Tat \Tat\, n. [Hind. t[=a]t.] Gunny cloth made from the fiber of the {Corchorus olitorius}, or jute. [India]
Tat \Tat\, n. [Hind. tatt?.] (Zo["o]l.) A pony. [India]
Amdahl Corp., playing tit for tat with arch-rival International Business Machines Corp., said it lopped off 10% to 14% from the price of its mainframe computers.
We can disagree on issues." Jesse Jackson called the complaints about attacks "campaign fatigue, this tit for tat on how bruised I am." But Ms. Jamieson said there was a legitimate distinction.
There's the same frustration I felt as a minority member of this body." Jones said he hopes Republicans would "not get involved in tit for tat.
Mitchell, however, acknowledged tat a compromise will require some backroom negotiations with Dole and others.
The mouse study focused on the "tat" gene of the virus, which normally switches on other viral genes to speed reproduction. Researchers injected fertilized mouse eggs with the gene plus the genetic switch that normally activates it.
However, tat has an alter ego called 3'orf (pronounced three-prime-orf).
"In one way or another, we are all related to the names on tat wall," said Vietnam veteran Ronald F. Gibbs.
"It was just a big, old 225-pound puddy tat." _ Indiana Bell supervisor Dannie Carper, who reattached a downed telephone wire after a year-old pet lioness in the yard was put on a leash.
Green said that unlike most proteins, the fake tat product can be taken in by cells.
It follows the Dee, second only to the Spey as a notable salmon river. Braemar is not a town to linger in, unless you are a fan of tartan tat.
His report dealt with a study involving Kaposi's sarcoma developed in mice that were genetically engineered to contain an AIDS virus gene called tat.
Perhaps an active tat gene induces a cell to produce some kind of substance like a growth factor that encourages cancer in a second cell, Jay said.