Sentences with phrase «suck less air»

Not exact matches

This baby bottle comes with a very unique nipple for each baby bottle, a unique nipple within a nipple design that tends to produce less air when baby is sucking.
The liners of this baby bottle collapse to allow baby to suck in less air.
Due to this design, we found that baby gulps in less air while sucking milk.
It is thought that bottle fed babies can take down too much air while sucking on the teat of the bottle while babies feeding from the breast are better able to control the flow of milk and therefore trap less air (they are also more likely to be fed in an upright position which also helps).
So, with none of the others sucking the air out of the room, space exists for a less - conventional candidate to get attention.
On a sprawling roof that covers most of a city block a kind of park has been laid, sucking up carbon dioxide and other air pollution, filtering rainfall, making it less acidic.
Now, if you have all this very cold, nearly freezing water surrounding these ice caps, sucking up carbon dioxide out of the polar atmosphere, at nearly the highest possible rate, 30 times faster than oxygen, and 70 times faster than nitrogen, doesn't it stand to reason that the air that remains might just have a lot less carbon dioxide in it than the atmosphere across the rest of the planet?
In other words, we would need to grow crops that suck CO2 from the air, then burn them to generate electricity and store the resulting gases so there is less CO2 in the atmosphere overall.
Well - hydrated hair is less likely to suck up moisture from the air.
At any rate come January 2016, publishers will doubtlessly be sucking air through their teeth looking at the low sales figures of their great white AAA hope for Q4 and some less patient publishers will probably fire some talented developers and close studios.
Other schemes, such as the machines designed to suck CO2 directly out of the air, are far less controversial, since all they aim to do is remove a pollutant that humans are adding to the air.
Some scientists speak of a hypothesis known as «warm Arctic, cold continents» as the polar vortex becomes less stable - sucking in more warm air and expelling more cold fronts, such as those currently being experienced in the UK and northern Europe.
The warmer the air — and the less moisture in it — the stronger that air will suck.
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