Dictionary
is pressures
noun
A pressing; a force applied to a surface.
Exact(5)
The reasons why casualisation has taken hold are complex, White says, but he says one of the main drivers is pressures to keep staff costs down in a climate where government is exerting ever greater pressure to save money.
Another example of this reasoning is: "Pressures are anything in the environment that could potentially threaten the survival of an organism, such as predators or natural disasters, but can also be anything ranging from the habitat to types of nutrition in the environment".
Although overpressure is common in the deeper parts of many hydrocarbon-bearing basins, there are mechanisms that can result in underpressure, that is, pressures below hydrostatic that would induce downward rather than upward flow.
In these extracts, men/boys were depicted as having the influence or power to 'persuade' women/girls to act in ways that might be risky, and teenage girls were frequently portrayed as being pressured to become involved in sexual relationships at an early age: "…there is pressures on girls to get into sexual relationships way too early" (The Observer, 29th Aug 2010).
Similar evolutionary pressures and constraints in two lineages can either be 1) "general" (or ancestral), that is, applying to most or all lineages within a group or 2) "recurrent," that is, pressures that themselves arose independently in only a subset of lineages.
Similar(54)
"There is pressure.
There is pressure, of course.
There is pressure to succeed".
Such is pressure.
What is pressure?
The key, he said, is pressuring Assad.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com