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Meanings of scientific language in English
We have no meanings for "scientific language" in our records yet.
Usage of scientific language in English
1
Or, to put it into modern scientificlanguage, environment corresponds to character.
2
In scientificlanguage they are called carbon or charcoal, oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen.
3
We have not, in short, the scientificlanguage here yet.
4
In scientificlanguage, the eccentricity of, the earth's orbit is said to increase and decrease.
5
Each consists, in scientificlanguage, of one cell.
6
This climax is called an "orgasm" in scientificlanguage.
7
For that is the height of the scientific affirmation also; the other was, in scientificlanguage, its 'anticipation.'
8
Put off by scientificlanguage and drawn to poetry and philosophy, however, he ended up reading English at Oxford.
9
Perhaps Asgard, translated from mythic into scientificlanguage, means the Zodiacal Light, and the Bridge Bifröst, the Milky Way.
10
Fundamentally the word cause is used in scientificlanguage in the same sense as in the language of common life.
11
The "declination," as it is termed in scientificlanguage, varies from one region of the earth to another.
12
All terms used in business, however general or abstract, have that well-defined meaning which is the first requisite of the scientificlanguage.
13
This word of a scientificlanguage used in conversation with a simple hospital attendant surprises me, I admit, and I merely reply:
14
They take the intellectual strengths of scientificlanguage -its precision, its carefulness -and wield them as weapons against science itself.
15
It is fashionable now to deny original sin, and equally fashionable to affirm 'heredity,' which is the same thing, put into scientificlanguage.
16
In fact Faraday had notions regarding the magnetization of light which were peculiar to himself, and untranslatable into the scientificlanguage of the time.