What's the difference between immission and immit?

Immission


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of immitting, or of sending or thrusting in; injection; -- the correlative of emission.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Measuring points with geometrical averaged immissions of significant elements (Zn, Cu, Pb, Cd, Be, Cr, V) above the 84-percentile of all measuring points are listed separately.
  • (2) Airborne particulate matter was collected by high volume samplers at two sampling stations in Berlin (West) between March 1983 and February 1984 (immissions).
  • (3) The second in the series "Microbial emission, immission and changes in the germ count in the cooling water of wet cooling towers" describes measuring methods and results of the measurements for determining the emission values and the changes in the germ count in the cooling system.
  • (4) The reduction of the oil aerosol has been obtained with the construction of an extraction and immission air suitable system.
  • (5) The investigations were based on a combination of emissions studies, measurements of immissions by continous working SO2 monitoring instruments, lead dioxide candles and Bergerhoff-instruments, and--if possible--meteorological investigations.
  • (6) Through the use of improved data processing in connection with more closely meshed measuring networks, and of automatic recording facilities, as well as through the increased use of physical models, the problem of immission in our heavily valleyed country could be investigated more thoroughly.
  • (7) Based on 4 surveys, threshold limit values for noise are proposed; beside noise immissions, the quality of living has also been considered.
  • (8) These limits are comprised compulsory in the GDR-Standard TGL39617 - Protection against Noise; Limits of Noise Immission in Communal Reach.
  • (9) More attention should be paid to the sectors of social and human sciences, energy, recycling and waste management, agriculture and cultivation in mountains, as well as to limits of maximum load of emissions and immissions within the field of environmental research.
  • (10) Parallel immission and climatic conditions were measured.
  • (11) Based on the immission levels measured in the city of Bochum (approx.
  • (12) Four groups of measuring site with different characteristic types of immissions could be distinguished by means of factor and cluster analysis.
  • (13) A trend is shown between the odour annoyance and the immission level determined by the sniffing team.
  • (14) The patterns of radon immission in houses due to buildings materials and also to soil emissions are described.
  • (15) Specimens of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) were exposed in situ for 7, 15, and 30 days to the water of the Po River either upstream or downstream the immission of the Lambro River, a small affluent which is highly polluted with industrial wastes.
  • (16) The Immissions were calculated using the air sample volumes.
  • (17) The observation that PbO2 absorbs besides SO2 other, gaseous pollutants such as HF suggested to extend the lead dioxid cylinder method by means of the fluoride electrode on the determination of the fluoride immission.
  • (18) The data are in keeping with the TRH-T-induced improvement of circulatory and respiratory functions, with mobilization of the residual blood from its capillary pooling and consequent immission of acid metabolites into the blood stream.
  • (19) In the effective range of a lead smelting plant, the repercussions of cadmium emissions (mainly past) on vegetables, fruit, soil and drinking water as well as of immissions were investigated by means of atomic absorption spectrometry.
  • (20) Case b) is of importance for the dissemination and immission of germs from cooling towers, because here, too, the visible plume initially laden with drops is dried by the admixture of unsaturated ambient air.

Immit


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To send in; to inject; to infuse; -- the correlative of emit.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Immitation synkinesia is usually associated with thalamic or parietal lesions.
  • (2) A number (210) of children were followed longitudinally through the first two years of life with pneumatic otoscopy and electroacoustic immitance, tympanometry, at every physician encounter.
  • (3) There are limitations to observer reliability with otoscopy, which has good sensitivity but poor specificity, in contrast to immitance audiometry.
  • (4) When only cases of middle ear effusion were screened, the acoustic reflectometer did not perform as well as immitance.
  • (5) Audiometric evaluation consisting of a well masked pure tone audiogram, speech discrimination score and immitance studies.
  • (6) Acoustic-immitance measurements obtain sophisticated data that give us valuable information about the middle ear mechanism as a whole.
  • (7) A psychogenic movement disorder can immitate sometimes a choreatic syndrom.
  • (8) Immitance audiometry is a safe, simple, reliable, and relatively objective method of determining middle-ear function that provides advantages for examining the difficult patient because minimal cooperation is needed.
  • (9) Immitance audiometry can confirm a doubtful otoscopic diagnosis and screen for ear disease.
  • (10) This is done indirectly through the plot of induced pressure versus acoustic immitance (tympanogram).
  • (11) During hospitalization, both pathologic findings from a submandibular lymph node and a scratching smear of the skin lesion contained Coccidioides immites.
  • (12) Applicability limits are specified for earlier obtained solutions of particular inverse problems of accumulation kinetics of newly synthesized RNA using isotope label for immitating unstationary state in stationary cell cultures.
  • (13) The incubation in vitro of excised ovaries of Dirofilaria immits in medium containing mebendazole between 10(-5) and 10(-8) M for four or six hours results in the accumulation of up to 20% of oogonial cells in arrested mitotic metaphase.
  • (14) Evidence from this modelling suggests that the technique may provide improved discriminability over conventional immitance measurements for some types of pathology.
  • (15) As a screening tool, immitance audiometry is most valuable in populations at risk for middle ear effusion, primarily those aged 7 months to 5 years.
  • (16) Immitance audiometry has very high sensitivity and specificity.

Words possibly related to "immission"

Words possibly related to "immit"