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English words and Examples of Usage

use "in-other-words " in a sentence


She became, in other words, a good wife.

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in other words, sex!?

Geez, you don't beat around the bush! In a timebound society time is seen as linear in other words as a straight line extending from the past, through the present, to the future.

Looks, brains, reflexes, rich family and, for good measure, vice president of the student committee in other words he's 'perfect'.

-The ideal visual field would be large and, above all, flat; in other words, objects at the periphery of the field would be as distinctly "in focus" as those in the centre.

During the course of this work attention must also be directed, as occasion arises, to such other bacteria, pathogenic or saprophytic, as are allied to the particular organisms under observation, or so resemble them as to become possible sources of error, by working them through on parallel lines-in other words the various bacteria should be studied in "groups.

When, however, the magnifying power of the glass is considerable, in other words, when its focal length is very short, and its proper distance from its object of consequence equally short, it requires to be placed at that proper distance with great precision: it cannot, therefore, be held with sufficient accuracy and steadiness by the unassisted hand, but must be mounted in a frame having a rack or screw to move it towards or from another frame or stage which holds the object.

The lens L below the reflector is to cause the light from the paper and pencil to diverge from the same distance as that received from the eye-glass; in other words, to cause it to reach the eye in parallel lines.

[184] Therefore another method of examination was adopted; the spores of a certain form were sown, and sooner or later they were looked after to see what the seed had produced-not every single spore-but the seed en masse, that is, in other words, what had grown on that place where the seed had been sown.

The conviction that a better knowledge of the principles of breeding would render our system of agriculture more profitable, and the hope of contributing somewhat to this end, have induced the attempt to set forth some of the physiological principles involved in the reproduction of domestic animals, or in other words, the laws which govern hereditary transmission.

Henry Berry of Worcestershire, in which, after stating that the question proposed is one full of difficulty and that the discovery of an independent quality such as that alluded to, in either sex, would be attended with beneficial results, he proceeds to show, that it is not to sex, but to high blood, or in other words, to animals long and successfully selected, and bred with a view to particular qualifications, whether in the male or female parent, that the quality is to be ascribed, which the Highland Society has been desirous to assign correctly.

From the hereditary nature of all characteristics, whether good or bad, we learn the importance of having all desirable qualities and properties thoroughly inbred; or, in other words, so firmly fixed in each generation, that the next is warrantably certain to present nothing worse,-that no ill results follow from breeding back towards some inferior ancestor,-that all undesirable traits or points be, so far as possible, bred out.

They will endeavor at once to procure well bred animals, or in other words, such as already possess the desired qualities so thoroughly inwrought into their organization that they can rely with a good degree of confidence on their imparting them to their progeny.

But, as we move away from the equator, we find that each higher latitude is less fully presented to the Sun, until, when we reach latitude 64½°-in other words just outside the Arctic Circle-7 square yards are presented to the Sun so as to receive only as much of the solar radiation as 3 square yards receive at the equator.

The range in its light and heat from the Sun is from 3 times that of the Earth to less than 1/1200th; or, in other words, the supply of heat at one time is nearly 4000 times that at another, and of the 76 years of its period, only 80 days are spent within the orbit of the Earth.

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