Sentence examples for latches from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

latches

noun

Plural of latch

  • The guard made sure all the latches were secure.

synonyms

Exact(60)

Facebook Twitter Google plus Share Share this post Facebook Twitter Google plus close 9.20pm BST21:20 18 min: Wow! Making a run from midfield, Fauzi Ghoulam turns on the afterburners and leaves Mesut Ozil in his dust as he gallops up the inside-left and latches on to a pass from Soudani.

This time the approach is to simply blockade all known cell receptors that the virus latches onto.

Stephen, our 'customer host', showed us to our doll's-house-perfect cabin: from the little latches holding the sink lid upright, to the washbag, with its one-squeeze tube of Colgate and a diddy comb that could be used to groom a hamster.

Unfortunately, it also latches onto strains of HIV, assisting their passage into the lymphocyte, where the virus then reproduces.In this section Who pressed the pause button?

One who sees compatibility between long-term profit...and kindness... ......When I say I've got a cool idea, the CFO latches on and helps me work it through".

It is composed of trastuzumab, an antibody also known under the trade name Herceptin, combined with a cancer-killing substance called DM1.  Trastuzumab latches onto an antigen called HER2 that is abundant in about 20% of breast cancers.

First, he latches on to the lower graphed line (or rather his version of it), the 50-10 income differential, and says this came down in the 1990s.

"We were in the valley of death in April of 2009," says John Winzeler, president of Winzeler Gear, whose small plastic gears go into door latches, lumbar supports and countless car parts.

Dr Blobel hypothesised, and then proved, that each of these location-specific proteins is created with a tag that tells it where to go or, rather, latches on to the place it is supposed to be in when it gets there.The tag is a particular sequence of the amino-acid units of which all proteins are composed.

It latches on to new ideas.

In the 17th and 18th centuries ironwork was used mostly for such practical purposes as weather vanes, foot scrapers, strap hinges, latches, locks, and particularly for the necessities and conveniences for fireplaces (firedogs, cranes, skewers, toasters, kettle warmers, and spits).

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