0 present participle of project
1 to calculate an amount or number expected in the future from information already known:
[ + to infinitive ] Government spending is projected to rise by three percent next year.
3 to cause a film, image, or light to appear on a screen or other surface:
Or, if there is some predictable pattern to the ordering, infants might be innately equipped with a productive mechanism for projecting the enumeration.
These rather strict patterns overlap with the more irregularly organised vocal line, projecting a distinct sense of disorientation.
Furthermore, thalamic inputs can also gain access to basal ganglia output nuclei via subthalamo-pallidal projecting neurons, neurons receiving glutamatergic thalamo-subthalamic projections.
Long-range competition among the neurons projecting centrifugally to the quail retina.
The fixed transition state for apo-azurin may be the result of a small pointed feature projecting from the top of an otherwise broad free-energy profile.
The play then re-enacts the moment of the ship's sinking, before finally projecting forward to the present indicated in the first quotation.
As for the prospects, they are also projecting an integrated identity; they seldom behave like customers in the interactions.
Dendritic morphologies of retinal ganglion cells projecting to the nucleus of the optic tract in the rabbit.