Dictionary
be bottlenecks
noun
The narrow portion that forms the pouring spout of a bottle; the neck of a bottle.
synonyms
Exact(10)
This is enough to see where passengers congregate, how much time they spend in stores and restaurants and where there may be bottlenecks.
Unfortunately, the rigidity and bio-uncompatibility of most inorganic nanomaterials will be bottlenecks limiting their applications to flexible and biological devices.
We also propose a load-balancing routing protocol to utilize the cellular interfaces of gateways, which are likely to be bottlenecks to the Internet.
Restraint is therefore advisable with regard to considerations of the short-term introduction of capacity mechanisms that are supposed to give additional income to conventional power plants at the consumers' expense today because of fears that there will be bottlenecks in the future.
The size and complexity of these proteins have proven to be bottlenecks in structural characterization.
Additionally, bottlenecks in the cell culture network were more likely to be bottlenecks in the clinical network.
Similar(50)
Supply doesn't seem to be bottlenecking as it is in some other cities.
The users with weak channels are more likely to be bottleneck users in general.
Is there merit to that? A. There are bottlenecks in refining.
"China is still around, plus there are bottlenecks in refinery and constraints in transportation".
The problem is not so much the amount of power available as it is bottlenecks in the transmission grid.
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