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adhesion <an adhesion; adhesions> N

adhesion
adhesion
adhesion AUTO
adhesion AUTO
adhesion AUTO
adhesion AUTO
adhesion MED
adhesion MED

adhesion

adhesion ECON
adhesion ECON

adhesion contract LAW

adhesion promoter CHEM

electrostatic adhesion ELEC

molecular adhesion PHYS

specific adhesion PHYS

act of adhesion

coefficient of adhesion

contracts of adhesion ECON

force of adhesion PHYS

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
It also functions as an adhesion protein, involved in cell attachment and wound healing.
en.wikipedia.org
The forces that promote cell adhesion are not the same as the ones that promote membrane fusion.
en.wikipedia.org
It induces them to abandon their tight adhesion and assume a more mobile and loosely associated mesenchymal phenotype.
en.wikipedia.org
Presently common are self-adhering prostheses (mass-produced) which adhere well initially, but the adhesion weakens over a few months.
en.wikipedia.org
The bacterial adhesion consists primarily of an intramembranous structural protein which provides a scaffold upon which several extracellular adhesins may be attached.
en.wikipedia.org
This design was believed to better distribute the car's weight to provide the best adhesion between the wheels and the rails to prevent wheelslip.
en.wikipedia.org
With a little higher applied tractive effort the wheel spins out of control and the adhesion drops resulting in the wheel spinning even faster.
en.wikipedia.org
Although the rails at the time of the test were wet with dew, the locomotive had no rail sander for increasing adhesion of the drivers.
en.wikipedia.org
These physical factors include differential adhesion of cells and feedback oscillations between cells.
en.wikipedia.org
Similarly, focal adhesions occur between the undersurface of the greater omentum and the cephalad aspect of the transverse mesocolon.
en.wikipedia.org

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