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were bridging
noun
A construction or natural feature that spans a divide. The upper bony ridge of the human nose. A prosthesis replacing one or several adjacent teeth. The gap between the holes on a bowling ball
Exact(8)
Negotiators met in their off-the-record mode yesterday, then offered no indication they were bridging any of their huge gaps in the two key economic issues.
In fact, the crystal structure for the butyrate (Fig. 9) showed Nd1 ions surrounded by two water molecules and five COO groups, four of which were bridging tridentate and the other bridging bidentate [59].
I might not understand what exactly they were saying, but I saw the ease with which they flowed between languages, the ways they were bridging their country's cultures.
They were bridging musical divides, but still aiming it at the dance floor," Tim Whelan, of experimentalists Transglobal Underground, long-time associates and performers at Whirl-y-Gig, tells me.
If any of these contigs aligned in such a way that they were bridging any two of the de novo scaffolds, those scaffolds were linked up (Figure S2A).
If another protein were bridging telomerase and TPP1, any combination of two defective mutations should be even more defective.
Similar(51)
Three patients were bridged to LVAD and two to heart transplant; eight were bridged to recovery.
In this method, cytogenetics and molecular genetics were bridged.
As ligand, two [1,4,7]triazacyclononane rings were bridged by a phenol.
"I was bridging worlds.
The problem is bridging the gap".
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