What's the difference between tessellation and vair?

Tessellation


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of tessellating; also, the mosaic work so formed.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) I arrange my coins into ascending size in my pockets, for example, and nothing gives me more comfort than the knowledge that my forks, knives and spoons are all in the correct place, tessellating magnificently in their drawer.
  • (2) Cells, considered as polygons, site their division line according to stochastic rules, eventually forming a tessellation of the plane.
  • (3) The selected area of the section is covered by a tessellation of domains.
  • (4) In contrast, the regular tessellation tended to increase feature means and decrease feature variances.
  • (5) Parapapillary chorioretinal atrophy was associated with shallow glaucomatous cupping, diffuse nerve fiber loss, markedly tessellated fundus and only moderately elevated intraocular pressure.
  • (6) Current techniques in composite-block-structured grid generation and unstructured grid generation for general 3D geometries are summarized, including both algebraic and elliptic generation procedures for the former and Delaunay tessellations for the latter.
  • (7) Its tessellating properties have captivated mathematicians, engineers and sculptors, and Erdély has reinvented himself as the shape's globetrotting chaperon.
  • (8) The group's first single, Tessellate , an onomatopoeic puzzle of angular beats and pointed sexual advances, became a radio hit before anyone knew who they were.
  • (9) Also, distinctness of a tesselated fundus, frequency of optic disc haemorrhages and frequency of bared circumlinear or bared cilioretinal vessels did not differ significantly.
  • (10) A vesicle simulation and computer analysis program, VESICA, is described which employs spherical projections of triangularly tessellated icosahedra to produce molecular graphics models of the three-dimensional structures of lipid vesicles.
  • (11) The tessellated marble fountain in the courtyard in front of his church now has a hole the size of a large soup-plate.
  • (12) In fish 55-65 mm long, about 300 formed a tessellated array across each retina.
  • (13) Parapapillary chorioretinal atrophy was associated with shallow glaucomatous cupping, diffuse nerve fiber loss, a marked tessellated fundus, and only moderately elevated intraocular pressure.
  • (14) Especially when you consider the meaning behind the lyrics to their debut single, Tessellate .
  • (15) Consequently, the extracted features showed subtle but consistent differences, with decreasing anisotropic effects and data dispersion for the regular tessellation.
  • (16) The low-income suburb is a mix of public housing and new residential estates, whose tessellating culs-de-sacs brush up against horse paddocks and small farms.
  • (17) Expected to be general, these trends recommend use of the regular tessellation, especially when classification accuracy may depend on small differences in several similar geometric features.
  • (18) On solid materials migrated cells maintained their tessellated morphology and exhibited numerous micro-appendages anchoring them to the surface of the test materials.
  • (19) In addition, cells contacting others near the 45 degree diagonals were more readily segmented when the image was tessellated on the regular lattice.
  • (20) The few systems capable of processing hexagonally tessellated images have approximated this tessellation by using image data acquired on a rectangular sampling lattice, from which six of the eight image samples were selected from each local neighborhood.

Vair


Definition:

  • (n.) The skin of the squirrel, much used in the fourteenth century as fur for garments, and frequently mentioned by writers of that period in describing the costly dresses of kings, nobles, and prelates. It is represented in heraldry by a series of small shields placed close together, and alternately white and blue.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) NA-induced and 5-HT-induced platelet aggregation and 5-HT uptake vaired accordingly.
  • (2) The fluorescence yields of tyrosine and tryptophan vaired 10- and 100-fold, respectively; the Stokes' shift of tryptophan ranged from 328 to 365 nm, but that for tyrosine was apparently invariant (305-307nm).
  • (3) The phenotype of the un-3 mutant raises the possibility that the vaIRS ORF has a second function in addition to protein synthesis.
  • (4) The rabbit thoracic aorta was studied by EM and vital staining with Evans blue at vaired points of time after a single lesion produced by an embolectomy catheter.
  • (5) Phase shifts of firing frequency relative to sinusoidally vaired chair position varied in units with different tonic discharge frequencies.
  • (6) The cyt-20-1 mutation in the vaIRS ORF results in severe deficiencies of both mitochondrial and cytosolic vaIRS activities, whereas the un-3 mutation does not appear to result in a deficiency of these activities or of mitochondrial or cytosolic protein synthesis sufficient to account for its temperature-sensitive growth.
  • (7) The normal level of PO2 in endolymph vaires between 20 and 30 mm Hg.
  • (8) The intensity of staining in the tumours vaired from one cell to another but was ingeneral less than that found for normal C cells.
  • (9) VAIRs were only observed in patients revascularized at an early stage (p 0.02) and in 54.5 p. cent of them.
  • (10) The speed of dark adaptation vaired considerably from cell to cell.

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