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Перевод: coalescence speek coalescence


[существительное]
соединение; сращение; объединение; сращивание; смесь


Тезаурус:

  1. There is, however, every reason to believe that the insect head arose by the coalescence of a number of body segments and a non-segmental anteriorly-placed acron homologous with the Annelid prostomium.
  2. The north Korean army originated in a coalescence of Kim's guerrilla supporters and the Yenan Koreans; it was only lightly armed prior to the departure of Soviet forces in 1948.
  3. In 1983, The Illusionist , a novel by Anita Mason, offered a controversial but historically valid perspective on the coalescence of the early Church; it was short-listed for the Booker Prize, Britain's most prestigious literary award.
  4. In the coalescence of Christian tradition, this is one principle that has remained constant.
  5. While most obviously a reaction to the coalescence of the right, it was also a reaction against the establishment in north Korea on 14 February of the Interim People's Committee under the leadership of Kim Il Sung.
  6. The danger of internal dispute was recognised and the KPR strove to achieve coalescence of all elements whether right or left, that had been opposed to the Japanese.
  7. Mithraism exerted a particularly powerful influence on the coalescence of Christian tradition.
  8. Paul Thompson (1967) sees the triumph of Labour as a constructive coalescence of the mature proletarian class consciousness which emerged with the displacement of small-scale production and an effective LLP, while Julia Bush (1978), concentrating on the experience of East London, argues that during the first world war socialist activity and the growing confidence and strength of the trades unions enabled the LLP to establish a solid base which it exploited to the full when hostilities ceased.
  9. In many insects the number of veins is less than in the hypothetical type, and the reduction has been brought about by the degeneration or complete atrophy of a vein, or of one or more of its branches, or by the coalescence of adjacent veins.
  10. Both the sun and the air as wind were essential to human life and in Amun-Re came together as a coalescence of creative elements.
  11. Since the lifetime of a large black hole must be measured in untold billions of years, it seems inevitable that the end of the Universe can be nothing else than the coalescence of everything into a single black hole.
  12. As Richard Flathman disapprovingly remarked, "There has been a remarkable coalescence of opinion around the proposition that authority and authority relations involve some species of "surrender of judgment" on the part of those who accept submit or subscribe to the authority of persons or a set of rules and offices.
  13. Coalescence takes place in two ways.

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