These lines demark similar ionic potential, which is a measure of how tightly an ion's charge is packed.
American Scots also had to demark the chief characteristics of this new identity.
A few weeks later, they surrounded the town's municipal buildings with yellow caution tape demarking an area the size of a local clear-cut forest.
In practice, the outer boundary of the local domain is demarked by a cosolvent (not water) monolayer if solvent structure is short-ranged.
The trouble is, some Web sites use special characters in URLs for legitimate purposes, such as demarking your username and password for easy login.
These are less noticeable than edges demarking stage transitions, but they cause considerable tension, friction, or energy costs to maintain or negotiate.
The gesture demarks his place in life: he is trapped where he is; he can see beyond his circumstance, but he cannot get there; he is a prisoner of technology.
One important thing is that companies need to think beyond the artificial lines demarking their ‘industry.’
If not to defeat him, to question his judicial beliefs as a way of demarking how they differ from liberal conceptions of jurisprudence.
The question of demarking legitimate from illegitimate bodies is not a recent phenomenon.
In a work that interprets Dreamtime stories, costumes play an integral role in demarking personas, animals and humans.
Bonded areas have a sharply demarked boundary with a foamlike interior.
It means a place that is demarked or set up or set apart.
There is a strip of fairy-lights taped to the floor to demark the edge of the track.
At first this resulted in the marginalisation of alternative film-making, with funding clearly demarking commercial entertainment for profit from film art, with the majority of funding going to the former.
Origin
Mid 19th century: from demarcation, on the pattern of the verb mark.