What's the difference between await and carline?

Await


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To watch for; to look out for.
  • (v. t.) To wait on, serve, or attend.
  • (v. t.) To wait for; to stay for; to expect. See Expect.
  • (v. t.) To be in store for; to be ready or in waiting for; as, a glorious reward awaits the good.
  • (v. i.) To watch.
  • (v. i.) To wait (on or upon).
  • (v. i.) To wait; to stay in waiting.
  • (n.) A waiting for; ambush; watch; watching; heed.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A clearer understanding of these relationships and their application to clinical management await further study.
  • (2) Seven children have been hospitalised for a week and more than 700 people are awaiting medical test results.
  • (3) The incidence of recurrent haemorrhage during the period awaiting surgery was 13.7%.
  • (4) To this day, 10 patients (31%) are alive with a functioning kidney transplant, 16 (50%) are still treated by CPD awaiting a transplant, 5 have died (16%) and one went back to hemodialysis (3%).
  • (5) But sanctions and mismanagement took their toll, and the scale of the long-awaited economic catharsis won’t be grand,” he says.
  • (6) Diego Garcia guards its secrets even as the truth on CIA torture emerges Read more The long-awaited decision – expected to cause enormous disappointment – follows more than 40 years of campaigning, court cases and calls for the UK to right a wrong committed by Harold Wilson’s Labour government.
  • (7) Sheryl Sandberg gave the commencement speech at UC Berkeley last weekend, during the course of which she said many stirring things about the future awaiting the class of 2016.
  • (8) These case histories, and very substantial background proof of efficacy and safety, justify treating with CoQ10 patients in failure awaiting transplantation.
  • (9) The method concerns identifying donor-recipient tissue compatibility by use of the two-way mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR), in which reacting cells from patients awaiting transplants are primed with phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) and stored.
  • (10) Genital irritation caused urinary symptoms with no clinical evidence of infection, and it is advised that antibiotic treatment should await urine culture.
  • (11) While awaiting renal transplantation, patients with end-stage renal failure frequently have to spend a period of time on dialysis.
  • (12) The BBC Trust met on Thursday to discuss Thompson's long-awaited DQF cost-cutting proposals .
  • (13) Whether these two effects are causally related awaits future study.
  • (14) It comes as Chilcot continues to avoid setting a final deadline for the publication of his long-awaited report into the war.
  • (15) A t the end of April two chairs in Westminster will await the arrival of Tony Hall , incoming director general of the BBC, and Chris Patten, chairman of the corporation's trust.
  • (16) Pardew apologised for his behaviour on Saturday night and the FA is awaiting the referee's report before deciding on action against the 52-year-old, who has been fined £100,000 by Newcastle and severely reprimanded by the club .
  • (17) But minutes after the final whistle, 76% of respondents to a Corriere della Sport online poll were blaming Lippi and in the post-match press conference the man himself was quick to take the blame, appearing to be anxiously awaiting the moment he can disappear quietly from the scene to be replaced by the Fiorentina manager, Cesare Prandelli, a switch decided with little fuss and no media debate just before the World Cup.
  • (18) These results indicate that at 24 h postmortem the extra fluid released from PSE pork already has been lost from the myofilament lattice and is awaiting release from compartments downstream such as interfiber and interfascicular spaces.
  • (19) In 2019, the long-awaited Crossrail project is due to open, but up until a few weeks ago, seven of the 38 stations on the route were set to remain inaccessible.
  • (20) The Guardian has asked for clarification of the retailer's position and is awaiting a response.

Carline


Definition:

  • (n.) Alt. of Caroline
  • (n.) Alt. of Carling

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Then, in 2006, Carlin, who covered South Africa for the Independent in the 1990s, was in Mississippi to write an article on poverty in the American South for El País, the Spanish daily that now employs him.
  • (2) Expression of a 13.7-kDa protein encoded by a gene in the E3 transcription unit is necessary and sufficient for this effect (Carlin et al., Cell, 1989; B. L. Hoffman, A. Ullrich, W. S. M. Wold, and C. R. Carlin, Mol.
  • (3) Most important, Carlin says, Freeman, abetted by the screenwriter, "impressively conveys the giant solitude of Mandela".
  • (4) Aren’t comedians supposed to be witty and subversive?” he asked, before citing four comedians – Carlin, Pryor, Mayall and Rivers – our generation should learn from.
  • (5) Transmitted in the middle of the afternoon, Carlin recited a list of seven words that he predicted could never be said on television: shit, piss, fuck, cunt, cocksucker, motherfucker and tits.
  • (6) Its writer, British journalist John Carlin, said: "I've had contracts since a year ago, which tells you there's a universality about this story.
  • (7) Even a parricide could buy forgiveness at God's tribunal at one ducat; four livres, eight carlines."
  • (8) Born in Brooklyn in 1933, Rivers worked the New York comedy scene alongside Richard Pryor, Bill Cosby, George Carlin and Woody Allen.
  • (9) 10, 5521-5524; Tollefson, A. E., Krajcsi, P., Yei, S., Carlin, C. R., and Wold, W. S. M. (1990) J. Virol.
  • (10) But I reject this: if you want to do something to help someone in distress, as George Carlin famously riffed, unplug their clogged toilet or paint the garage .
  • (11) Blake and Carlin didn't wait long before scaling up their ambitions.
  • (12) Cinemagoers watching Invictus, based on British journalist John Carlin's book Playing the Enemy, will be inclined to agree.
  • (13) Next week, Carlin – Blake left the partnership after the first two albums – releases Red Hot + Rio 2, a tribute to the Brazilian tropicália movement of the late-60s and a follow-up to 1996's original Red Hot + Rio, which featured Money Mark, PM Dawn, Maxwell and Stereolab, among others.
  • (14) For Carlin Carr, an American working on urban poverty issues there, it’s a city of contradictions, where the stresses exist on a deeper level than just having to sit in traffic.
  • (15) Nearly a full five seconds behind, but nonetheless jubilantly silver, came GB’s Jazz Carlin .
  • (16) 254:8690-8696, 1979; Carlin, Bartelt, and Siekevitz: J.
  • (17) In the same way that [Nelson] Mandela was the symbol of the country in the glorious years of generosity and pragmatism and all those good things, the cataclysmic fall [of Pistorius] was a metaphor for broader disappointed dreams,” John Carlin, who attended the trial and has written a book on the former athlete, told the Guardian last month.
  • (18) The trial was conducted in an intelligent and mature way that was impressive by any world standards,” said Carlin.
  • (19) Carlin's proposal for his book had already been circulating in Hollywood, and it had caught Freeman's eye.
  • (20) In that case, the supreme court rejected Pacifica's claim that its first amendment rights had been violated when it was censured by the FCC for having broadcast the notorious "filthy words" monologue of the comedian George Carlin.

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