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to extracting
verb
To draw out or forth; to pull out; to remove forcibly from a fixed position, as by traction or suction, etc.
Exact(60)
This phosphate wash was repeated twice prior to extracting the DNA using the MoBio Soil DNA extraction kit.
A victory for Harrington might bring a new level of legitimacy to extracting truth mechanically.
It was one of his many approaches to extracting useful, fascinating information from the most minute details.
We can, says Wilkens, "look for potentially interesting features without committing months and years to extracting them via close reading".
As our numbed eyes witness every night on the news, stuff happens, particularly when it comes to extracting hydrocarbons.
Beginning in 2016, Greece will be committed to extracting a budgetary surplus (excluding interest payments) from a shrinking economy.
Down the years he has met President Pervez Musharraf, Benazir Bhutto, Nawaz Sharif and numerous backroom power brokers – usually with a view to extracting money for his schools.
It prevents countries from having education, healthcare and a government-paid police force that doesn't resort to extracting bribes on the roadside.
But while daunting fuel costs and overpriced villas surprise no one, Hawaii can be ruthlessly surreptitious when it comes to extracting every last dollar from tourists.
Officially, the British government insists it is dedicated to extracting the father of four, a position it has publicly adopted for the past six years.
But to Texas oilmen, carbon dioxide is a useful — and scarce — commodity that is vital to extracting hard-to-reach oil reserves.
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