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the instabilities
noun
The quality of being unstable.
Exact(60)
They accurately reflect the instabilities of urban life today.
All the farms in Gaza are vulnerable to the instabilities resulting from Hamas rule.
There was no objective truth, only the truth-effects engendered by the workings of power and the instabilities of language.
Physicists have developed an entire nomenclature for the instabilities: sawteeth, drift, tearing, sausage, interchange, counter-streaming, helical kink, bump-in-tail.
As she argues: "My disaffection for genes arises in part from the instabilities or illogic I perceive in the characterisation of genes as facts.
But the novel wants to disturb any sense of what might constitute "a consensus view of reality," the better to depict the instabilities of a perforated mind.
Of course, the same becomes true of their English: the more they try to speak German, the more they notice the instabilities in their native language.
Nevertheless Europe – and the world as a whole – faces a genuine upsurge of illegal migration across and around the Mediterranean caused by the instabilities and dangers in countries stretching from Syria to Mali, and from Libya to Eritrea.
The clue is in the name: the primary aim of a public service is to provide a service to the public – to protect crucial social utilities from the instabilities of capitalism and to avoid negative social impacts.
Both the instabilities were observed to be constant velocity waves.
Both types of the instabilities are high-frequency instabilities but carry growth rates of different magnitudes.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com