Dictionary
the ruptures
noun
A burst, split, or break.
Exact(60)
And you see the ruptures throughout the work".
In the insular elite of Honduran politics, the ruptures are evident, perhaps inevitable.
But the ruptures run deeper than a clash between city and countryside, she said.
The ruptures are the startling uses of words as nonsignifiers, as pure sound.
But a quarter of the ruptures occur before the 26th week, when over half the fetuses die.
Historical progressions from old to new are re-established; the ruptures are repaired in music like this.
But researchers have learned that such heart attacks are caused by the sudden rupturing of plaque, and the tests cannot predict the ruptures, Dr. Frame said.
Without reviewing medical records to confirm the occurrence of the ruptures, it is impossible to know whether the study's conclusions are accurate, overstated or understated.
She refers to the "high trapeze at the commencement of love," and the attendant "surprise meetings, canceled meetings, devouring jealousies, the rapture and the ruptures of an affair".
In South Asian countries, Hindus, Christians and members of other religious communities all seek solace at them and are an example of the enduring conviviality of people of different religions, despite the ruptures between them in recent decades.
When a century changes, there is a power struggle between what we know and what we can imagine, or just the habit of the familiar versus the ruptures of what hasn't been fully or even partly tried.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com