Elongation in a sentence as a noun

I remember that it is due to a single plant hormone that stunts the elongation of cells.

It was at its greatest elongation from the Sun in late March, so of course it's very visible.

A simple elongation of the phone really doesn't fit in any mental model I have of Apple's design decisions.

> I have thought about this myself, but I thought that elongation being permanent or difficult to reverse was intuitive.

I have thought about this myself, but I thought that elongation being permanent or difficult to reverse was intuitive.

It plays its a normal role as a polymerase catalyzing the elongation of a new DNA molecule by adding a monomer.

Part of your current deficiency is ciliary, part is axial elongation.

It would be interesting to test it, since the clock elongation should be visible when you measure instruction timing relative to a clock not affected by the adaptation.

If your eye elongated to adapt and you trash benefits of this elongation by wearing glasses without changing you lifestyle then you encourage further elongation.

Accept if it’s an elongation; reject if the reader takes two attempts to start the word.”Again, this almost categorically excludes people with a stutter and other types of speech disorders.

"but unless it is a natural thread I'm sure zip ties can be made from that material"A zip tie requires a different combination of compression strength, tensile strength, and elongation stability compared with lacing.

The higher rates reflect a more efficient ALA elongation process in mice and rats"It specifically states that ALA->DHA is only a phenomena that occurs in rats and not humans.>Studies on rats are far from conclusive... but then why claim it's a human-health fact?Exactly my point.

Elongation definitions

noun

the quality of being elongated

noun

an addition to the length of something

See also: extension

noun

the act of lengthening something