What's the difference between coco and moco?

Coco


Definition:

  • () Alt. of Coco palm

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Where to stay: Beachside bungalows at Coco Grove Beach Resort cost £19 per person.
  • (2) She was a once-in-a-lifetime gal.” A friend of Breaux wrote on Instagram: “God really does give his best angels their wings first.” Breaux was a student at Louisiana State University in Eunice and lived in Lafayette, where she was working at clothing retailer Coco Eros.
  • (3) Globiz hopes there's no repeat of last year's Star Magic Ball where Salvador prompted a major fist-fight to break out between two of the country's hottest young actors, Matteo Guidicelli and Coco Martin (think the R-Patz and Taylor Lautner of the Philippines).
  • (4) Thus we see Emma as aviator Amelia Earhart, fashion pioneer Coco Chanel and, perhaps most touchingly, the president of the United States.
  • (5) It is what I do with it, rather than what I am worth, that I believe is more important.” Unlike some of his predecessors, such as Bendor, the 2nd Duke, who lavished diamonds on his lover Coco Chanel and wanted Britain to ally with Hitler, the 6th Duke gave to and supported a string of charities and other worthy causes – £500,000 to farmers hit by the 2001 foot and mouth crisis, for instance – and served diligently on the boards of many military and other charities, including Emmaus , for the homeless, for more than 40 years.
  • (6) Doritos, Peperami and Coco Pops are the latest products to fall victim to shrinkflation as rising costs hit food producers.
  • (7) Cocos, the remote emerald tip of a towering underwater mountain range which was the setting for the fictional Isla Nublar in the novel Jurassic Park, has served as a pirate hideaway, whaling station, penal colony and a pit stop for Colombian drug runners.
  • (8) OK.” Glen Coco (@MrPooni) To clarify, this is Matt Damon trying to school the producer of Dear White People on diversity in Hollywood.
  • (9) The undersea world at Cocos is as fantastical as the names of its inhabitants, from the sicklefin devil ray to the scarlet Mexican hogfish.
  • (10) The Australian border protection vessel carrying 157 Tamil asylum seekers is on its way to the Australian territory of the Cocos Islands, from where the department of immigration plans to transfer the asylum seekers to immigration detention on the Australian mainland, Guardian Australia can reveal.
  • (11) Rafael Gutiérrez, executive director of Costa Rica's national conservation system which manages Cocos Island, says his organisation is working to provide alternatives to illegal fishing, such as farming red snapper and harvesting the Piangua clam from mangrove swamps, as well as supporting the development of whale– and dolphin-watching businesses.
  • (12) The laborers were mostly mixed Malays, and about 500 of their ancestors remain on Home island, the Cocos’ northern landmass.
  • (13) It’s run by Coco, who’s about 90 years old and has no legs.
  • (14) It's insane.” He says more enforcement bases and vessels are essential if the radar is to help in the fight against the pirates: “Right now they are in a war but without any barracks.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Turtles frequent Cocos Island off Costa Rica but can be drowned by illegal fishing.
  • (15) But Coco Torre, an avid football fan and the marketing manager of the United Football League of the Philippines, has been rooting for Brazil.
  • (16) It is prepared by extracting a mixture of ten medical herbs (Rehmannia glutinosa, Paeonia lactiflora, Liqusticum wallichii, Angelica sinesis, Glycyrrhiza uralensis, Poria cocos, Atractylodes macrocephala, Panax ginseng.
  • (17) The food's good, and on a cold morning-after-the-night-before you can easily justify popping in to sup an ocho coco – a mix of tequila, coconut liqueur, passionfruit, coriander, ginger and lime to help the hangover.
  • (18) The Cocos Islands is a tiny green speck in the Indian ocean nearer to Penang than Perth, settled in 1826 as a resupply base for Indian ocean traders.
  • (19) In the same era, the Devonshire treasure, named for the ship that carried it, was bunkered on Cocos by Captain Bennett Graham.
  • (20) The young, timid Yves had gone, replaced by a charming, seemingly assured man who was more than just a household name – like Coco Chanel, he had become his brand's most alluringly potent incarnation.

