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A string "bridge" or "run" is an attachment of horn or wood, used to hold the string a little further apart from the bow's limbs at the base of the siyahs, as well as allowing the siyah to rest at an angle forward of the string.
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String bridges are not present in artwork in the time of Genghis Khan or before.
Large string bridges are characteristic of Manchu (Qing dynasty, 1644 1911) bows and late Mongolian bows, while small string bridges are characteristic of Korean, Crimean Tatar, and some Ming dynasty (1368 1644) bows.
A BLAST search of expressed sequence tags with a sequence string bridging the stronger cr3′ss+126 identified at least 13 transcripts in cDNA libraries from insulinoma (n = 11) and isolated pancreatic islets (n = 2) (J.K. and I.V., unpublished data).
Hardly anything remains of the Google logo itself, abstracted into several guitar strings, bridges, a pick up and a recording button - but brush your cursor over the strings and they strum.
Fig. 7 offers a not to scale depiction of the proteoglycan structure, illustrating the complexity of the super-coiled spring-like protein core and interaction of the tape-like co-aggregates of antiparallel glycosaminoglycan strings bridging adjacent collagen fibrils.
Like a guitar string, a bridge can vibrate in distinct patterns of motion, or modes, each of which has its own distinct frequency.
You must stretch strings after changing strings or adjusting bridge; stretch string until pitch no longer declines.
Know the terminology applied to parts of the violin directly related to the strings: The bridge is a wooden piece that holds up the strings and carry the vibration of the strings to the body.
In his workshop a string held bridges lined up by size.
By way of contrast, and less than a couple of hours away, is the Atlantic Ocean Road, which includes a dramatic string of bridges leapfrogging across the Hustadvika islands.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com