What's the difference between acker and tacker?

Acker


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Mills and Ackers (Mills, F.C., and Ackers, G.K. (1979) J. Biol.
  • (2) The Obscure Figure Test has been conceptualized by Acker and McReynolds (1965) as a measure of Cognitive Innovation.
  • (3) The assumption that the distribution of pore sizes is Gaussian has led to the prediction of a linear relationship between the molecular Stokes radius (RS) of the protein and the function erf-1 (1-KD), where KD is the partition coefficient [Ackers (1967) J. Biol.
  • (4) These are the quantitative DNase footprint titration technique [Brenowitz, M., Senear, D. F., Shea, M. A., & Ackers, G. K. (1986) Methods Enzymol.
  • (5) Today there is an increasing use of cardiac pacemakers in younger people and the first reported obstetric experience with a cardiac pacemaker implanted before pregnancy was by Shouse and Acker.
  • (6) An experimental approach based on four independent techniques, in which kinetic and equilibrium measurements of subunit assembly reactions are combined with concentration-dependent oxygen-binding curves, has previously been used to resolve parameters of the linkage system for human hemoglobin over a wide range of conditions [(G.K. Ackers and H.R.
  • (7) Data on CO saturations and distributions of intermediates were analysed in terms of the free energies of dimer-tetramer assembly of the intermediates (G.K. Ackers and F.R.
  • (8) These kinetic results together with the equilibrium constants obtained for these solution conditions by Ackers and coworkers provides, for the first time, a complete kinetic and thermodynamic description of all the intrinsic ligand binding and association reactions for alpha-subunits.
  • (9) Then there's Ballard's Crash and Kathy Acker's full-on catharsis; or, for a gentler modernity, Tibor Fischer.
  • (10) For partially ligated cyanomet hemoglobins, Smith and Ackers (Proc.
  • (11) This has led to a "molecular code" which translates configurations of the 10 ligation states into switch points of quaternary transition according to a "symmetry rule"; T-->R quaternary structure change is governed by the presence of at least one heme-site ligand on each of the alpha beta dimeric half-molecules within the tetramer [see Ackers et al.
  • (12) 4.00am BST Jason Acker (@jason_acker) Holy sh*t this game is bananas #LGR June 8, 2014 3.59am BST Rangers 4-4 Kings, 1:30, first overtime LA have their chances as well - Gaborik shoots and hits the glass!
  • (13) There have been five reported cases of unilateral renal agenesis with oligomeganephronia in a solitary kidney [Van Acker et al.
  • (14) A previous paper (Mills, F.C., Johnson, M.L., and Ackers, G.K. (1976), Biochemestry, 15, the preceding paper in this issue) describes the experimental implementation of this strategy.
  • (15) The redox process in the presence of cyanide, represented as a Hill plot, is simulated from Smith and Ackers' cooperative free-energies and is compared with available electrochemical binding measurements.
  • (16) Contrary to the findings of Ackers (1964), the equilibrium dilution and chromatographic methods gave closely agreeing values for the distribution coefficient, K(av.
  • (17) Using hemoglobins where the ligated subunits contain cyanomethemoglobin, Smith and Ackers studied the dimer-tetramer assembly reactions in all nine of the partially ligated species (F. R. Smith and G. K. Ackers, Proc.
  • (18) In lieu of a picture of Osvaldo bounding around in his billycock, here's some great bowler hats of our time: Charlie Chaplin ... Oscar Wilde ... Mr Acker Bilk, and ... Stan Laurel and Liverpool managing director Ian Ayre.
  • (19) Take your pick from Michelle Williams, Keri Russell, Jessica Chastain, Amy Acker, Kirsten Stewart, Jennifer Lawrence, Emma Stone, Reese Witherspoon, Elisabeth Moss, Dakota Fanning, Shailene Woodley, Rosario Dawson, Scarlett Johansson, Anne Hathaway, to Zoe Saldana.
  • (20) This confirms the suggestion of Acker and Lübbers (1976) that increased plasma flow through the carotid body does not influence the oxygen supply to this organ, despite variations of both oxygen transport capacity and haemoglobin concentration.

Tacker


Definition:

  • (n.) One who tacks.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A technique that afforded relief of prolapse and of incontinence by laparoscopic rectal sacropexy, performed without sutures, using a newly designed laparoscopic sacral tacker and laparoscopic staples, is described.
  • (2) Using the cardiac arrest and resuscitation model of de Garavilla, Babbs, and Tacker with an arrest time of eight minutes, 76% of the animals arrested were resuscitated with an average intermittent abdominal compression-CPR time of 3.3 minutes.