vertebrate counterparts, and their development is regulated by a common suite of molecular factors (Mazet et al. 2005).
We hypothesize that the healing responses have a common genetic basis, implying a common suite of mechanisms.
Secondly, we assessed whether both mutants had a common suite of genes that were misregulated that could account for the similarities between sticky and dFmr1 mutant phenotypes.
Several studies have shown the induction of a common suite of effector genes during growth of fungal plant pathogens under nitrogen-starved conditions in vitro and during growth in planta [ 16, 17].
Similar(51)
The SPLASH-2 is a common suite for scientific studies on parallel shared memory machines.
The 7-spot has the largest degree of radial symmetry within the common suite of regular drilling patterns (line drive, 9-, 7- or 5-spot).
In analogy with the common suite of morphological and physiological traits that distinguish crops from their wild ancestors (Doebley et al. 2006; Zeder et al. 2006), the changes in life-history traits of pathogens adapting to domesticated hosts and to the agro-ecosystem can be regarded as a 'domestication syndrome'.
Fukami et al.'s result implies that while communities vary in composition, they tend to be represented by sets of species with common suites of traits (in their case, a multitude of life-history, belowground, phenological and reproductive traits).
If some genomes are generally more likely to contain SSRs (due to differences in mutational biases or selection pressures or other factors) and a common mechanism (or suite of mechanisms) controlled the likelihood of SSR presence, then a correlation between short and long SSRs would be predicted.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com