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This setter could form anagram with 'man'
Answer for the clue "This setter could form anagram with 'man' ", 4 letters:
agar
Alternative clues for the word agar
Usage examples of agar.
Cut to Agar, inventor of the atomic napalm, holding Mara Corday on a hill above the burning city and the charring monster.
Chemicals, but it did not consume much space: the salt, the agar, a small box of lye, six ounces of absolute alcohol and four of formalin.
Meanwhile, he busied himself adjusting his microscope and test-tubes and getting the agar slides ready for examination.
Its editors Herbert Agar, Ralph Borsodi, Canon Ligutti and others, all foremost in the Ruralist movement, acknowledge debt to Chesterton and are carrying on the torch.
Even with both channels, Mora Dyen and Cloris Agar, monitoring, he thrashed through four aborts before they could get the transfer into him.
Highlights included checking agar emulsions used to bind skin cells for zero-G cloning, a test drill of a new depressurization protocol and a modification of the strap-on peeing device which was slightly embarrassing.
Plop them on a bed of agar and pamper them as you will, and most will just lie there, declining every inducement to bloom.
On the first occasion I had been down to visit an isolated village, on the south face of Kala Agar ridge, that had been abandoned the previous year owing to the depredations of the man-eater, and on the way back had taken a cattle track that went over the ridge and down the far side to the forest road, when, approaching a pile of rocks, I suddenly felt there was danger ahead.
As soon as Digen walked in the door, Cloris Agar stepped out of one of the cubicles partitioned off by heavy insulating drapes.
The blood clock was a rotating dish that held a circular slab of blood agar.
The virulent strain was removed from the pigeons and subcultured onto blood agar plates.
Along with the usual laboratory standbys-- horse and sheep blood agar, chocolate agar, simplex, Sabourad's medium-- there were thirty diagnostic media, containing various sugars and minerals.
Along with the usual laboratory standbys-- horse and sheep blood agar, chocolate agar, simplex, Sabourad’.
Using a sanple of blood taken from the body of Gary Wechlas, she was methodically contaminating a series of growth media, jellied compounds filled with nutrients on which bacteria generally thrived: horse blood agar, sheep blood agar, simplex, chocolate agar, and many others.
It had all cost a pretty penny, Agar was certain of that, and it meant the pogue was well worth having.