English to Punjabi Dictionary interstitial

interstitial

ਇੰਟਰਸਟੀਸ਼ਿਲ
definition
adjective
the interstitial space
of, forming, or occupying interstices.
example
While uncertain, this 'interstitial' space of unknowing was refreshing in its dislocation from the daily constraints posed by plantation culture.
Who knows what other microarthropods are lurking in the sand beneath, 'interstitial' fauna inhabiting the chinks of the world.
The unconsolidated sediments in running water are an important interstitial habitat; in many cases, the 'interstitial' aquatic genera overlap those found in caves.
This fluid then contains cells which were contained in the very small air sacs of the lung, where the inflammation begins in 'interstitial' lung disease.
This is how the restless energies of the poem construct the door between inside and outside, which is the 'interstitial' space of our real dwelling.
All macrodasyids are marine 'interstitial' animals that live between sand grains to which they adhere with the aid of adhesive tubules that are distributed along their whole body.
A major challenge lies, therefore, in crafting 'interstitial' spaces beyond the hegemonic where feminism and popular mobilization can reside.
This 'interstitial' space would become a sliver between the new glassy condo tower and the ‘worth-keeping’ old tower in Lucien Lagrange's design.
Without decent wages, too often our populations have to dip into the grey 'interstitial' corners of making a living to survive and to deal with bare versions of what allows human beings to emerge without immense psychic and physical damage.
The interest you see in London with dirt, the abject, and those uncontrollable 'interstitial' spaces is a little mark of resistance against that process.
The most important of these 'interstitial' spaces are the gallery vestibules, which are emphasised by lace-like fretwork ceilings.
Through the forces of adhesion, surface tension, and cohesion, water can be drawn up ward, well above the water table, through very narrow 'interstitial' passageways such as those found in fine soils.
Within what is essentially an office building, Schultes has created sculptural scenography out of 'interstitial' space.
How important are rotifers to the ecology of springs and soils, 'interstitial' , and periphytic habitats?
The public streets will become little more than the 'interstitial' space to these fortified private cores.
The fluid, bending form creates an always-varying 'interstitial' space in the courtyard as it rises to about the height of the existing cornice.
Sandwiched between old and new facades on south and east is an 'interstitial' space incorporating the original balconies and new stretches of corridor.
The 'interstitial' space may be occasionally disruptive of hegemonic articulations, but it can also represent the economic and cultural powerlessness of the unwilling migrant.
Moreover, the angel creates an 'interstitial' space that seeks to regain the purity of the first garden but benefits from the knowledge of the second and, thereby, transcends both.
Thus, the analysis should not be unfamiliar to scholars in either Cultural Studies or the Sociology of Sport, for it occupies a largely unmapped 'interstitial' space between the two.
Held in place by steel flanges and lined internally with horizontal planks of pine, the segmented lead roof casings curve out and extend down the flanks of the halls, creating 'interstitial' space for escape stairs.
Through the 'interstitial' spaces of those rows, segments of the winding hard-edged lines can be seen.
Modular panels permit easy access to the 'interstitial' space for rewiring and servicing exhibitions.
Both foggy white boxes contain one sealed inner box, flowing 'interstitial' foyer space and, as finale, a single punctured window aligned with one or other of the adjacent hills that cradle San Sebastian.
Other animals such as echinoderms and 'interstitial' worms can attach and let go on a time scale of seconds.
Condensation may occur at some distance from the source of the moisture, normally on wall surfaces, in cavities, or 'interstitially' within building materials.
Our simultaneously living in these strongly and starkly differing worlds is one more powerful instance of our living in a between, living liminally, 'interstitially' where we attempt aporias and try to stay alive at the same time.
A new and unexpected finding is that the influence of telomere proximity extends to ectopic recombination between homologous sequences located 'interstitially' .
This oyster also has moderate inflammatory changes in other tissues, both 'interstitially' and associated with vessels.
They are found from intertidal to abyssal zones at least as deep as 5,300 m 'interstitially' in usually the upper few millimeters or centimeters of the sediment layer.
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