Nghĩa của từ flowing to bằng Tiếng Đức
flowing to [flouiŋtou] zufließend
Đặt câu có từ "flowing to"
1. Aspirin helps get more blood flowing to your legs
2. CPR keeps blood and oxygen flowing to the heart and brain.
3. An Abscess can also keep blood from flowing to parts of your brain
4. Turning on the Gmail service doesn't make mail start flowing to people's Gmail accounts.
5. • Federal Funds are flowing to Province-based programs but these will be phased out by March 31, 2006.
6. Ballasts and drivers install into lighting fixtures to regulate current and voltage flowing to the fixtures' light bulbs or LED arrays
7. As the name sounds, scapular retraction will help you open your chest and get the blood flowing to your shoulder and upper back muscles.
8. If chronic Bronchitis decreases the amount of air flowing to the lungs, it is considered to be a sign of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
9. Mid-14c., "a plentiful flowing, an abundant supply," from Old French affluence, from Latin Affluentia "affluence, abundance," literally "a flowing to," abstract noun from affluentem (nominative affluens) "flowing toward; abounding, rich, copious" (see affluent).
10. "flowing to" (of liquids), both senses now obsolete, from Old French afluent (14c.) or directly from Latin Affluentem (nominative affluens) "abounding, rich, copious," literally "flowing toward," present participle of affluere "flow toward," from ad "to" (see ad
11. "flowing to" (of liquids), both senses now obsolete, from Old French afluent (14c.) or directly from Latin Affluentem (nominative affluens) "abounding, rich, copious," literally "flowing toward," present participle of affluere "flow toward," from assimilated form of ad "to" (see ad-) + fluere "to flow" (see fluent).
12. The Alternation of contrasting hydrological phases in IRES generates dynamic variation in the respective metacommunity assembly processes, which may lead to dynamic community patterns in the network (Cañedo-Argüelles et al., 2015; Datry et al., 2016b,c).For example, shifts from flowing to nonflowing conditions are likely to cause a rapid increase in the importance of species sorting
13. Affluence mid-14c., "a plentiful flowing, an abundant supply," from Old French affluence, from Latin Affluentia "affluence, abundance," literally "a flowing to," abstract noun from affluentem (nominative affluens) "flowing toward; abounding, rich, copious" (see affluent).The notion in the figurative Latin sense is of "a plentiful flow" of the gifts of fortune, hence "wealth, abundance of
14. Affluence (n.) mid-14c., "a plentiful flowing, an abundant supply," from Old French affluence, from Latin affluentia "affluence, abundance," literally "a flowing to," abstract noun from Affluentem (nominative affluens) "flowing toward; abounding, rich, copious" (see affluent).The notion in the figurative Latin sense is of "a plentiful flow" of the gifts of fortune, hence "wealth, abundance of