THIN vs HYPERFINE: ADJECTIVE
- Watery.
- Flowing with relative ease; not viscous.
- More rarefied than normal.
- Not dense or concentrated; sparse.
- Having little bodily flesh or fat; lean or slender.
- Not great in diameter or cross section; fine.
- Having a low number of transactions.
- Relatively small in extent from one surface to the opposite, usually in the smallest solid dimension.
- Having little substance or significance
- Not dense
- Very narrow
- Lacking excess flesh
- Relatively thin in consistency or low in density; not viscous
- Of relatively small extent from one surface to the opposite or in cross section
- (of sound) lacking resonance or volume
- Sparsely supplied or provided; scanty.
- Not full or well grown; wanting in plumpness.
- Not close; not crowded; not filling the space; not having the individuals of which the thing is composed in a close or compact state; hence, not abundant
- Rare; not dense or thick; -- applied to fluids or soft mixtures.
- Having little thickness or extent from one surface to its opposite
- Not having enough photographic density or contrast to make satisfactory prints. Used of a negative.
- Lacking radiance or intensity.
- Lacking resonance or fullness; tinny.
- Lacking spirit or sincere effort
- Lacking force or substance; flimsy.
- Extremely fine, especially of the hyperfine structure in the spectra of atoms and molecules.
- Extremely fine or thin, as in a spectral line split into two or more components
THIN vs HYPERFINE: VERB
- Take off weight
- Lessen the strength or flavor of a solution or mixture
- Lose thickness; become thin or thinner
- Make thin or thinner
- N/A
THIN vs HYPERFINE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To make thin (in any of the senses of the adjective).
- N/A
THIN vs HYPERFINE: ADVERB
- Not thickly or closely; in a seattered state.
- Without viscosity
- So as to be thin.
- In a thin manner.
- N/A
THIN vs HYPERFINE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To reduce in strength or richness: as, to thin the blood.
- To reduce in consistency or viscosity: said of liquids: as, to thin starch.
- To make less dense or compact; make sparse; specifically, to rarefy, as a gas.
- To make thin.
- Having insufficient density or contrast to give a good photographic print or a satisfactory image on the screen; weak: said of a negative or a lantern-slide.
- Having no depth: said of a school of fish.
- Scantily occupied or furnished; bare; empty: used absolutely or with of.
- Limited in quantity or number; small or infrequent; scanty.
- Thinly.
- Limited in power or capacity; feeble; weak.
- Of sound, lacking in fullness; faint, and often somewhat shrill or metallic in tone.
- Deficient in some characteristic or important ingredient; lacking strength or richness; specifically, of liquors, small: opposed to strong.
- Having slight consistency or viscosity: said of liquids: as, thin syrup; thin gruel.
- Hence, easily seen through; transparent, literally or figuratively; shallow; flimsy; slight: as, a thin disguise.
- Having the constituent parts loose or sparse in arrangement; lacking density, compactness, or luxuriance; rare; specifically, of the air and other gases, rarefied.
- Very narrow in one diameter; having the opposite surfaces very near together; having little thickness or depth; not thick; not heavy: as, thin paper; thin boards: opposed to thick.
- Very narrow in all diameters; slender; slim; long and fine: as, a thin wire; a thin string.
- Meager; lean; spare; not plump or fat.
- To reduce in numbers or frequency.
- To make bare or empty.
- To become thin.
- A Middle English form of thine.
- 14. In art, characterized, in composition, by few and widely separated elements, by absence of serious interest, or by lack of body and force in technique.
- To make lean or spare.
- A fragile claim to fame"
- Not viscous
- Become thin or thinner
- Lacking substance or significance
- Lose thickness
- (transitive; intransitive verb) To make or become thin or thinner.
- N/A
THIN vs HYPERFINE: RELATED WORDS
- Pale, Anorexic, Spindly, Stringy, Lean, Wispy, Ribbonlike, Narrow, Sparse, Flat, Flimsy, Weak, Slender, Skinny, Slim
- Crystal lattice, Excitation, Valence electron, Electron, Josephson junction, Photoemission, Exciton, Fermion, Paramagnetic, Phonon, Quasiparticle, Nucleon, Dipolar, Dipole moment, Thin
THIN vs HYPERFINE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Pale, Anorexic, Spindly, Stringy, Lean, Wispy, Ribbonlike, Narrow, Sparse, Flat, Flimsy, Weak, Slender, Skinny, Slim
- Crystal lattice, Excitation, Valence electron, Electron, Josephson junction, Photoemission, Exciton, Fermion, Paramagnetic, Phonon, Quasiparticle, Nucleon, Dipolar, Dipole moment, Thin
THIN vs HYPERFINE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Do you have a thin kerf rip blade?
- Examples include chap, ship, thin, whiz, and photo.
- Europa has a thin atmosphere rich with oxygen.
- Patient skin is velvety thin, loose, and stretchable.
- US, or thin clothes when it is snowing.
- It adds a thin coating of silicone over your case and then caps it with a thin aluminum shell with a matte finish.
- The tart looks amazing, thin on crust meaning thin on calories!
- They may become abnormally thin, or thin for their body, and still talk about feeling fat.
- Bandgap engineering of titanium based oxynitride thin films and molybdenum disulfide thin fi.
- Shannon Thin Elk, Julie Thin Elk and Carrie Thin Elk.
- A major current study is on magnetic exchange interaction, hyperfine field fluctuation, charges, and spin transport phenomena in nanoscale materials.
- EIS spectroscopies for the probe laser locking to the indicated hyperfine transitions.
- Interpretation and theory of electronic, vibrational, rotational, and nuclear hyperfine states.
- The effect of symmetry restrictions upon the hyperfine properties.
- This behavior shows the progressive hyperfine-induced spin relaxation quenching by applying magnetic field.
- Hyperfine lives and works on the cutting edge of medical imaging accessibility.
- Hydrobiologia Hyomen Gijutsu Hyperfine Interact Hypertension IEEE Electron Device Lett.
- Revealing hyperfine features of dendrimers using scanning tunneling microscopy.
- Stark effect on the hyperfine interaction is limited.
- FPGA locking to acetylene hyperfine structure is presented.
THIN vs HYPERFINE: QUESTIONS
- Is foreign debt included in thin capitalization rule?
- What are the disadvantages of thin client computing?
- Can You thin Bullseye Shellac with denatured alcohol?
- What is high-performance thin layer chromatography?
- Do thin capitalization rules affect leverage ratios?
- What is thin stillage fractionation using ultrafiltration?
- How long did Thin Lizzy's'Thin Lizzy'stay on the charts?
- Do thin films with crystalline absorber thin films produce better cell structures?
- Are ultra thin socks thin enough to go barefoot in shoes?
- Why do most Africans have thin noses and thin lips?
- How to determine the absolute wavelengths of hyperfine components of sodium D?
- What is the spin quantum number of hyperfine structure of nuclei?
- What are the three components of the magnetic hyperfine field?
- What is the hyperfine structure of the spectral line?
- What is the hyperfine splitting of the magnetic field?
- How to compute transition rates between magnetic fine and hyperfine structure substates?
- What does the hyperfine splitting pattern in an EPR spectrum represent?
- Does electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum contain hyperfine splitting?
- Why is hyperfine interaction important in EPR spectroscopy?
- What is the quantum number of hyperfine interaction?