Sentence examples for deep consequence for from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Likewise, the load imposed on a cell by a heterologous circuit is affected by the availability of external resources, and, in the extreme, can lead to changes in cell fitness that can have deep consequence for circuit function and stability.

Similar(59)

This fragmentation of care has deep consequences for decision-making and healthcare spending but there is another growing problem – the diffusion of accountability.

Those steps could quickly be derailed, with deep consequences for the United States, if India finds Pakistani fingerprints on the well-planned operation.

That crescendo builds up, you are on your own and think you have to do something.' The journey of these two young Britons will have deep consequences for the region.

There is a serious ambiguity in the meaning of "adaptation"; which meaning is in play has had deep consequences for both the group selection debates and the species selection debates (Lloyd 2001).

The TOT data presented in this article contravene this conjecture: the presence of the TOT feeling state has implications for people's choice to seek more information a propensity with deep consequences for our curiosity, for our engagement in learning, and, ultimately, for our understanding.

The GLSEN survey comes on the heels of a new University of Michigan study, which found that the phrase "that's so gay" could have deep consequences for LGBT youth.

In this context, the paradoxical existence of fruits with apparent adaptations for the dispersal by some groups of animals, in areas where these animals are now extinct, is an interesting topic with deep consequences for evolution, ecology and conservation of plant diversity.

Moreover, our understanding of northern refugial biodiversity has deep consequences for conservation.

Whatever the cause, floral integration may have deep consequences for floral trait evolution, such as the floral traits involved in the accurate placement of pollen grains on pollinators or stigmas (Armbruster, 1991; Pérez-Barrales et al., 2007; Pérez et al., 2007; Bissell and Diggle, 2010; Ferrero et al., 2011; Rosas-Guerrero et al., 2011).

Nor is the reader informed of that action's deeper consequence for the boy's life, or the life of his family.

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