Sentence examples similar to described print from inspiring English sources

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We used previously described printed circuit board technology to manufacture eSensor chips with 16 gold electrodes, one reference electrode, and one auxiliary electrode [ 2- 4].

Written as television was emerging as the principal source of information, McLuhan insisted that it had become possible to define and describe print culture because it was coming to an end and was destined to be replaced by the electronic age.

Many forms have not even been described in print.

Before meeting Ms. Shimizu, Ms. Harper was linked to the filmmaker Daniel Leeb, sometimes inaccurately described in print as her husband.

Immediately after Mill's own death his relationship with Harriet was being described in print as "the great blot on his career".

The West Thumb Geyser Basin was the first of Yellowstone's hydrothermal features to be described in print, in a letter published in a Philadelphia newspaper in 1827.

Anthropologist Benedict Anderson has described how print culture created "imagined communities": readers of, say, a specific newspaper felt they had something in common with other readers they had never met.

Daily Mail & General Trust described the print advertising performance within its media division as a "marked deterioration" and warned that the outlook for the group's full-year results was now "towards the lower end of market expectations".

It was described in print as early as 1690, having made its way to Europe either from China (the Cantonese ke-tsiap means, roughly, "eggplant juice") or from Malaysia (where the Malay word kecap referred to fermented fish sauce).

Then the teams pretty much said goodbye to Caribbean blue, with the commercial centres of Kingston, and Port-of-Spain, followed by Georgetown, which despite once being described in print (by a colleague who had never set foot there, or even consulted a map) as a "palm-fringed island", isn't even in the Caribbean at all.

You can turn Scrooge into a network programming executive (Bill Murray in the 1988 "Scrooged") or a beautiful black pop star (Vanessa Williams in this year's "Diva's Christmas Carol" on VH1), and he or she remains at heart the same "squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous, old sinner" Charles Dickens first described in print.

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