artificial substitutes造句
例句与造句
- The plasma is then replaced with an artificial substitute before the blood is returned.
- The US Sugar Association has launched a campaign to promote sugar over artificial substitutes.
- Its name comes from its intended use as an artificial substitute for ebony wood.
- One solution to bear poaching is to fund research in Asia to find artificial substitutes, he said.
- Only a few years ago, scientists believed that transplants or artificial substitutes were all that could be used for such purposes.
- It's difficult to find artificial substitutes in a sentence. 用artificial substitutes造句挺难的
- However, there has been a long, ongoing struggle between corporations promoting artificial substitutes and grassroots organisations and WHO promoting breastfeeding.
- The silk also could be used to make artificial ligaments or tendons, Lewis said, for which there are no effective artificial substitutes now.
- Parian Ware is an artificial substitute for marble, originally a brand name for a variety of unglazed bisque porcelain, developed in 1842 in England.
- For example, programs for a combined specialty in prosthodontics ( the replacement of missing teeth ) and maxillofacial prosthetics ( the use of artificial substitutes for missing jaw and facial structures ) generally take 45 months.
- In 1948, SRI began research and consultation with Chevron Corporation to develop an artificial substitute for tallow and coconut oil in soap production; SRI's investigation confirmed the potential of dodecylbenzene as a suitable replacement.
- Pattern analysis constitutes a critical building block in the development of gas sensor array instruments capable of detecting, identifying, and measuring volatile compounds, a technology that has been proposed as an artificial substitute for the human olfactory system.
- 'Glover once [ 1931 ] wrote a very interesting paper in which he investigated the ways in which incomplete or inexact interpretations, and also other psychotherapeutic procedures, influence the patient's mind . . . [ as ] artificial substitute symptoms, which may make the spontaneous symptoms superfluous.