Omega in a sentence as a noun

That's the alpha and the omega of Miranda.

I am the source code, the documentation, the alpha build, the omega build.

Sound intensity for a plane wave is given by the equation $I = \xi^2 \omega^2 c \rho$.

DHA in omega 3 is important for optimal brain function.

Our food supply has changed; sixty years ago when cows ate grasses, beef naturally had some omega-3s in it.

He's showing his place as an "omega" and looking for support form others, because that's what he needs the most at that moment.

I am not an expert, but I've read in many places that the omega-3 in flax oil is far inferior, to the point of almost being worthless, compared with fish oil.

[c] And omega-3 fatty acids have no visible effect when examined in the rigorous way in which we examine any other new drug.

Many speakers do a good job, but there are some who will start out with "Let M be a symplectic manifold, let omega be the associated bilinear form, let X be the ring of differentials, ..." [ugh.]And yet I think there is more pressure to write and speak well than there is to do so poorly.

Seriously, if you aren't getting enough omega 3 fatty acids, either from regularly eating lots of fatty fish or through supplementation, you're seriously missing out on some good stuff.

The omega balance raising IQs and resulting in more eco-scientists, sociologists, and general income for the government or charities for retooling of bronze-age fisherpeople.

There was also no difference in protein or fat content between organic and conventional milk, though evidence from a limited number of studies suggested that organic milk may contain significantly higher levels of omega-3 fatty acids.

Omega definitions

noun

the ending of a series or sequence; "the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end"--Revelation

noun

the last (24th) letter of the Greek alphabet