What's the difference between gases and oases?

Gases


Definition:

  • (pl. ) of Gas

Example Sentences:

  • (1) They argue that the US, the world's largest producer of greenhouse gases per capita (China recently surpassed us in sheer volume), needs to lead the fight to limit carbon emissions, rather continuing to block global treaties as it has done in the past.
  • (2) and respirated with a pneumatic respiration pump and the parameters blood pressure, pH and blood gases (pO2, pCO2) were continuously recorded.
  • (3) Two patients died from asthma after leaving our service, one patient having left the hospital against medical advice with arterial blood gases demonstrating acute respiratory acidosis during status asthmaticus.
  • (4) The pope has written in his encyclical of the urgent need to reduce climate change gases.
  • (5) Chemical control of respiration becomes less stable during the light stage of sleep, despite a reduction in chemoresponsiveness, due to a concomitant increase in "plant gain" (i.e., responsiveness of blood gases to ventilatory changes).
  • (6) Nick Nuttall, a spokesman for UNEP, said the latest findings should encourage more governments to follow moves by some politicians to invest billions of dollars in clean energy and efficiency as a way of curbing greenhouse gases.
  • (7) We therefore investigated the influence of different carbon dioxide tensions and bicarbonate concentrations on directly measured pH of organ baths aerated with mass-spectrometric analyzed O2-CO2 gases.
  • (8) Under cyclic uptake conditions alveolar gases follow an oscillating time course, because gas concentrations tend to increase during inspiration and to decrease during expiration.
  • (9) Pulmonary function tests, measurements of blood gases, and immunological assessments have been essentially normal.
  • (10) The raw air curve is determined by sequentially counting radionuclide activity in respiratory gases sampled at the mouth.
  • (11) Arterial blood gases, MAP's, and heart rates did not change.
  • (12) The campaign’s focus was the damage to the ozone layer caused by fluorinated gases, such as HFCs.
  • (13) After insertion of venous and arterial (radial and pulmonary) catheters, baseline measurements of tidal volume (VT), respiratory rate (RR), ventilatory response to CO2, and arterial and mixed venous blood gases were made.
  • (14) In further investigations a definite composition of pure gases was used.
  • (15) We evaluated urinary excretion of D-Glucaric Acid before and after exposure to anesthetic gases in 53 subjects, including medical personnel and patients.
  • (16) Alveolar-arterial Oxygen Difference and Blood Gases were normal after IAT.
  • (17) Blood viscosity was affected by hematocrit and blood gases, which acted on pulmonary pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance and right cardiac output.
  • (18) After transport to the hospital, arterial blood gases and the level of unconsciousness were again determined.
  • (19) At the onset of inhibition of this activity, the arterial blood gases and pH in these animals were almost the same at all ventilatory frequencies.
  • (20) He knew that the find presented the country with perhaps its last chance to develop in the traditional way, but he also knew it would push the oil frontier deeper into the Amazon, release 400m tonnes of climate-changing gases and make the destruction of a vast and pristine area inevitable.

Oases


Definition:

  • (pl. ) of Oasis

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These originated in the Bou Denib oases in Morocco, and have a fine flavour and seductively smooth texture.
  • (2) The general findings do not appear to support the existence of active foci of transmission, but analysis of the data for certain oases and localities leads to a quite different assessment of the epidemiological situation.
  • (3) From now on, important efforts of Prevention and Control for vectors and malaria must be developed with large intensity in Saharan oases and in Maghreb.
  • (4) We note the importance of mitigating the effects of desertification, land degradation and drought, including by preserving and developing oases, restoring degraded lands, improving soil quality and improving water management, in order to contribute to sustainable development and poverty eradication.
  • (5) From his fictional response to his old school you can discern in embryo his emerging portrait of an incestuous, inward-looking British establishment whose institutional oases – All Souls and Balliol, the Foreign Office, MCC, Parliament, Clubland and the Circus – are just different versions of the sixth form Junior Common Room.
  • (6) The first comparative results indicate significantly greater instability in the case of gamma alcoholics in the chronic stage than in the oase of gamma alcoholics in the critical stage and alpha alcoholics and epsilon alcoholics.
  • (7) A mammalian enzyme that generates 2'-5' phosphodiester bonds is (2'-5')oligoadenylate synthetase [(2'-5')OASE].
  • (8) By means of a aerohydrodynamic model a hint was received to the probable existence of such a language in western Atlas or in one of the Mauretanian oases.
  • (9) Type I and II interferons (IFNs) stimulate the expression of the 202 and 2'-5' oligoadenylate synthetase (OASE) genes in L929, NIH 3T3 and LM-TK- fibroblastic cell lines.
  • (10) Over-exploitation of river systems and oases has exacerbated the problem.
  • (11) (i) We show that a (2'-5')OASE activity is associated with 60S spliceosomes in an ATP- and RNA-dependent manner and that it can be indirectly immunoprecipitated by anti-Sm antibodies.
  • (12) There are special springs near the mine, real oases of life in a very arid area.
  • (13) In an obvious reference to Palestinians, Jihad Makdissi, the Syrian foreign ministry spokesman, wrote on Facebook that "guests" in Syria "have to respect the rules of hospitality" or "depart to the oases of democracy in Arab countries".
  • (14) You have to get off the highway to see the real Baja, across the spine of mountains and along old mule trails that go back to the conquistadors, linking oases, old ranches and Spanish missions from the 1700s.
  • (15) (iii) HeLa cell nuclear extracts immunodepleted of (2'-5')OASE activity were also deficient in splicing activity.
  • (16) We analyzed (573) anopheline mosquitoes of A. sergenti (463), A. pharoensis (81) and A. multicolor (29) collected from Siwa-oases and Faiyum Governorate (two known active malaria foci in Egypt), for detection of P. falciparum and P. vivax sporozoites.
  • (17) In oases epizootic process assumes a two-phase course, with accumulation by the middle of the season L. major species pathogenic for human beings.
  • (18) But these oases are never far away from wide-scale chaos: bad urban planning from the Mao era means that huge roads cut across the fabric of the city, so the sound of cars is a constant in the capital.
  • (19) The chromosomes of individuals from Nigeria and from the southwest of the Arabian peninsula have the haplotype - - - - + + - + previously found in west African, Jamaican, and U.S. American blacks, whereas those from the eastern oases of Saudi Arabia and from the west and the east coast of India showed a different haplotype not found in Africa (+ + - + + + + -).
  • (20) He said Labor’s history of achievements were “rare oases in a desert of non-functionality”.

Words possibly related to "gases"

Words possibly related to "oases"