Moco


Definition:

  • (n.) A South American rodent (Cavia rupestris), allied to the Guinea pig, but larger; -- called also rock cavy.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) CP bonded firmly MoCo and did not release it efficiently unless aponitrate reductase was present in the incubation mixture.
  • (2) A Chlamydomonas reinhardtii molybdenum cofactor (MoCo)-carrier protein (CP), capable of reconstituting nitrate reductase activity with apoprotein from the Neurospora crassa mutant nit-1, was subjected to experiments of diffusion through a dialysis membrane and gel filtration.
  • (3) It is difficult to explain these results by a simple regulatory model; therefore, we reexamined the MoCo levels in chl2 plants using a sensitive, specific assay for MoCo: complementation of Neurospora MoCo mutant extracts.
  • (4) Thus MoCo is not involved in NR dimerization in higher plants, contrary to current assumptions.
  • (5) The amount of total MoCo (free, carrier-bound and heat releasable forms) was dependent on the growth phase of cell cultures.
  • (6) The Nucleus multichannel implantable hearing prosthesis (Nucleus Ltd., Sydney, Australia) has been modified by computer programming (MOCO, Inc., Scituate, Mass.)
  • (7) Constitutive levels of total MoCo in ammonium-grown cells markedly increased when cells were transferred to media lacking ammonium (nitrate, urea or nitrogen-free media).
  • (8) Stability of MoCo bound to CP against air and heat was very similar to that of free-MoCo released from milk xanthine oxidase.
  • (9) Ltd., Lane Cove, Sydney, Australia) has been modified by computer programming (MOCO, Inc., Scituate, Mass.
  • (10) Biochemical data suggest that the haem and FAD domains are functional, and that the molybdenum cofactor (MoCo) domain is inactive owing to the absence of MoCo in yeast.
  • (11) In addition, chl2 plants are not thought to be defective in MoCo, as they have near wild-type levels of xanthine dehydrogenase activity, which has been used as a measure of MoCo in other organisms.
  • (12) Hundreds of chlorate-resistant mutants have been identified in plants, and almost all have been found to be defective in nitrate reduction due to mutations in either nitrate reductase (NR) structural genes or genes required for the synthesis of the NR cofactor molybdenum-pterin (MoCo).
  • (13) Results suggest that MoCo is continuously synthesized in C. reinhardtii and that its levels are regulated by ammonium in a way independent of nitrate reductase synthesis.
  • (14) Our data strongly suggest that MoCo is directly transferred from CP to aponitrate reductase to form an active enzyme.
  • (15) Levels of both total MoCo and free plus carrier-bound MoCo seemed to be unrelated to either nitrate reductase synthesis or functioning of nit-1 and nit-2 genes responsible for nitrate reductase structure and regulation, respectively.
  • (16) The MoCo oxidation product from C. reinhardtii has the same chromatographic and spectral properties as that of milk xanthine oxidase and chicken liver sulfite oxidase.
  • (17) In soluble form, MoCo was found to be present in several forms: (i) as a low Mr free species; (ii) bound to a MoCo-carrier protein of about 50 kDa that could release MoCo to directly reconstitute in vitro nitrate reductase activity in the nit-1 mutant of Neurospora crassa, but not to Thiol-Sepharose which, in contrast, bonded free MoCo; and (iii) bound to other proteins, putatively constitutive molybdoenzymes, which only released MoCo after a denaturing treatment.
  • (18) A simple and reliable procedure of oxidation of molybdenum cofactor (MoCo) from molybdoenzymes by autoclaving samples at 120 degrees C for 20 min yielded a single predominant fluorescent species that could be quantitatively determined by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography.
  • (19) Molybdenum cofactor (MoCo) of molybdoenzymes is constitutively produced in cells of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown in ammonium media, under which conditions certain molybdoenzymes are not synthesized.

Words possibly related to "coco"

Words possibly related to "moco"