What's the difference between clique and isomorphic?

Clique


Definition:

  • (v. i.) A narrow circle of persons associated by common interests or for the accomplishment of a common purpose; -- generally used in a bad sense.
  • (v. i.) To To associate together in a clannish way; to act with others secretly to gain a desired end; to plot; -- used with together.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Each movie group – Gone Girl, The Imitation Game, Selma, etc – sits defensively together, sort of like high-school cliques in the canteen of an 80s teen movie, and those proud, defiant smiles they managed to maintain for TV have long since wobbled away a bit.
  • (2) They just wanted the machine that would give them power as a clique.
  • (3) There were still quite a few Marxists at Oxford in those days – Terry Eagleton and his clique were seemingly bolted to the same table in the King’s Arms the entire time I  was an undergraduate – but while I was silly and naive enough to believe in the purifying, energising effects of violent revolution, I wasn’t obtuse enough to think of dialectical materialism as anything more than a powerful heuristic.
  • (4) Many street disputes are not gang or even clique related, but the climate of violence created by the gangs, with their ready access to arms, means that a Hobbesian, kill-or-be-killed mentality can afflict even the most minor altercations.
  • (5) However, the Socialist party – the successor to Militant Tendency – described the claims as “wholly inaccurate” and said they “reflect the terror of the rightwing clique that dominates the Labour party at the wave of enthusiasm Jeremy Corbyn’s campaign is generating”.
  • (6) We will build a union where members’ interests are always put first – not subordinated to the political machinations of a clique.
  • (7) Whether Podemos can balance the demands of its grassroots activists, who expect to shape policy, with the powerful influence of Iglesias and his clique of Complutense academics, remains one of the most challenging questions for the party’s future.
  • (8) There is a value that unites that vast majority of British people away from the small metropolitan clique, and that value is patriotism,” Nuttall has said.
  • (9) "For the sake of national unity and the development of stability in Tibetan regions, we must take a clear-cut stand and deepen the struggle against the Dalai clique."
  • (10) They won the European Championship with something to spare and, importantly, they appear to be free of the cliques and divisions that can exist when bringing together players from different clubs, and particularly when those clubs are bonded by mutual contempt in the manner of Barcelona and Real Madrid.
  • (11) And if you judge it by how it treated those who told it the truth, the BBC remains a dangerous organisation, run by a managerial clique that puts its own interest before honest reporting or, indeed, the best interests of the BBC.
  • (12) "It is not the king who is to blame," Hamza Mansour, the secretary-general of the Islamic Action Front (the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood), recently told Le Monde, "but the clique surrounding him."
  • (13) It quoted a Tibetan expert who said the "Dalai Lama clique" had "instigated and enticed" the men to self-immolate.
  • (14) Browder says his problem isn’t with Russia as such but with the powerful clique of ex-KGB spies who have grabbed the state.
  • (15) We strongly believe that the holders of Ukraine’s government debt must rethink the conditions for dealing with this country and realise that rather than helping, debt relief may mean a full amnesty for a corrupt clique who has brought the nation to its knees.
  • (16) In July, Russian banks allied to Putin's clique were sealed off from issuing bonds on Wall Street, only to issue them the next week in Frankfurt.
  • (17) Noland said: “It appears to be developing into a corrupt, opaque extraction-based economy common in central Asia or sub-Saharan Africa, which generates benefits for a small ruling clique and key regime constituencies, but does not deliver prosperity for the bulk of the population.” Beneath a tiny elite at the top, benefits are spread unequally, said Smith.
  • (18) In his first five minutes he name-checked Picasso, quoted a poem by the Russian dissident Osip Mandelstam – not, he hoped, any relation of Lord Mandelson – and raved about both the play Jerusalem, and the anarchic cabaret La Clique, a show he saw at the Roundhouse.
  • (19) Given this, isn't there some truth in the accusation that Falkirk was a case of one tightly connected clique facing off against another?
  • (20) It is actually quite difficult for a woman to get in as part of an Old Etonian clique.

Isomorphic


Definition:

  • (a.) Isomorphous.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The experimental results for protein preparations of calmodulin in which Ca2+ was isomorphically replaced by Tb3+ were obtained by a spectrometer working at the Institute of Nuclear Physics.
  • (2) The structure is isomorphous to native FdI except at the site of mutation where A24 moves toward the [4Fe-4S] cluster.
  • (3) We have found a good correlation between dysmorphic erythrocyturia and glomerular diseases and between isomorphic erythrocyturia and nonglomerular changes.
  • (4) The mutant proteins were screened for their ability to crystallize into the orthorhombic form and bind mercury ions isomorphously.
  • (5) The structure was determined by X-ray diffraction using the isomorphous replacement technique.
  • (6) By using this method, slowly and rapidly adapting primary afferents were shown to transmit isomorphic neural images of the letters.
  • (7) All the crystals of these myoglobins are isomorphous with that of native metmyoglobin.
  • (8) The structure was refined crystallographically, by restrained least-squares methods, starting with a model based on the isomorphous diferric structure from which the ligands, metal ions, anions, and solvent molecules had been deleted.
  • (9) Fluoroaluminates or fluoroberyllates are isomorphous to Pi, and the inhibitory nucleotide-fluorometal complexes mimicked transient intermediates of nucleotides that appeared in the course of ATP hydrolysis.
  • (10) The space group is P212121 with unit cell dimensions a = 49.40 A, b = 46.71 A, c = 41.02 A for the complex with 2'AMP and a = 48.97, b = 46.58 A, c = 40.97 A for the complex with 2'UMP, both of which are poorly isomorphous to the mother crystals.
  • (11) Three heavy atom isomorphous derivatives were used for the X-ray analysis of the holo form of NAD-dependent bacterial formate dehydrogenase (ternary complex enzyme-NAD-azide) at 3.0 A resolution.
  • (12) The LD isomorphic pattern was found in 60% of AMI patients complicated by cardiogenic shock.
  • (13) We found the isomorphic phenomenon, that is, lesions appearing at sites of skin trauma, in 19 of the 22 study subjects; photodistribution of skin lesions in 15 of the 22, grouping of the lesions over the elbow and knees in 7 of the 22, and nailfold involvement in 7 of the 22.
  • (14) An equally powerful computer program for testing isomorphism of graphs based on the adjacency matrix power method is introduced.
  • (15) This facial wiping response is isomorphic with that of older pups and adult rats exposed to aversive oral stimulation.
  • (16) These isomorphous phospholipid mixtures exhibit nearly ideal mixing behavior.
  • (17) Light microscope examination found clusters of isomorphic cells separated by a dense fibrillar matrix.
  • (18) An interpretable electron density map calculated at 2.5 A resolution was obtained by the combination of multiple isomorphous replacement with four heavy atom derivatives, molecular averaging and solvent flattening.
  • (19) This corresponds approximately to the R-factor calculated for the X-ray crystal structure previously determined using the isomorphous replacement technique, if the residues 1 to 4 and 74 and all localized solvent molecules were removed from this structure.
  • (20) By characterizing isomorphism in reciprocal space [i.e.