RARE-sequences help to shorten investigation time, particularly in cases involving the skeleton.
2
A higher spiking concentration made it possible to shorten the detection time.
3
Unusually dry winters and higher water consumption could shorten this deadline considerably.
4
Hospitals are encouraged to take every effort to shorten delay of treatment.
5
I see something is doing in England to shorten the apprenticeship system.
1
If introduced, the ban would effectively castrate the powerful devices there.
2
The effect was to castrate both Shevardnadze and his plans for the pipeline.
3
She's got to throttle back, or she'll castrate everything in the domestic niche.
4
Provisional Clinical Opinion For men with CRPC, a castrate state should be maintained indefinitely.
5
It's probably because I know how to castrate farm animals.
1
I'll have to expurgate it or you'd have a rush of blood to the head, you're so excitable.
2
Why must Northern publishers expurgate and emasculate the literature of the world before it is permitted to reach them?
3
In a few months' time those in authority in the French school found that it was not necessary to supervise and expurgate her.
4
More often, the versions I found were outdated, expurgated, or badly translated.
5
The plays of Shakespeare are expurgated only where necessary for school use.
1
She should not be allowed to disguise and bowdlerize it to suit the unwelcome tastes she had acquired at school.
2
I cannot, unfortunately, bowdlerize the best of these without spoiling them, so I will endeavor to give a few examples of the less forceful.
3
To tell this bowdlerized story of her brother was to elevate herself.
4
Not being an adept liar, she continued with a bowdlerized version of the facts.
5
He'd already spoken to his editor and told him a slightly bowdlerized version of the latest developments.
Uso de bowdlerise em inglês
1
In addition to "bowdlerise," there is "sandwich."
2
Last summer, Stephen Sondheim was reported as suggesting that Walt Disney was set to bowdlerise his immaculate deconstruction of fairytale mythos.
3
It might have been bowdlerised MacMillan but it had seismic force.
4
It then had to be substantially bowdlerised to secure the chance of release in Russia.
5
Roth's fiction has previously been mangled and bowdlerised into such unlovely movies as The Human Stain.
6
Traditional music has had more than its fair share of doors opened and boundaries bowdlerised in recent years.
7
In the fashion of the time, Garrick repeatedly bowdlerised the Bard, cutting and adding whole characters and scenes.
8
Victorian versions often edited it to clarify one way or the other (and sometimes bowdlerised it, too).
9
Of course it's Bowdlerised as to words, but she manages to get back all that's been taken out in her acting.
10
Lamb and his Mary took the often-dark complexity of Shakespeare's stage plots and simplified them for younger readers, paraphrasing and bowdlerising where necessary.
11
Your correspondent complained that the "colourful" New York vernacular in Saturday Night Fever, which was audible on the screen, had been bowdlerised in the subtitles.
12
If I may be permitted a rather lengthy digression, "bowdlerised" derives its name from Thomas Bowdler, who in 1818 published an expurgated edition of Shakespeare.