Sentences with phrase «like repeating that sequence»

Prior to that, Modric featured heavily in 15 of Madrid's 22 consecutive wins back before Christmas, and the side has not looked like repeating that sequence.

Not exact matches

Many of these repeats, including some genes, appear as back - to - back series of the same repeated sequence or as long palindromes which, like the word «racecar,» read the same forward and backward.
The bottom line is that it has been very difficult to understand what the contiguous DNA sequences really look like, when these tandem repeats appear to make up an enormous amount of exactly similar pieces in an enormous jigsaw puzzle,» explains Lex Nederbragt.
Still other repeat sequences, like the one above but longer, may encourage rearrangement of DNA within specific genes.
Many of these little pieces come from stretches of repeated DNA sequences, so putting together the coffee genome is a little bit like putting together a puzzle that is mostly the same color.
When you're ready, simply repeat these moves with the left foot stepping back.Roll through this sequence as many times as you would like, and feel free to sit in meditation when you are done to increase your awareness and focus for the rest of the day.
Repeat the entire sequence for two rounds — or better yet, four rounds — and you'll get a you - versus - gravity aerobic workout like never before.
For one thing, the story is almost a beat - for - beat repeat of James Cameron's Aliens, while the visual grammar of both the action sequences and the designs is heavily inspired by the video game likes of Gears of War.
Right on target with expectations are the repeated sequences of characters outrunning all sorts of things, like the giant chasms caused by earthquakes, rocketing fireballs, and plumes of smoke and ash, while on foot, in cars, and airborne.
If you like, repeat this sequence a few times.
Catch orbs of energy by clicking on them or play games like grabbing moving letters to spell words, building jigsaw puzzles and repeating sequences of flashing symbols.
The passing time is displayed as a series of still frames, or a rapid sequence of moments, ever flowing like the waves that break on the shore, like a repeated chant with no beginning, middle or end.
The most startling work is Klaus vom Bruch's video «On War & Peace & Art» (1995), which replays endlessly a snatch of historical film footage over a repeated sequence of unintelligible voices electronically altered to sound like something between barking and birdsong.
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