What's the difference between remanent and remanet?
Remanent
Definition:
(a.) That which remains; a remnant; a residue.
(a.) Remaining; residual.
Example Sentences:
(1) For dead cells, this remanent field was constant, but for viable macrophages, the remanent field decreased rapidly so that only 42% of its initial magnitude remained 5 min after alignment.
(2) The remanent rectification was not due to block by the main permeant cation, Na+.
(3) The design principles of instrumentation for magnetizing intracellular particles and for detecting weak remanent magnetic fields are described.
(4) This order effect could be explained by a remanent effect of amisulpride after 6 wash-out weeks.
(5) However this compounds are very expensive and less remanent than D.D.T.
(6) Scratching the itchy lesions often spreads the condition by transplanting the remanent resinous toxin to other parts of the body.
(7) This observation shows that glyceryl thioglycolate may be responsible for allergic contact dermatitis in hairdressers; it emphasizes the long remanence of the allergen in the hair that makes its eviction specially difficult.
(8) After magnetization from outside the chest wall, the remanent magnetic field (RMF) strength generated in the trachea was sequentially measured with a flux-gate magnetometer.
(9) Remanent field strength (RFS) from the AM containing Fe3O4 particles was measured immediately after magnetization.
(10) The CT scan accurately predicted the location of the round window remanent.
(11) The terms "remanent" and "archeomodular" are used to describe a relic modular format, traces of which are shown here to persist despite the changes that have occurred in the primary structures of ribonucleic acids during the course of their evolution.
(12) To study effects of cigarette smoke on the cytoplasmic motility (CM) of alveolar macrophages (AM), we measured remanent field strength (RFS) in guinea pigs with and without systemic capsaicin pretreatment in vivo.
(13) The latter are particular in that they possess remanent antimicrobial properties, given their ability to carry antiseptic molecules.
(14) In comparison with their precursor lipoproteins, the remanants of the triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins are reduced in contents of triacylglycerols and apolipoproteins AI and AIV, whereas the contents of cholesterol (free and esterified) and apolipoprotien E are increased.
(15) It will also determine the degree of remanent articular mobility.
(16) Its presence should be clinically suspected if a mechanical icterus with septic angiocholitis, sometimes associated with an external biliary fistula (from the residual cavity), occurs in the postoperative course of these patients, especially if the primary operation has excluded the remanance of an obstacle at the level of the main bile duct.
(17) They must be seen within the context of the current philosophical approach to the illness, and the economic climate which prevails, at a time when new drugs, for example fludarabine (Leiby et al, 1987; Reman et al, 1988; Whelan et al, 1991), are showing promise, and differentiating agents are being tested in remission (Cunningham et al, 1985).
(18) Subthreshold oscillations could be explained by changes in K conductance together with a remanent of the sodium leakage current.
(19) As a measure of intracellular motility, gamma-Fe2O3 particles in cells were magnetically aligned and the decay rate of the remanent magnetic field (RMF) in the direction of initial magnetization was monitored over time.
(20) The remanent photosensitivity syndrome is characterized by an extreme photosensitivity which may be very disabling, preventing the patient to go outdoors; photo-allergological exploration discloses numerous positive patch-tests or photopatch-tests to various allergens, but the role played by these allergens in the occurrence of photosensitivity remains unclear.
Remanet
Definition:
(n.) A case for trial which can not be tried during the term; a postponed case.