The policy followed at this period consisted in assimilating Algeria to France.
2
Capacity for assimilating the public taste and reproducing it, is the commonest.
3
Returning to District 8 or assimilating into another district would be impossible.
4
The product of ability only partially described by assimilating it to rent.
5
Middlemarch, in fact, counted on swallowing Lydgate and assimilating him very comfortably.
1
Siderophore-bound iron is subsequently utilized via the reductive iron assimilatory system or uptake of the siderophore-iron complex.
2
Consistent with a role in the regulation of nitrogen metabolism, overexpression of nreB leads to repression of nitrate assimilatory genes.
3
Salt stress resulted in a more significant decrease in CO2 assimilatory capacity in the vtc-1 mutant than in the WT.
4
Plant SO (PSO) also plays an important role in sulfite detoxification and in addition serves as an intermediate enzyme in the assimilatory reduction of sulfate.
Ús de assimilative en anglès
1
What the one lacks in nutritive or assimilative qualities the other supplies.
2
Or Mr. Waldner's assimilative opinion that he had seen only ice crystals.
3
But as she lagged the assimilative German streamed in through her hospitable door.
4
The digestive and assimilative powers of the old world seemed gone.
5
There was associative apperception, subsumptive apperception, assimilative apperception, and others up to sixteen.
6
They were conscious of the assimilative power their nationality possessed.
7
Treatment may also be given for lack of assimilative power.
8
The stomach, with its fierce assimilative power, is a great stimulator of commercial activity.
9
We show that the mean observed rating exerted a strong assimilative effect on subjective pain.
10
Then his receptivity and assimilative powers are enormous, and he demands these in his reader.
11
Thirty-five languages are spoken in this city, but the assimilative power of English absorbs them all.
12
Many of these are, in all probability, excretory products of no assimilative value to the plant.
13
Milk is given in fevers and in other diseases, when the digestive and assimilative processes are suspended.
14
Scotland taxed for centuries the assimilative capacity of united England; it was too much for Northumbria to digest.
15
He may therefore quite fail to secure from his beliefs that which they produce in more assimilative natures.
16
But it is, as I have said, a chief glory of Christianity that it possesses this assimilative power.