Examples of frog
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
Kinetics of long-lived rhodopsin photoproducts in the frog retina as a function of the amount bleached.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Photoreceptor shedding is initiated by light in the frog retina.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
To obtain embryos, the same female frog used for collecting oocytes was allowed to recover for 2 weeks from the surgery.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
This inter twining may have included co-fasciculation like that described above for the frog, although it was not specifically mentioned.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Individual frogs were placed in an arena with uniformly colored white walls.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
The skin was sutured and the frog allowed to survive for 1-3 days.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
This could enable frogs to accurately find a single object and to select the most nasal object when there is more than one object visible.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
The frogs were maintained in plastic tanks (23 cm x 16 cm x 11 cm) with water and food (mealworms) available ad libitum.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Evidence that fast exocytosis can be predominantly mediated by vesicles not docked at active zones in frog saccular hair cells.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
It hardly "corroborates his identification with the frogs"; it holds it up for laughter (142).
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Its usage helped sustain reference across the full range of this discourse, from the frog's reflexes to the crowd's violence.
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The leap-frog method is adopted to solve the ion's equation of motion.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
The movement of dust particles is obtained by calculating the equation of motion using the leap-frog method.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
These plasmids were injected into early-stage embryos of the frog and, after a period of cell divisions, recovered from the embryos.
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Our study indicates strong similarity between frogs and lizards in diet despite enormous differences in physiology and behaviour.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Evidence for spatial regularity among retinal ganglion cells that project to the accessory optic system in a frog, a reptile, a bird, and a mammal.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
More deformities were found in adult frogs implying that pesticide exposure and trematode infection may contribute to the global decline of amphibian populations.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
The frog presumably becomes infected by ingesting infected copepods during its tadpole stage.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Modulation of the delayed rectifier potassium current in frog cardiomyocytes by betaadrenergic agonists and magnesium.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Reflecting off the wall, the sound projected out towards the frogs, seeming temporarily to expand, and add elevation to, the frogs' zone.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Very rarely, frogs fall from the sky, we call that ---.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
This was summed up in the local proverb: 'the frog leaps into the basket' (that's all there is to it).
From the Cambridge English Corpus
According to our survey responses, most patients in our investigation did not have direct contact with a frog or toad.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
This finding suggests ongoing exposure to frogs, toads and turtles throughout the epidemic period.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
