English to Urdu Dictionary replicate

replicate

نقل تیار
definition
verb
it might be impractical to replicate eastern culture in the west
make an exact copy of; reproduce.
noun
Subsequently, groups were randomly assigned to receive one of the three supplemental treatments (corn, rice bran, or soybean hulls), resulting in three replicates each of two years.
a close or exact copy; a replica.
a tone one or more octaves above or below the given tone.
adjective
a replicate Earth
of the nature of a copy.
example
It argues for eliminating ‘cookbook labs,’ in which students 'replicate' experiments where the results are already known.
Vermeer experimented with this device and took pains to 'replicate' the optical distortions observed through the apparatus, such as discrepancies of scale, collapsed perspective, halations, and blurred focus.
In another plaque, Prussian blue pigment, meant to 'replicate' copper corrosion, obscures much of the surface.
She does idealize the island, at times, particularly as her characters try to 'replicate' island culture within their (often dismal) mainland barrios.
Hobby's architectural hypothesis that places parent-child bonds at the core of all forms of love is true on this view because of the operation of universal organic drives to reproduce or 'replicate' ourselves.
It works on strict adherence to the scientific method, through double-blind studies, good lab practices, etc. and the ability to 'replicate' results.
The foregoing simulation simply assumes that the trials 'replicate' themselves based on what works.
This is of particular importance since the surviving imperial portraits are copies that 'replicate' officially sanctioned prototypes with varying degrees of fidelity and skill.
Perhaps they 'replicate' each other and work together on occasion, but their roles are different.
In particular, it would be important to 'replicate' this study using different cultural products in order to see if the observed effects can be generalized across art product categories.
This vaccine induces protective immunity but does not allow the virus to 'replicate' - copy itself - or pass from bird to bird.
It's not 'replicable' anywhere else but in a museum.
Researchers also had to tweak the organism's DNA so it would expend most of its energy making propanediol rather than 'replicating itself' .
‘This method 'replicates' how problems occur in life,’ he says.
Because the tests were conducted on corn grown in 'replicated' experiments, they could determine if the diagnostic test level accurately matched the plant response.
In the days before xerox machines, a carbon copy was the best way of 'replicating' a piece of writing.
When serum is present, alpha-defensin - 1 acts on vulnerable cells to block HIV infection at the stage when the virus is taken up by the cell and begins 'replicating itself' and integrating into the host.
The form of the headdress also almost completely 'replicates' the form of the short-handled agricultural hoe.
In 'replicated' trials, the hybrid was also resistant to Colorado potato beetle, an insect costing U.S. potato, tomato, and eggplant growers about $150 million annually.
But when Diener announced his discovery, he was overturning scientific dogma that held that an organism with no proteins couldn't 'replicate itself' .
However, with the amount media circulating today there is no communication by 'replicating' traditional design principles.
Cloning will be used for far more than 'replicating' a mammal or reproducing a child.
This result is not consistently 'replicated' in a more recent study by Davis-Friday, Liu, and Mittelstaedt.
And in doing so, the gene creates copies of its genetic material by 'replicating itself' through intricate processes of cell division.
In a sense, this private menagerie 'replicates' the oldest of human/animal relationships which was the aristocratic privilege of ownership that was the prevalent model until the French Revolution.
Every time a chromosome 'replicates itself' , its telomeres shorten in length.
Nebraska farmer Jerry Mulliken has conducted 'replicated' trials for six years to assess the effect of row cleaning operations prior to corn planting.
In most cases what is understood as ‘fact’ by scientists has withstood the tests of self-consistency, 'replicability' and peer-review, which are key to the validation of scientific knowledge.
This allows experiments to be 'replicated' independently by anyone skeptical of the original results.
As with all such research, its success hinges on findings whose results can be 'replicated' .
Credits: Google Translate
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