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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
vitro
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
in vitro fertilization
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
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Vitro

Vitro is the largest glass producer in Mexico and one of the world's main organizations in its industry. Founded in 1909 in Monterrey, Mexico, this corporation has 30 subsidiaries in Mexico, United States, Brazil, Colombia, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Guatemala and Panama.

Its companies produce, distribute, and market a wide range of glass articles, which are part of the daily life of millions of people in 34 countries in the Americas, Europe and Asia.

Category:Companies based in Mexico City Category:Companies established in 1909 Category:1909 establishments in New Mexico Territory

Usage examples of "vitro".

Lisa and Jack went ahead with the in vitro that had been scheduled for December.

I knew from my work in cell biology that cells adhere to plastic dishes for in vitro culture, secreting their own scaffold as they settle to the bottom of the plate.

Wingate, director of the clinic as well as head of the in vitro unit, took immediate control.

In vitro gives a coherent but dangerously simplified recreation, from the calm of the studio.

Listening furiously to the last of the variations, he cannot, for a moment, choose between telling her about the in vitro idea or explaining his theory on how these musical condensations are all variations.

Code redundancy may favor an in vitro method of determining codon assignments over analyses of base and polypetide sequences.

As the details are lost on her and therefore safe, he lays out the theory of an in vitro solution just weeks away from gelling: submit the simplest imaginable message to the coding mechanism, and see what the enciphered text looks like.

They are to split their time between in vitro synthesis and computer tutorials.

Ressler tries again to interest them in in vitro, but these three refuse to concede that the codon catalog is arbitrary, devoid of internal order.

Ressler relates the in vitro successes and describes the block they now knock up against.

Flowers and their cipher-texts, smearing the one-for-one trip-wire correspondence that in vitro would isolate.

The pages fill with a complete, handwritten history of the in vitro attempt.

In vitro is still jammed, and he has nothing to fall back on but the torture of relaxation.

The last click of in vitro reverberates in his head with the clang of a meter-thick cell door being thrown wide open.

His idea is simplicity itself: they must feed the in vitro decoder a stripped-down signal of their own devising that will yield a message beyond ambiguity.