What's the difference between primo and primp?

Primo


Definition:

  • (a.) First; chief.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Titrations by hemagglutination of sensitized turkey red cells are performed before and after primo-immunization and first booster.
  • (2) Primo-infected mice challenged subcutaneously into a hind footpad manifest an increased capacity to withstand the dissemination of the challenge bacteria from the inoculated region and to control the bacterial population in the draining lymph node and in the spleen.
  • (3) They were as victimised as any other prisoners at in Auschwitz.” Son of Saul review: an outstanding, excoriating look at evil in Auschwitz Read more Röhrig conceded that such confusion did persist, with even Primo Levi having insisted that the Sonderkommando were in some sense collaborators.
  • (4) Get smart: more coding schemes for youngsters Primo, a game that aims to teach young children coding without the need for literacy.
  • (5) After a primo-vaccination followed by a booster dose one year later, sero-conversion ranges from 95,3% to 100% for type 1, 83,3% to 96,5% for type 2, 75% to 84,9% for type 3.
  • (6) Again and again Primo Levi 's work is described as indispensable, essential, necessary.
  • (7) route), along with phentanyl and droperidol before primo-implantation or replacement of pacemaker under local anaesthesia.
  • (8) The objective is an individual primary (or primo-secondary) prevention among other processes of preventive intervention.
  • (9) Money is pouring into it, from hedge funders speculating on programming startups to ordinary people inspired to back projects such as the coding-for-infants toy Primo .
  • (10) The unknowability of the Holocaust was famously, if inadvertently, expressed by the guard at Auschwitz who curtly told Primo Levi: “There is no why here.” We cannot in the end explain the Holocaust: it is beyond explanation.
  • (11) A 19 year-old man developed an acute syndrome of the anterior horn of cervical spinal cord during a primo-infection with toxoplasma.
  • (12) Considering the microbiological status assessed by serology, a variation was found both in post-infection state at entrance in the study, and in primo-infection associated with a rise in antibody concentrations during the study.
  • (13) In mice, this counterinflammation effect is observed only 6 hours following the primo-inflammation, occurs in absence of T lymphocytes and is not mediated with bioproducts of the arachidonic metabolism.
  • (14) Mouth Organ John, an amateur musician and mechanic whose real name was João Chupel Primo, met his fate first.
  • (15) Sero-conversion and the appearance of a specific IgM antibody response to CMV were documented, suggesting that this was a case of a primo-infection by CMV, and not one of reactivation of latent CMV infection.
  • (16) It is possible that is was responsible for the primo infection of most of the components of the group surveyed, as the phenomenon of the "Original Antigenic Sin" explains.
  • (17) The scientist survivor was clear about the source of the infection he observed in such clinical detail: “Mainly, at the root of it all, a tide of cowardice, an abysmal cowardice, masked as warrior virtue, love of country, and loyalty to an idea.” It may be too much to ask the Trump White House to see Primo Levi’s point.
  • (18) Primo Levi is fingering some similar lesion in the title of his postwar memoir, written almost concurrently with Camus, If This Is a Man .
  • (19) Primo Levi spoke of the concentration camps and how the Nazis would tell prisoners that, even if they did escape, nobody would believe them.
  • (20) Rather, the response in primo-infection to Rat Corona Virus, Sendai Virus, and Pneumonia Virus of Mice was the highest in animals clustered as "fast-and high" responders to ovalbumin.

Primp


Definition:

  • (a.) To be formal or affected in dress or manners; -- often with up.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) And beautiful Beyoncé tells us that since becoming a mother, she eschews big primping routines, opting for "no make-up, just sunglasses and lip gloss".
  • (2) My hair really does look like a football helmet.” In an otherwise chaotic universe, their primping and styling remains the constant to which they can always turn.
  • (3) And it strikes me: this is almost cooking as couture, backstage behind the catwalk as fantastical creations are pinned and primped into shape.
  • (4) The hotel is being primped and hoovered, the security is arriving, the press is nowhere to be seen, and I just had a really boring crab salad.
  • (5) He resented the way women primped themselves before coming on the show, so they all looked alike and he could not tell the black pudding stringers from the knitting needle knobbers; and he disliked the certificate challengers were given to say they had beaten the panel, thinking it encouraged evasive replies to questions.
  • (6) Not the comparatively ancient generation that once produced Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, Ryan Gosling and Christina Aguilera, but the new breed, who are primped and propagated like prize roses; toothy munchkins given TV shows and then slapped on backpacks, pencil cases and, if they can carry a tune without significant wobble, album covers.
  • (7) From now on, space and air would be shaped and primped by the private sector.
  • (8) What we put in our piscine, Is called polymethyl hexabiguanide, It acts with the aid of hydrogen peroxide, To keep our piscine quite pristine..." Hearing John sing this one night in his pleasant tenor voice, as the moonlight glinted off a perfectly placid and primped pool, was one of the great musical experiences of my life.
  • (9) By day he rests and reads a little; by night he comes alive, a vampire in a linen suit, throwing great raves for primped and preened pals in his penthouse.

Words possibly related to "primo"

Words possibly related to "primp"