The sound makes the eardrum vibrate, which in turn causes a series of three tiny bones in the middle ear to vibrate. |
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Today I asked your child to depress the right pedal, to stop the action of the dampers so that the strings could vibrate freely. |
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The nervous system and sensory system are simple, although some species vibrate their compound eyes to gather more visual information. |
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They zapped the clusters with infrared light and microwaves to make the molecules vibrate and spin. |
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Both of the fish vibrate intensely while eggs and milt are simultaneously discharged. |
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The fingerhole on each pipe does not affect pitch, but when it is closed the airstream forces the respective reed to vibrate. |
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Lines pulse or vibrate, and ghostly dots flash at the intersections of lines. |
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I noticed that as it held the plant in its forepaws, it rapidly moved its face and mouth, so that at times they appeared to vibrate. |
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Newton concluded that these forms of light vibrate at different frequencies. |
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The captured waves vibrate the eardrum and tiny bones of the middle ear to amplify and pass the sound to the inner ear. |
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The researchers used quartz crystals, like the wave transmitters in televisions and radios, which vibrate in an electrical field. |
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The best way to counter this form of corporate espionage is to mount tiny mechanical motors into the window frame to vibrate the glass. |
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Bells, however, vibrate in different ways to stringed instruments and so require a different tuning treatment. |
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Functioning like tuning forks, the stones vibrate or relay the EM world frequency. |
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Buttons on the cane's handle vibrate gently to warn a user to dodge low ceilings and sidestep objects blocking their path. |
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Thinking of a satisfying bass guitar sound, a twang which makes the room vibrate but doesn't go through the ears at all. |
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A type of abstract art that exploits certain optical phenomena to cause a work to seem to vibrate, pulsate, or flicker. |
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Once the blade struck something, it would vibrate at an ultrasonic frequency, making the gash even bigger. |
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The kingsnake may discharge musk from glands at the base of the tail and vibrate its tail when disturbed. |
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When the prongs of a tuning fork vibrate back and forth in a regular manner, a periodic sound is produced. |
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As we headed to the vector, our aircraft, without warning, began to vibrate violently. |
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These bones vibrate in succession and move the lower membrane of the organ of corti located in the cochlea of the inner ear. |
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They vibrate with emotions that do not simply serve the story, but rather power-charge it. |
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An object exposed to its resonant frequency will vibrate in sympathy with the sound. |
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When you speak, air rushes from your lungs and makes your vocal cords vibrate, producing the sound of your voice. |
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Ryley was jolted by the power of the system and felt her inside vibrate to the sound of the bass. |
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Thus a plurality of coupled vibratory systems are provided, tuned to one another, which vibrate with one another at the same frequency. |
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The vocal cords vibrate when air is expired through the glottis, creating sound waves in the column of air within the pharynx, nose, and mouth. |
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The researcher believes giraffes may use Helmholtz resonance, causing the air in their long windpipes to vibrate at a low pitch. |
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The sudden eruption of gunfire was so thunderous that the very air seemed to vibrate. |
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A crystal connected to an alternating voltage source will vibrate, generating an alternating voltage. |
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Three small bones vibrate with the sound, passing the vibrations to the inner ear. |
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It features an 8-inch touch-navigation screen and rubberized handgrips that vibrate for heightened effect. |
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In the presence of a magnetic field, the Lorentz force causes the resonator to vibrate. |
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I looked at the receiver when I pulled it away from my ear, then slammed it down on the body causing it to vibrate with a low-pitched hum. |
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Because the string is magnetized, the magnetic field surrounding it will also vibrate with the string. |
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The manakins vibrate their wings at more than 100 cycles per second, twice the speed of hummingbirds. |
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When a propeller produces thrust, aerodynamic and mechanical forces are present that cause the blade to vibrate. |
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The tiny dimensions of the device allowed it to vibrate quickly, achieving a millions-of-cycles-per-second frequency of 23.57 megahertz. |
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Forgive the trespasses of others and of nations and to set free the division of hearts and allow the fullness of our heart to pulsate and vibrate at the core. |
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The floor began to vibrate from all of the feet stomping and dancing. |
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For most men, the vocal folds in the larynx, or voice box, vibrate 100 times per second as air passes from the windpipe into the mouth and through the lips. |
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The soft tissues in the upper airway vibrate when you breathe in and out. |
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The sitar also has resonator strings that vibrate harmonically with the main strings and adds sustain to the main strings by the same principle, aka feedback. |
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The inner ear has small hairs rooted in fluid and when tympanic responses from sound goes through three small bones the hairs vibrate, or oscillate in sympathy. |
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Dozens of cultivation tools are at the organic producer's disposal, he added, from rotary hoes to new machines that simply vibrate soil to uproot newly sprouted weeds. |
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They used piezoelectric motors and nanocircuitry to make the blade they were installed in vibrate very rapidly, greatly increasing its cutting power. |
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While drive rail mounts could potentially allow the drive to move or vibrate slightly after it is installed, the drive fits so tightly that it is not going to move. |
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It is this centrifugal force, which varies with the square power of the exciter speed, that causes the machine to vibrate, move forward, and compact the soil. |
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The problem was that our tea blender made the entire building vibrate. |
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My gloved fingertips, soaked with blood on his pulseless groin, started to vibrate. |
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Should a solar flare vibrate the interstellar plasma in the next few years, the tone would be higher still. |
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The buildings in the centre of Sofia are of impressive proportions and it feels great to hear how they vibrate to the sound and how the music resonates against their windows. |
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To keep you off your seat and on your feet, many trackers will even vibrate after a certain timeframe of inactivity. |
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The beautifully spun yarns can still vibrate with strong primary reds, yellows and blues, into the more sophisticated variations of mauve, delicate pinks and maroons. |
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A mathematical string can vibrate in many patterns, which represent a different type of particle, and among these are certain patterns that represent massless particles. |
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A ceramic wall decoration split in half while I caught the television before it could vibrate all the way off of its stand. |
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The Aeolian Harp took its fundamental form from the traditional wind harp, an instrument that plays ethereal, random music as wind currents move over and vibrate its strings. |
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The tymbals on either side of a male's abdomen vibrate to make the racket for which cicadas are famous. |
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But plumping it up allows the two cords to meet and gives the nonparalyzed one a better surface to vibrate against. |
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They then puff out the throat and with a closed mouth, begin to vibrate air. |
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At the articulatory level, a voiced sound is one in which the vocal folds vibrate, and a voiceless sound is one in which they do not. |
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She decided to tackle 80 lipsticks with Raman spectroscopy, which zaps a sample with laser light, making some of the molecules vibrate. |
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But when it is strung on a guitar, tuned, and plucked, the string forces the sides of the soundbox to vibrate at the same frequency. |
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Vibration of the diaphragm caused a needle to vibrate in the water, varying the electrical resistance in the circuit. |
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Most species either scrape bones together or vibrate air-filled swim bladders. |
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When a sound wave hits a green anole lizard, for instance, the energy causes the lizard's chest wall to vibrate in tune with the wave. |
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Scientists in America devised special insoles that vibrate under the feet without being felt. |
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Once open, it continues to vibrate, becoming a fully automatic discharger and bridge-breaker, promoting a free flow of even the most difficult to discharge materials. |
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I suspect the key is in the relation between the way the four quadrants of each plate vibrate and how they interact with the air inside the violine. |
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He will need to explain to me how colours can vibrate in the sky of Teesside, because how colours can vibrate is beyond the imagination of a humble Luddite like me. |
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Please put your cellphones on vibrate for the duration of the meeting. |
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