Sentence examples for and so commonly from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

On the contrary, acquired retinal diseases are relatively common retinal conditions that are mostly treatable and so commonly seen in hospitals.

This can be treated as a clustering problem, but the shape of the clusters, their number and their densities are not known a priori, and so commonly used clustering algorithms such as k-means and DBSCAN cannot be applied.

LCA focuses on process and system analysis and so commonly examines the timeframe of construction, operation and decommissioning of a process plant, with individual changes within this period assumed to offset each other.

Similar(57)

Marijuana is used as a medicine throughout the American and Mexican desert; it is smoked, brewed and chewed, and is so commonly found growing that one tribe calls it "that grass over there".

This draws attention to the larger problematic of the interconnections of place, culture, and health [ 22, 23] and the importance of understanding the marginalisation and violence so commonly experienced by individual sex workers in terms of the spatial dimensions of sex work more broadly [ 24].

He believes his condition was caused by exposure to the paint sludge, which looks like hardened gray dough and was so commonly seen when he was a boy, he said, that he and his friends molded it into balls and threw it at one another as they played in the woods.

The guides enabled us to see both the commonly visited and not so commonly visited artifacts.

It also helps us understand why we find the "universal spice", pepper, on dinner tables through Europe, and chilli so commonly scattered on food in Asia.

He didn't need to see the x-ray; his joints now ache with the pain and stiffness so commonly associated with arthritis, despite being only 35 years old.

The number of candidate STEPs near exons causing an upstream transcript start (UTS) is an interesting result, perhaps illustrating that the common scenario of alternative splicing in 5' untranslated sequences results in an alternative first exon and not so commonly the activation of a cryptic splice site [21] or exon skipping.

However, over the short-term, organisms under stress must alter their physiology or behavior, and doing so commonly involves changes in gene expression.

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