What's the difference between gregarious and soc?

Gregarious


Definition:

  • (a.) Habitually living or moving in flocks or herds; tending to flock or herd together; not habitually solitary or living alone.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Rubens is not a solitary source of painterly genius, but a gregarious master who never hid his own quotations of earlier art.
  • (2) Cytological features are in agreement with the gregarious behaviour of cockroaches.
  • (3) Path analysis procedures were used to test a causal model that concerns possible antecedent conditions in relation to gregarious drinking patterns.
  • (4) He inherited his father's calculation and his mother's gregariousness and style.
  • (5) Backstage, Gabbana – the more gregarious of the two – will talk about fashion as fantasy, last season explaining his vision thus: “I have this life … I want to be happy.
  • (6) Famously, she lit a lamp in her window, as a welcoming sign to the vast Irish diaspora; deliberately – there was no lack of steel in her campaign, and she quickly showed a willingness to exploit the gaffes of often incompetent rivals – she made herself less private and austere, acquiring suits by Irish designers, trying, above all, to be more open and approachable, more, she told Byrne, like her own warm, gregarious mother.
  • (7) The imposing and gregarious Midlands-born banker tried and failed to buy Northern Rock before it was nationalised in February 2008 and then missed out on 318 Royal Bank of Scotland branches last year.
  • (8) Little wonder that tactless buyers at Asda rubber-stamped the rapidly withdrawn "Mental Patient" fancy dress costume when "mental" is routinely worn as a badge of gregarious honour.
  • (9) These patients also showed significant differences on the MCMI asocial, gregarious, and neurotic depression scales.
  • (10) Passive avoidance learning occupies a central role in accounts of disinhibited behavior, ranging from psychopaths' persistent criminality (Hare 1970) to extraverts' gregariousness (Gray, 1972).
  • (11) Bank swallows nest gregariously in colonies usually ranging from 10 to 300 nests.
  • (12) When we sit down for a more formal interview in his Manhattan hotel room a few hours later, Ross's earlier gregarious anecdotes are replaced by aphorisms that could come straight off one of those inspirational posters you see in recruitment consultant offices.
  • (13) Light-microscopically, pleomorphic tumor cells clustered gregariously and often formed alveolar structures.
  • (14) American Indians and Hispanos have a greater tendency to drink gregariously, to drink more, and to have more disruption in social role functioning.
  • (15) Females of two hamster species with contrasting degrees of gregariousness were tested for social influences on the timing of sexual maturation.
  • (16) He is a gregarious media grandee, who was born into the royal family of UK showbusiness.
  • (17) 2) Traditionals, healthy at both ages, were gregarious and nurturant.
  • (18) "Affectionately known as ­Corporal Hamer in the office, he was a gregarious figure, a wonderful friend who was hugely popular with his colleagues.
  • (19) When female dwarf hamsters (Phodopus sungorus campbelli), a gregarious species, were housed with an adult male at weaning, they began estrous cycles significantly earlier than when they were housed alone or with their family.
  • (20) Experiments were performed to evaluate the status of antibacterial defensive responses in M. sexta larvae parasitized by this gregarious endoparasitoid.

Soc


Definition:

  • (n.) The lord's power or privilege of holding a court in a district, as in manor or lordship; jurisdiction of causes, and the limits of that jurisdiction.
  • (n.) Liberty or privilege of tenants excused from customary burdens.
  • (n.) An exclusive privilege formerly claimed by millers of grinding all the corn used within the manor or township which the mill stands.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Two small populations of GLY + neurons were observed outside of the named nuclei of the SOC; one was located dorsal to the LSO, near its dorsal hilus, and the other was identified near the medial pole of the LSO.
  • (2) The large motoneurons innervating only white muscle are similar to the primary motoneurons identified in developmental studies in teleosts (Myers: Soc.
  • (3) This study investigated the value of the sense of coherence (SOC), self-esteem, and the Mental Health Inventory subscales as predictors of response to a brief pain management program.
  • (4) After a recovery period of approximately one month, physiological recordings were made with tungsten micro-electrodes from the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus of animals with SOC lesions.
  • (5) The neurones of the latter chiefly run to the contralateral superior olivary complex (SOC), whereas the neurones of the dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) terminate mainly in the central nucleus of the contralateral inferior colliculus (IC).
  • (6) The inverse relationship between peak stress and cross-sectional area was unchanged in the VOL and SOC groups.
  • (7) One animal with complete bilateral destruction of the SOC was incapable of sound localization, even with 2-s noise bursts.
  • (8) This activity is independent of GTP gamma S. Addition of SOC I increases this activity 3-4-fold, only when GTP gamma S is present.
  • (9) Following SOC ablations, type 4 endings degenerated in the OCA ipsilateral to the lesion.
  • (10) With SOC neuronal lesions the major changes were in 'c' and 'd' of 3CLT (P3 and P4 of ABEP).
  • (11) The inverse relationship between peak stress and cross-sectional area (CSA) was practically identical in the POL and SOC groups.
  • (12) The soc-500 allele appears to activate genes involved with sensing nutritional stress.
  • (13) Thus, neurons from the SOC to the octopus cell area of the cochlear nucleus seem to be entirely periolivary and not entirely equivalent to neurons providing collaterals to the olivocochlear bundle.
  • (14) The relative salience of the pitch components of a two-tone dichotic chord is invariant with respect to the relative intensity of the two tones over a wide range of interaural intensity differences [R. Efron and E. W. Yund, J. Acoust, Soc.
  • (15) SOCs were evident at -60 mV and more positive potentials.
  • (16) LEP and SOC cell lines were contaminated with mouse cells.
  • (17) L-alpha-Phosphatidylcholine (PC)-specific and L-alpha-phosphatidylethanolamine (PE)-specific PLA2 activities were significantly greater in glomerular membranes from rats with BUO than from SOC rats.
  • (18) The reversal of SOCs at the K+ equilibrium potential and their suppression by tetraethylammonium chloride lead to the conclusion that they represent the activity of K+ channels.
  • (19) These results are consistent with previous work suggesting that conditioning produces substantial adaptation effects in B-photoreceptors (Crow, T. (1982) Soc.
  • (20) Trump’s national security adviser, the retired lieutenant general Michael Flynn, was once J-Soc’s intelligence chief.

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