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The multifarious uses to which flora is put is a revelation - from clothing and household utensils to medicine.
The auditorium is being used as a lecture hall: McGarvey remembers it as "a dusty old storage space and exam hall with a mixture of multifarious uses".
The Himalayan Sea buckthorn, Hippophae rhamnoides (Elaeagnaceae) has multifarious uses and employs diverse pathways to reproduce.
Here, we compare the advantages and limitations of the mouse, ferret and guinea pig models for research with influenza A viruses, emphasizing the multifarious uses of the ferret in the assessment of influenza viruses with pandemic potential.
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If no writers match Shakespeare for making prismatic and multifarious use of plays-within-plays, a few come close.
And while the few props and sticks of furniture are put to wonderfully multifarious use (that multipaneled trunk really is pretty fabulous), there's none of the aren't-we-clever, self-congratulatory spirit that often accompanies such acts of theatrical legerdemain.
And while the few props and sticks of furniture are put to wonderfully multifarious use (that multi-paneled trunk really is pretty fabulous), there's none of the aren't-we-clever, self-congratulatory spirit that often accompanies such acts of theatrical legerdemain.
However, along with the coastal natural change, population growth and destruction of war, the demand of multifarious land uses increases rapidly.
Still more provocative is his Spinozist conclusion, that the mind's primary focus is the body: "The mind exists for the body, is engaged in telling the story of the body's multifarious events, and uses that story to optimize the life of the organism".
Using multifarious statistical approaches and accounting for sex differences we identified several transcripts differentially expressed between the Danish and French progenies, for which additive genetic basis is suspected (showing intermediate expression levels in hybrids, and therefore additivity).
Three women who have used the camera to reinvent themselves in multifarious guises share this show, based on a recently discovered cache of photographs by Cahun (1896-1954), a French-born writer and actress whose work was rarely shown in her lifetime.
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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