What's the difference between pollack and pollock?

Pollack


Definition:

  • (n.) A marine gadoid food fish of Europe (Pollachius virens). Called also greenfish, greenling, lait, leet, lob, lythe, and whiting pollack.
  • (n.) The American pollock; the coalfish.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Thus, the Alaska pollack roe aminopeptidase resembles soluble alanyl aminopeptidase [EC 3.4.11.14].
  • (2) Can I introduce Sydney Pollack... Sydney Pollack: Thank you very much.
  • (3) The best resolution of mitotic nuclei was obtained in Pollack's buffer.
  • (4) News media reports and unclassified government documents showed North Korea imported large amounts of centrifuge parts in the early 2000s, Pollack said, but an apparent dearth of observed imports since then suggests that Pyongyang is making the necessary components at home.
  • (5) Migration of the cells onto a flat surface also allows visualization of their actin cables (E. Friedman, M. Verderame, S. Winawer, and R. Pollack, Cancer Res., 44: 3040-3050, 1984).
  • (6) laidlawii (Pollack et al., 1965) and U. urealyticum (Romano & La Licata, 1978).
  • (7) After the sentencing on Monday, defense lawyers Edward MacMahon and Barry Pollack thanked US district judge Leonie Brinkema for what they considered a fair sentence.
  • (8) Jonathan Pollack, an Israeli activist who was at the demonstration this month, said Tristan was hit at around 4.30pm inside the village, at least 1km from the barrier, at a time when the demonstration was dispersing.
  • (9) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Susan Pollack’s parents.
  • (10) The government’s security forces, both army and police, are overwhelmingly Shia,” said American analyst Kenneth Pollack.
  • (11) Claudio Pollack, consumer group director of Ofcom, said: "Ofcom is today making clear that consumers entering into fixed-term telecoms contracts must get a fairer deal.
  • (12) These findings support Pollack's nondevelopmental explanation for age effects on Type I illusions.
  • (13) While one group recited the Psalms, another chanted: “Death to terrorists.” Among the crowd milling close to the entrance of the synagogue was Akiva Pollack, a paramedic who was one of the first on the scene, who told the Guardian that upon entering the building he had been confronted immediately by an individual covered in blood.
  • (14) Pollack said Israeli border police had led an incursion into Nilin that morning.
  • (15) The tonical cholinergic and adrenergic influence on the heart rate was investigated in vivo in seven species of marine teleosts (pollack, Pollachius pollachius; cuckoo wrasse, Labrus mixtus; ballan wrasse, Labrus berggylta; five-bearded rockling, Ciliata mustela; tadpole fish, Raniceps raninus; eel-pout, Zoarces viviparus and short-spined sea scorpion, Myoxocephalus scor pius) during rest and, in two of the species (P. pollachius and L. mixtus), also during moderate swimming exercise in a Blazka-type swim tunnel.
  • (16) Claudio Pollack, consumer group director of Ofcom, said: "We have reached an important milestone in our work to ensure consumers and small businesses have better protection against unexpected price increases."
  • (17) I tried to treat him, but then I heard shooting nearby.” Pollack said he dragged one of the injured from the synagogue, and when he reached the exit he saw a policeman who had been shot and seriously wounded in the head.
  • (18) Its south-east England campaigner Brenda Pollack said: "These latest estimates will set alarm bells ringing across the south-east of England where fracking firms seem intent on punching holes in some of Britain's most beautiful countryside in the search for profits.
  • (19) In some cases, the jury gets it wrong,” Pollack said.
  • (20) As a result, for most of his presidency, Obama and his staff “saw the Kurds as a nuisance”, Kenneth Pollack, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, told me over the weekend.

Pollock


Definition:

  • (n.) A marine gadoid fish (Pollachius carbonarius), native both of the European and American coasts. It is allied to the cod, and like it is salted and dried. In England it is called coalfish, lob, podley, podling, pollack, etc.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The content of unsaturated fatty acids in walleye pollock PRM is 1.4 times greater than in frog PRM.
  • (2) "She's presumably in there now doing all the news programmes by herself," said Ian Pollock, chair of the NUJ London branch at the BBC.
  • (3) Body composition was evaluated using anthropometric methods (according to Garrow Webster, Durnin-Womersley, modified Durnin-Womersley and Jackson-Pollock) and impedance measurement in which resistive bioelectric impedance is measured using a tetrapolar technique.
  • (4) According to a paper published in the journal Science on Thursday, large and bottom-dwelling species carry most risk, which means cod, flounder, halibut, pollock, skate and sole from the waters in question could be off limits for years, .
  • (5) It comprises 13% of the pollock nuclear DNA with a copy number of 5 x 10(5) per haploid genome.
  • (6) Margaret Pollock, a retired dentist who organises the local yes campaign, said that 20 shops in the town were lying empty.
  • (7) But most of the collection, including works by Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Francis Bacon and many others, remains in the vaults and basement.
  • (8) Tackle the Humpback Dolphin trail and watch the surfers crest waves at Pollock Beach.
  • (9) His-96 is therefore one of several neighboring amino acids of the kringle portion of fragment 1 that displays highly unusual chemistry (see also Asn-101 [Welsch, D.J., & Nelsestuen, G. L. (1988) Biochemistry 27 4946-4952] and Lys-97 [Pollock, J.S., Zapata, G.A., Weber, D.J., Berkowitz, P., Deerfield, D.W., II, Olson, D.L., Koehler, K.A., Pedersen, L.G., & Hiskey, R.G.
  • (10) It’s important we get our heads around these impacts, so we can make the right decisions,” Pollock said.
  • (11) Body density and percent body fatness were determined after weight loss according to four commonly used skinfold equations: Pollock (P); Durnin-Rahaman (D-R); Durnin-Womersley (D-W); and, Jackson-Pollock (J-P).
  • (12) Fragmentation of wall-eyed pollock and bovine rhodopsins by papain in the photoreceptor membrane was studied by sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis.
  • (13) Tested equations were those reported for body density by Sloan, Wilmore, Jackson and Pollock, Durnin and Womersley, Lohman, and Pollock et al.
  • (14) She reads: “The look in his eyes was as much as we could take…” Pollock sighs: “Oh, that’s really desperate.” There was also the case of 10-year-old Curtis Elton, a talented pianist whose hands have been insured.
  • (15) Pollock is the first to note the limitations of her study and the sample size it analysed.
  • (16) And we had a massive amount of support from parents for our decision.” Pollock stops short of calling for rugby to be banned, but she does believe that every parent whose child plays rugby should be in no doubt of the risks they face.
  • (17) The initial rate of lipid peroxidation (LPO) in photoreceptor membranes (PRM) of walleye pollock is 1.8--2.3 times higher than in frog PRM.
  • (18) As the job description for the post made clear, whoever was appointed was going to have to report to the chief executive, Cressida Pollock, who by her own admission knows very little about opera, and presumably would have to get their artistic plans approved by her.
  • (19) Pollock say the DA is sensitive to the concerns of the community – not least its resistance to long custodial sentences.
  • (20) Only later did I read Marlowe's poem Hero and Leander that begins: "On Hellespont, guilty of true love's blood..." Twombly came of agein the America of Jackson Pollock and the Abstract Expressionists.

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