Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The canoe is also represented mnemonically in selected works by way of highly constructed small sculptures.
But Toby might also have to help him reorient his son's mnemonically obliterated shell.
Your instructions have been mnemonically implanted in your subconscious.
"Remember it mnemonically: C for ceiling, G for ground.
Were Marcel Proust to come to Lawson, he would find his madeleines daily but made smaller, sweeter and mnemonically new.
Some neurons also responded mnemonically, becoming active when a part of the body moved through space and approached the remembered location of an object in the dark.
Several of the CPK colors refer mnemonically to colors of the pure elements or notable compound.
(double quote, mnemonically like the dots above the umlaut) An LED on the keyboard indicated an on-going compose sequence.
Among the ancients the beginning ("resh pasuḳ") of a verse rather than the end ("sof pasuḳ") was emphasized, since the former was important mnemonically.
The vocabulary is "from scratch", yet based on internal lexical and semantic rules that help the learner to construct and deconstruct derivations logically, mnemonically, and consistently.
"You can distinguish them from stalagmites mnemonically by thinking of the C in stalactite as standing for ceiling, and the G in Stalagmite as standing for ground.
The expected additive memory benefit of dual coding has been confirmed in numerous experiments which also suggested that the nonverbal code is mnemonically stronger (contributes more to the additive effect) than the verbal code.
Originally titled "The Alzheimer Case," this mnemonically minded film opens as two separate stories - one involving an idealistic young cop, the other an older hardbitten assassin - that clue by clue, break by break, eventually twist together.
It is difficult to imagine telling a judge that MYLEGS (marriage contracts, those of a year or longer, concerning land, executor's contracts, goods worth more than $500 and suretyships) mnemonically spells out the times when contracts fall under the statute of frauds.
The Iroquois, living around the Great Lakes and extending east and north, used strings or belts called wampum that served a dual function: the knots and beaded designs mnemonically chronicled tribal stories and legends, and further served as a medium of exchange and a unit of measure.