Examples of using Microscopes in English and their translations into Turkish
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
Why so many microscopes?
Microscopes, the internet, tentacle polish.
See these two microscopes?
I had two microscopes disappear yesterday.
Developing the newest atomic force microscopes.
Chairs, microscopes, school supplies.- Um… Desks.
I was in a lab, amongst test tubes and microscopes.
Gadgets like these telescopes, microscopes, and so on are immensely powerful.
I was in a lab, amongst test tubes and microscopes.
Two main types of electron microscopes exist: transmission and scanning.
It's… was In a lab, amongst ton tube: and microscopes.
No, just some microscopes and test tubes and beakers and maybe a brain.
Like you with your telescopes and your microscopes.
And microscopes that we have today can actually see individual atoms.
Well, Virgil, we don't need you or your microscopes anymore!
With the development of modern microscopes in the 20th century, the discovery was confirmed.
I was justkeeping her busy while Nelson stole microscopes.
However, electron microscopes are expensive instruments that are costly to maintain.
It's only gonnabe a matter of days before they start sticking microscopes up our ass.
By comparison, electron microscopes are limited by the de Broglie wavelength of the electron.
In the 1920s Dr.Rife invented one of the most advanced microscopes of his time.
Let them bring their X-rays, their microscopes even their nuclear weapons if they like.
This stadium-sized buildinghouses one of the world's most powerful microscopes.
Same microscopes, same dead frogs, same inexplicable urge to take human beings apart.
And nearing the limit of our most powerful microscopes, single carbon atoms.
Current microscopes allow us to observe with fine detail the molecular structure of materials.
Maybe it's different in laboratories,where you guys just play with your own little microscopes all day.
In blue light, conventional optical microscopes have a diffraction-limited resolution of about 200 nm.
The diffraction limit is a feature of conventional lenses and microscopes that limits the fineness of their resolution.
There were now well-engineered microscopes on every laboratory bench, used to expose new wonders.