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lab.

n. (context legal English) (abbreviation of laboratory English)

Usage examples of "lab.".

All are children of the original members of the Lab. I asked my father last weekend how they could have done it.

FBI to go on and for prosecutors to break up the Lab. Most important was a listing of the outside conspirators who had agreed to join the Group.

Still trying to suppress items found in the search, the defense lawyers called to the stand Lisa Sakevicius, an analyst from the state crime lab. She revealed that, in yet another unusual turn of events, she had driven from her office in Little Rock to assist the police in their search.

Sent it to Little Rock to the crime lab. Sent it to the FBI in Virginia, in Quantico, for them to assess it.

Aimlessly he clambered off the craft, back into the gloomy lab. There was nothing more he knew to do.

When his eyes had adjusted, he found the lab. The lock they had left was a black shadow-pit yawning in its great ungainly cluster of space-stained cylinders and globes.

Thorsen took it with him when he left the High Lab. Security never found him.

She saved my life, in fact, when I was first here from the High Lab. Barranca had hidden me in a cellar.

Thorsen brought it aboard in a computer casethe same case in which he had smuggled it down from the High Lab. He let Quin install it and gave him tech guides for it.

When you reach zero, you will get up, go out of this room, and come immediately to the lab. To the ground floor of the lab, Nikki.

In some cases an experiment in progress was transformed in design and intention by a result coming from elsewhere in the lab. As Peter Medawar pointed out many years ago in his classic essay Is the scientific paper a fraud?

Downstream, the messages our chicks give us must be incorporated into a package of knowledge that bears our stamp, is identified as the work of our lab. Packages are posters, papers, reviews, conference lectures, invited seminars - sometimes even books.

I therefore have no right to privilege the reductionist knowledge of the laboratory over the experiential knowledge of human life outside the lab. The ontological argument is more extreme.

Understanding and functioning in these worlds, it seems, demands radically different epistemologies from the controlled reductionism of the lab. Am I then an irretrievably fractured person, entering and re-entering these different worlds of meaning?

However, such visits were brief, and until the institute was ready Martin would continue research in his Cambridge lab. Apart from the necessary excursions to Harlow, Martin insisted that his time not be taken up by administrative matters which others could handle-a strategy already endorsed by Sam Hawthorne and implemented by Celia.