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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / carve the sea

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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carve the sea

Xerxes I
Xerxes I

Phraseologism: Carve the sea.

Meaning: About a man who blames anyone but himself for all his failures, and in such claims to others comes to the point of absurdity.

Origin: From the legend of the Persian king (from 486 BC) Xerxes (? -465 BC), who in 480-479. BC e. led the Persian campaign in Greece, which ended in defeat. When the battle of Salamis was being prepared, Xerxes ordered a pontoon bridge to be built in order to quickly transfer his military forces to the battlefield. But the wind picked up, the bridge was destroyed. The furious king ordered the sea to be punished, and the Persian executioners who were with the army flogged the sea water. The sea was "punished".

Random phraseology:

The revolution has a beginning - the revolution has no end.

Meaning:

About a long, protracted process, action (jokingly ironic).

Origin:

From the song "The Revolution Has a Beginning..." (1967), written by the composer Vano Muradeli to the verses of the poet Yuri Semyonovich Kamenetsky (b. 1924).

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Created an artificial organism with one chromosome 12.08.2018

Scientists have been doing experiments on yeast for a long time, but recently they have achieved an amazing result: they brought out a yeast fungus with a single chromosome. Even last year, scientists managed to bring the number of chromosomes in yeast to six, and this year their number was reduced to one. At the same time, the functioning of the yeast practically did not change.

The new study involved two groups. The first, from the New York University School of Medicine, was able to use CRISPR to reduce the number of chromosomes in yeast from 16 to two. The second group, from China, managed to do even better and developed yeast with only one chromosome. The research results are published in the journal Nature.

With the help of CRISPR, each team was able to tie chromosomes together, eventually drastically reducing their number. And the yeast did not begin to function differently.

Yeast with two chromosomes survived after the procedure, began to divide and grow as well as their normal relatives, but yeast with one chromosome began to divide somewhat more slowly. None of the new varieties could interact with the standard yeast.

This inability to interact and share with other yeast means that scientists have developed a new species, and in the future this feature can be extremely useful. For example, researchers can take a yeast species that can decompose agricultural waste into biofuels and safely release it from the lab without fear of it coming into contact with natural species.

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