Traits
in sentence
286 examples of Traits in a sentence
Weather causes the feelings to assume the physical
traits
of the weather they represent.
What if we could take multimeasure tests and make them scalable and accessible, and provide data to employers about really what the
traits
are of someone who can make them a good fit for a job?
But if you clap immediately on red and sometimes clap on green, that might mean that you're more impulsive and creative, and we've found that top-performing salespeople often embody these
traits.
He said successful wrestlers find the
traits
within themselves they're the strongest at and make those the focus of who they become in the ring.
Like the skeletons, the teeth present a mix of primitive and derived
traits.
No other species exists with this mix of primitive and derived
traits.
These algorithms can quite easily infer things like your people's ethnicity, religious and political views, personality traits, intelligence, happiness, use of addictive substances, parental separation, age and genders, just from Facebook likes.
It doesn't mean that you've got to turn into an extrovert and burn out, because that's no use for anyone, but what it does mean is that you should value the skills and the
traits
that you have that activism needs.
And as these more docile scavengers outlasted their aggressive brethren, their genetic
traits
were passed on, gradually breeding tamer wolves in areas near human populations.
Generations of selection for tameness have favored more juvenile and submissive
traits
that were pleasing to humans.
This phenomenon of selecting
traits
associated with youth is known as neoteny, and can be seen in many domestic animals.
Those are the three
traits
we want to change: more suberin, more roots, and the last one, deep roots.
Then we want to combine all those
traits
in one plant, and we can do that easily and we will do it, and we are doing it actually, in the model plant, Arabidopsis, which allows us to do these experiments much faster than we can do in another big plant.
And the reason is because, just in the last year, we've been able to find single genes that affect each of those three
traits.
I mean, we share the most
traits
in common.
I think that's one of the main changes, also, in architecture: that we're starting to look now not for some ideal form, like a Latin cross for a church, but actually all the
traits
of a church: so, light that comes from behind from an invisible source, directionality that focuses you towards an altar.
You just need to incorporate a certain number of
traits
in a very kind of genetic way.
We do not know what challenges lie ahead and what new
traits
will be necessary, but the more diversity we can safeguard now, the better the chances are that we will have the suitable varieties at hand for the future.
The gender, the race, the personality
traits
you were born with might be something you want to experiment differently with.
So they have very few genes and genetic information to encode all of the
traits
that they carry out.
And in that process that's going to morph from being just for diseases, to being for lesser vulnerabilities, like risk of manic depression or something, to picking personalities, temperaments, traits, these sorts of things.
Natural selection simply means that
traits
which help an organism survive and reproduce in a given environment are more likely to make it to the next generation.
As the environment changes,
traits
that were once useful can become harmful.
Those
traits
are often selected against, meaning they gradually disappear from the population.
Vestigial
traits
can persist when there’s no incentive to lose them— but since there’s also no incentive to keep them, random mutations will sometimes still eliminate them from part of the population.
We're all born into certain circumstances with particular physical traits, unique developmental experiences, geographical and historical contexts.
At that time, many people believed in eugenics, the idea that desirable and undesirable genetic
traits
could and should be controlled in humans through selective breeding.
This phenomenon, known as the Flynn Effect, happened much too fast to be caused by inherited evolutionary
traits.
So we're working with George Church at Harvard, who has already moved the genes for four major
traits
from the now well-preserved, well-studied genome of the woolly mammoth, thanks to so-called "ancient DNA analysis."
So you're now getting basically Asian elephant germline cells that are effectively in terms of the
traits
that you're going for to be comfortable in the Arctic, you're getting them in there.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Character
Genetic
Which
Personality
There
Other
People
Human
Could
While
Certain
About
Three
Individuals
Genes
Being
Power
Years
Selection