In-situ in a sentence as an adjective

No clue what an in-situ find is. They look at the PR, look-up a few background factoids, rewrite the piece and publish it.

This hits close to home because my wife was diagnosed with Stage 0 Melanoma-in-situ when she was 35 years old. We have three kids of our own and imagining them growing up without their mother is terrifying.

I wonder what some sort of self-assembing/modular device that can be fed in chunks through a vein catheter or keyhole surgery, and built in-situ could be plausible. Not sure what to do about the MRI issue though.

So theres a somewhat sophisticated message protocol that allows for variable-length fields that they parse in-situ into a _fixed size_ buffer allocated on the _stack_? Come on, its not the 90s anymore.

What is masked by some of the hoopla around cancer is exactly this, gene therapy is advancing, and it can rewrite your DNA in-situ. This meets pretty much every definition of the term 'game changing' from atheletes who want the Sherpa gene for making more red blood cells to a host of genetic disorders that lead to a myriad of complications in the patients life.

The people who want in-situ transit directions, want Google's much superior search experience, and those who got screwed over by Apple not covering their geographic area particularly well - will be happy about this upgrade though.

If there are enough organics of the right kind, they could be used to make thin films, possibly allowing solar sails to be made in-situ. Combining this with the abundant energy and the advantageous combination of being low in the Sun's gravity well, this makes Mercury a prime location both for energy-intensive industry and export to the rest of the solar system.

In-situ definitions

adjective

being in the original position; not having been moved; "the archeologists could date the vase because it was in-situ"; "an in-situ investigator"

See also: unmoved