(1) Cancer of the mouth, pharynx and esophagus has decreased in all Japanese migrants, but the decrease is much greater among Okinawan migrants, suggesting they have escaped exposure to risk factors peculiar to the Okinawan environment.
(2) Like many families, we’ve had to move to escape the fighting.
(3) At follow-up, the initial presence of signs of repression was significantly more common in such initially nonregressive patients as had escaped a later psychotic breakdown.
(4) The proliferation of this cell type may represent an escape from the senescence pathway and progression to immortal tumor cells.
(5) The presence of the positive-off diagonal of the second-order kernel of respiratory control of heart rate is an indication of an escape-like phenomenon in the system.
(6) If you’ve escaped the impact of cuts so far , consider yourself lucky, but don’t think that you won’t be affected after the next tranche hits.
(7) The plan was to provide those survivors with escape routes while also giving law enforcement an entry point.
(8) He said: “Almost daily we hear from parents desperate to escape the single cramped room of a B&B or hostel that they find themselves struggling to raise their children in.
(9) Only two of the 31 commandos escaped; the rest were tracked down and killed.
(10) It is deeply moving hearing him talk now – as if from the grave – about a Christmas Day when he felt so frustrated and cut-off from his family that he had to go into the office to escape.
(11) Since chromatin particles containing DNA the size of 125 kbp can electroelute, we conclude that the polymerizing complex is attached to a nucleoskeleton which is too large to escape.
(12) If such a system were rolled out nationally, central government could escape political pressure to ringfence NHS funding.
(13) New insights into the biochemical and cell-biological alterations occurring in articular cartilage during the early phase of osteoarthrosis (OA) have been gained in the past decade by analysing experimentally induced osteoarthrosis in animals, mostly dogs and rabbits, while early phases of OA in humans so far have escaped diagnostic evaluation.
(14) After 2 weeks of chronic exposure to 75 mM EtOH, crayfish showed behavioral tolerance as measured by a decrease in righting time and an increase in tail-flip escape behavior to control levels.
(15) The researchers' own knowledge of street language and drug behavior has enabled them to capture information that would escape most observers and even some participants.
(16) Animals continued to display escape responses after removal of eyestalks and antennae.
(17) Intracerebral injection of the GABAA agonists muscimol (1 nmol), isoguvacine (1 nmol) or THIP (1, 2 and 4 nmol) in rats with chemitrodes implanted in the dorsal midbrain central grey raised the threshold electrical current for inducing escape behaviour.
(18) Rats were tested on either escape or avoidance learning at 80 days of age after chemical sympathectomy at birth or 40 or 80 days of age.
(19) The fraction of ligands that initially escaped into the solvent decreased when the temperature was lowered, and the Arrhenius plots for the rebinding rate coefficients were found to deviate significantly from linearity.
(20) When Hayley Cropper swallows poison on Coronation Street on Monday night, taking her own life to escape inoperable pancreatic cancer, with her beloved husband, Roy, in pieces at her bedside, it will be the end of a character who, thanks to Hesmondhalgh's performance, has captivated and challenged British TV viewers for 16 years.
Inescapable
Definition:
(a.) Not escapable.
Example Sentences:
(1) Numbness sets in.” Philip Hope-Wallace on Look Back in Anger “I must be the only playwright this century to have been pursued up a London street by an angry mob … There was an inescapable tension in the house.
(2) The multicentricity of peritoneal origin of ovarian epithelial tumors is a far more likely reason for morbidity and mortality, and is inescapable when the ovaries contain no lesion, when they contain a lesion that is noninvasive, or when the ovaries have been surgically removed.
(3) Rats receiving pretreatment before inescapable stress with any of the three methods of prevention--BDZs, TCAs, or ES--showed escape behavior in the shuttle-box test for LH comparable to naive unstressed controls.
(4) The paradigm of long-term sleep deprivation was used as a model of chronic inescapable stress in rats.
(5) Rats receiving saline before inescapable stress showed significantly more LH behavior in the shuttle-box task and had significantly lower 5-HT release as well.
(6) The effects on pain sensitivity were then assessed using two psychophysical pain testing procedures: (1) minimum shock intensity (threshold) which produced a conditioned escape response; and (2) total activity elicited by highly aversive inescapable shock.
(7) Interference with escape was shown to be a function of the inescapability of shock and not shock per se: Rats that were "put through" and learned a prior jump-up escape did not become passive, but their yoked, inescapable partners did.
(8) Both plasma ACTH and corticosterone levels were measured at various times following escapable and yoked inescapable electric shock conditions known to produce differential behavioral outcomes.
(9) Environmental stimuli previously paired with inescapable footshock (conditioned fear) elicited increases in levels of the DA metabolite, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC), in the medial prefrontal cortex and of plasma corticosterone in rats.
(10) Today as the marijuana economies in Colorado and Washington begin to take flight, Alexander noted the inescapable undertow of race that continues to haunt this moment of apparent progress at play: "Forty years of impoverished black kids getting prison time for selling weed, and their families and futures destroyed … Now, white men are planning to get rich doing precisely the same thing."
(11) It is proposed that the time-dependency of the sex differences in behavioral consequences of treatment with inescapable shock may be related to sex differences in transient neurochemical or hormonal changes induced by inescapable shock.
(12) Free-running and entrained animals did not exhibit differential vulnerability to the effects of inescapable shock.
(13) It takes nothing more than a short walk in the city’s main roads to confirm this fact unambiguously; the sharp contrast between the old city and its newer additions is inescapable.
(14) Three experiments examined food intake and body weight in rats after exposure to one session of intermittent, inescapable electric shock.
(15) We measured the binding of [3H]DAGO, a selective mu-opiate receptor agonist, in brains of rats exposed to no shock, inescapable shock, or escapable shock.
(16) This observation is based upon the fact that these frequently appear despite successful removal of the primary growth, and given that they originate from the now no longer present tumour, the inescapable conclusion is that dissemination must have taken place prior to initial treatment.
(17) Half of these rats then received three hours of inescapable, intermittent, electric foot shock as a stressor.
(18) Following "inescapable" treatment, internals performed worse than externals.
(19) Moreover, it is suggested that several time-dependent behavioral variations associated with inescapable shock may be related to alterations of anxiety.
(20) Despite the optimism the inescapable fact remains that it is a sad state of affairs when an 87 year old man has to stand for re-election in an attempt to try and move the country forwards with respect to either a new coalition government, or new elections.