It lacks a specifically defined morphological structure, but is characterized by a lack of cell surface adherent molecules such as E-cadherin, non-polarity, extending filopodia, and high migratory capacity.
22.
The baseline of any decision made on the feasibility of forest settlements must be ecological sustainability, and this depends on forest type, altitude and the morphological structure of the landscape.
23.
Flowers often have specialized structures that make the nectar accessible only for animals possessing appropriate morphological structures, and there are numerous examples of coevolution between nectarivores and the flowers they pollinate.
24.
And your last part " my cunning plan falls apart with " Prime Minister-elect " ", your analysis doesnt have to stop there because complex words have an internal morphological structure.
25.
The morphological structure of the word " mal akh " suggests that it is the " maqtal " form of the root denoting the tool or the mean of performing it.
26.
New Persian was widely used as a trans-regional lingua franca, a task for which it was particularly suitable due to its relatively simple morphological structure and this situation persisted until at least 19th century.
27.
3 ) Inflectional Morphology ( especially Network Morphology ) the European Research Council funded project Morphological Complexity which examined the ways in which morphological structure introduces complexity which has no apparent function outside this component.
28.
Within distributed morphology ( DM ), this is where morphological structure is constructed, where the hierarchical syntactic structure is transformed into a linearized structure, and syntactic features are replaced with vocabulary items, among other things.
29.
Thus, English can have two words that are pronounced and spelled the same and have the same lexical category but have different meanings, different prefixes, a different internal morphological structure, and different internal bases that the prefixes are attached to:
30.
Since there are no obvious gaps between supposed species groups, according to basic morphological structure, Scoble ( 1986 ) synonymised the five pre-existing genera of Hedylidae ( 33 of which had been described in " Phellinodes " ) into just one genus.