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The phrase "an exert" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "an exertion"? If this is the case, you can use it when referring to a physical or mental effort made to accomplish a task.
Example: "After a long day of exertion at the gym, I felt completely exhausted."
Alternatives: "an effort" or "a strain".
Exact(1)
We are choosing the leader of the free world," Mr Bush said, according to an exert published by Reuters.
Similar(59)
Catestatin (CST), a fragment of Chromogranin-A, exerts angiogenic, arteriogenic, vasculogenic and cardioprotective effects.
It is not known if Drosophila ADGF-A exerts a signaling function similar to human ADA2.
These results further suggest that JAM-A exerts specific effects on β1-integrin heterodimers.
Taken together, these results indicate that Aurora-A exerts a repressive effect on the DNA repair by HR.
Therefore, fusicoccin A exerts cytostatic effects but low cytotoxic effects (as demonstrated by flow cytometry).
As we have seen, an impressed force is an action exerted on a body.
(In our examples, we considered that an "effort" exerts a proportional probabilistic rate of intrusion).
These are eccentric contractions, when a muscle exerts a force as it lengthens.
A preterm birth can exert an influence on cognitive development.
Specifically, it measures the forces that particles of a body exert on one another.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com