Immigrés -- Langage. : Bilingualism and migration / Guus Extra and Ludo Verhoeven (editors)
1999
1
Immigrés -- Mexique -- Histoire -- 20e siècle. : Los refugiados españoles y la cultura mexicana : actas de las primeras jornadas, celebradas en la Residencia de Estudiantes en noviembre de 1994 / José Luis Abellán, Juan Marichal, Rafael Segovia, Arturo Souto, Javier Garciadiego, Franscisco Gil Villegas, Josep Lluis Barona, Juan Manuel Díaz de Guereñu, Andrés Lira
Immigrés -- Singapour. : Class inequality in the global city : migrants, workers and cosmopolitanism in Singapore / Junjia Ye
2016
1
Immigres -- Vie religieuse -- France. : Rester Catholique en France : l'encadrement religieux destiné aux migrants Belgo-Flamands du Lillois, de Paris et des Campagnes Françaises 1850-1960 / Henk Byls
2019
1
Immobilienfinanzierung. : The politics of housing booms and busts / edited by Herman M. Schwartz and Leonard Seabrooke
2009
1
Immobiliengeschäft : In search of paradise : middle-class living in a Chinese metropolis / Li Zhang
Immobilisation : An introduction to nuclear waste immobilisation, second edition / M.I. Ojovan, W.E. Lee
2014
1
Immobilisierte Zelle : Immobilized cells : basics and applications : proceedings of an international symposium organized under auspices of the Working Party on Applied Biocatalysis of the European Federation of Biotechnology, Noordwijkerhout, the Netherlands, November 26-29, 1995 / edited by R.H. Wijffels [and others]
A transient loss of consciousness and postural tone caused by diminished blood flow to the brain (i.e., BRAIN ISCHEMIA). Presyncope refers to the sensation of lightheadedness and loss of strength that precedes a syncopal event or accompanies an incomplete syncope. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp367-9)
Microbial, plant, or animal cells which are immobilized by attachment to solid structures, usually a column matrix. A common use of immobilized cells is in biotechnology for the bioconversion of a substrate to a particular product. (From Singleton & Sainsbury, Dictionary of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 2d ed)
Microbial, plant, or animal cells which are immobilized by attachment to solid structures, usually a column matrix. A common use of immobilized cells is in biotechnology for the bioconversion of a substrate to a particular product. (From Singleton & Sainsbury, Dictionary of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 2d ed)
Immobilized cells -- Congresses : Immobilized cells : basics and applications : proceedings of an international symposium organized under auspices of the Working Party on Applied Biocatalysis of the European Federation of Biotechnology, Noordwijkerhout, the Netherlands, November 26-29, 1995 / edited by R.H. Wijffels [and others]
Enzymes which are immobilized on or in a variety of water-soluble or water-insoluble matrices with little or no loss of their catalytic activity. Since they can be reused continuously, immobilized enzymes have found wide application in the industrial, medical and research fields
Enzymes which are immobilized on or in a variety of water-soluble or water-insoluble matrices with little or no loss of their catalytic activity. Since they can be reused continuously, immobilized enzymes have found wide application in the industrial, medical and research fields