We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
However, water extract did not show any H 2 R blocking effect.
2
The main chemical components found linked to the plant extract were triterpenes.
3
He claims water torture was used to extract a confession from him.
4
They can extract information to corroborate evidence and to find certain people.
5
Reports were coming in of houses being broken into to extract justice.
1
Second, vaccination would likely elicit herd immunity, which would benefit all ages.
2
Despite some advantages over traditional methods, Web-based studies elicit concerns about generalizability.
3
It's easy to suspect that Grubman offers this information to elicit sympathy.
4
Neither age nor HF-C diet alone is sufficient to elicit these changes.
5
Conclusions: Both vaccines elicit cross-reactive antibodies detectable even twelve years after vaccination.
1
They also can evoke strong feelings that create challenges for a candidate.
2
Downstairs, the heirloom sideboard and sculptural lamp evoke her parents' 1960s house.
3
The photographs must be high-quality, original and evoke a sense of place.
4
However, the molecular pathways that evoke these responses are not well understood.
5
Davey continued to evoke certain excesses committed during her period of radioactivity.
1
They could drawout whatever reinforcements were available on a minute-by-minute basis.
2
Her shaking fingers could hardly drawout the watch in her belt.
3
I let it drawout on purpose, to force him to speak.
4
Of course the shooting of last night would drawout the natives.
5
That is the only comfort we can drawout of the affair.
Usage of educe in English
1
And if we educe only well-remembered incidents, no offence will be taken.
2
The aim in education is not to abolish selfishness; it is to educe the selfishness that is altruistic.
3
She was content to let the divine light of philosophy penetrate by its own power, and educe its own conclusions.
4
To preserve and educe all we possibly can obtain from their situation, and purpose, is a main duty to history.
5
We do not have to draw out or educe positive activities from a child, as some educational doctrines would have it.
6
Zelter wrote to Goethe on anything and everything, trivial and otherwise, but his letters never failed to educe strains of the most illuminating comment.
7
Education must educe, being from 'educare,' which is but another form of 'educere'; and that is to draw out, and not to put in.
8
A few suggestive questions, however, will educe a mass of delusions, which when pieced together demonstrate the logical unconscious ideas that give rise to them.
9
The same questions from the "Malleus Maleficarum," were put to them all, and torture never failed to educe the answer required by the inquisitor.
10
The conflict between this "struggle-theory" and ethics has been freely acknowledged by Professor Huxley and others; every attempt to educe unselfishness from selfishness has failed.
11
Therefore the soul is educed from the potentiality of matter.
12
I recalled what I could of how I had been educed, at age twelve.
13
Out of a frightful anarchy, he educed at least a rude and imperfect order.
14
And at length a system of justice and order is educed out of the chaos.
15
The task of educing him was given to a promising young sculptor who lived here.
16
A large amount of medical testimony could be quoted in corroboration, but enough has been educed.