surrogates

listen to the pronunciation of surrogates
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
plural of surrogate
surrogate
A surrogate or surrogate key is a unique identifier for either an entity in the modeled world or an object in the database
surrogate
A person or animal that acts as a substitute for the social or pastoral role of another, such as a surrogate mother
surrogate
: A judicial officer of limited jurisdiction, who administers matters of probate and intestate succession and, in some cases, adoptions
surrogate
To replace or substitute something with something else; appoint a successor
surrogate
A substitute (usually of a person, position or role)
surrogate
Any of a range of Unicode codepoints which are used in pairs in UTF-16 to represent characters beyond the Basic Multilingual Plane
surrogate
one who or that which is substituted for or appointed to act in place of another
surrogate
a person appointed to represent or act on behalf of others
surrogate
{n} a deputy, a delegate, a person appointed to act for another
surrogate
One substituted for or appointed to act in place of another
surrogate
Also known as a Stochastulator (© A O'Hagan) An approximation to the simulator that evaluates much more rapidly For sets of inputs, estimates the outputs as a collection of means and variances (or some other uncertain description) Often implemented using random functions [JCR, 17 04 00]
surrogate
A woman who carries an embryo that was formed from the egg of another woman; the surrogate is expected to return the infant to its genetic parents
surrogate
A deputy; a delegate; a substitute
surrogate
Literally, a deputy or substitute In 18th and 19th Newfoundland, naval officers and others with temporary commissions as justices of the peace were known as surrogate magistrates, and their courts as surrogates courts
surrogate
{i} substitute; surrogate mother, woman who voluntarily carries a fetus for another woman; judge who has jurisdiction over the settlement of wills and estates (in certain states of the USA)
surrogate
A deputy for a bishop in granting licences for marriage
surrogate
A judicial officer of limited jurisdiction, who administers matters of probate and intestate succession and, in some cases, adoptions
surrogate
a local judicial officer in some states who has jurisdiction over the probate of wills, the settlement of estates, and the appointment and supervision of guardians
surrogate
You use surrogate to describe a person or thing that is given a particular role because the person or thing that should have the role is not available. Martin had become Howard Cosell's surrogate son Surrogate is also a noun. Arms control should not be made into a surrogate for peace. a surrogate person or thing is one that takes the place of someone or something else
surrogate
An object that stands in for and forwards messages to another object
surrogate
A surrogate is (usually) an element of biodiversity that is used in management to represent, or substitute for, a more complex element of biodiversity that is more difficult to define or measure Surrogates may also be Indicators when they are used for performance assessment purposes
surrogate
replace or substitute something with something else; appoint a successor
surrogate
{s} acting as a substitute or replacement
surrogate
To put in the place of another; to substitute
surrogate
In some States of the United States, an officer who presides over the probate of wills and testaments and yield the settlement of estates
surrogate
Something that serves as a substitute In risk analysis, surrogates are often used when data on the item of interest (a chemical, an industry, an exposure, etc ) is lacking As an example, underground mining of coal and hardrock minerals can be used as a surrogate for underground oil shale mining
surrogate
Outcome Measure A health outcome measure which is not the true goal (of screening, prevention, diagnosis, or therapy), but which is intended to substitute for the final health outcome of interest Surrogate outcome measures are generally chosen because they can be measured earlier than the primary outcome { 3} Use your browser's "BACK" button to return to the page you were viewing previously
surrogate
The deputy of an ecclesiastical judge, most commonly of a bishop or his chancellor, especially a deputy who grants marriage licenses
surrogate
Generally organic compounds which are not target analytes, but are similar to target analytes in chemical composition, extraction, and chromatography, but which are not normally found in environmental samples These compounds are added to samples to assess analytical performance of a method They are spiked into all blanks, samples, and spiked samples prior to analysis Percent recoveries are calculated for each surrogate
surrogate
- a species that is tested in place of the species of interest for ethical or logistical reasons
surrogate
{f} substitute, act in place of another; carry a fetus for another woman; act as a substitute parent
surrogate
someone who takes the place of another person
surrogate
the elected county official who oversees probate in the State of New Jersey
surrogate
A copy of the information content of an original item in another medium, usually one which is more durable See also: Reproduction and Facsimile
surrogate
An organic compound which is similar to the target analyte(s) in chemical composition and behavior in the analytical process, but which is not normally found in environmental samples
surrogate
Of, concerning, relating to or acting as a substitute
surrogate
providing or receiving nurture or parental care though not related by blood or legal ties; "foster parent"; "foster child"; "foster home"; "surrogate father"
surrogate
A copy of the information content of an original item in another medium, usually one which is more durable See also reproduction and facsimile
surrogates

    Турецкое произношение

    sırıgıts

    Произношение

    /ˈsərəgəts/ /ˈsɜrəɡəts/

    Этимология

    [ 's&r-&-"gAt, 's&-r ] (transitive verb.) 1533. Latin surrogatus, past participle of surrogare to choose in place of another, substitute, from sub- + rogare to ask; more at RIGHT.
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