Sentences with phrase «relatively narrow band»

As the most premium Kindle reader, the device is targeted at a relatively narrow band of consumers — those who want an essentially single - function device with a premium build.
Canada's population is concentrated in a relatively narrow band paralleling the Canada - US border.
You soon find yourself adjusting your driving style to suit the relatively narrow band of power from the engine.
The heart of a jet stream is a relatively narrow band of strong wind a few hundred miles wide that can reach speeds of more than 200 miles per hour.
That was all right when the euro was trading in a relatively narrow band.

Not exact matches

Most bird species studied produce relatively narrow - band, tonal songs that lack the complex formant patterns prominent in human speech.
This confines the stratus deck to a relatively narrow vertical band in the atmosphere, allowing it to strengthen.
When one looks at Yellow Jacket, 1969, one notices yellow used in a variety of ways: On the right, narrow vertical lines of yellow are tightly interspersed with orange lines; on the left, blue and pink stripes are sandwiched between relatively wide bands of lemon; and in roughly the center, medium - size gold stripes emerge from within a broad swath of lime green.
As far as I can judge, the relatively narrow error bands are obtained through this kind of approach.
I agree with the overall scenario (and was actually thinking of posting something similar), except that I suspect that instabilities and the Earth's rotation would cause the pattern to break up into relatively narrow latitudinal bands perhaps as little as a few tens of kilometres wide, with a sort of helical circulation in each (like a rope).
This, too, is a function of the relatively rigid or narrow epistemology that law has; when signals can only be received in a narrow band of frequencies (to switch metaphors as well) an increase in the rate of signals leads ultimately to noise.
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