Sentence examples for be confused with using from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

"I use settings, but that is not to be confused with using real people, and things that have actually happened to those real people," she tells the filmmaker, while his camera lingers on her hands: she is slicing through the blood-red stalks of rhubarb plants with a chef's knife and casually discarding the poisonous leaves.

Similar(59)

The findings in this study suggest that information from the GP about high cholesterol and risk of cardiovascular disease was reinterpreted in everyday social life, where people navigate according to different 'concerns' (not to be confused with worry), using rationalities for action from different discourses [ 28].

The acronym ICE as used herein should not be confused with that used for "integrating and conjugative elements (ICEs)" in bacteria [ 10].

The determination of the equivalence of two sketches, as described above, should not be confused with methods used to determine whether two connection tables represent the same molecule, such as unique SMILES [25] or InChI [26].

The natural right of using should not be confused with the "use of right" and "right of using" that are legal rights.

Note that a semicolon is the delimiter between channels, and this should not be confused with the use of brackets for arrays, as used in MATLAB and specified in Rule 3. does not indicate a two-dimensional array or matrix as in MATLAB.

This use of the slash sign must not be confused with its use to mark quantifier independence as in IF logic.

Some NAC, including C. firmetaria and C. inconspicua, could be confused with C. krusei using this medium.

Approaches for reaching high coverage are known as "delivery channels," "delivery strategies" or "means of distribution" in the literature [ 17], and should not be confused with the use of the term "delivery" as in childbirth.

The first is a genome-wide scan for epigenetic variation in relation to disease risk what has recently been called an epigenome-wide association scan (EWAS) (Rakyan et al. 2011) (this should not to be confused with the use of the same acronym for exposure-wide association scans, Patel et al. 2010).

The terms "generation", "genotype", "phenotype" and "fitness" will be used to help illustrate this method, and these should not be confused with similar terms used for the animal breeding application itself.

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