0 present participle of condense
1 to reduce something, such as a speech or piece of writing, in length:
2 to change or make something change from a gas to a liquid or solid state:
Brutally condensing complex thought, idealists focused on the moral unity of a society with individuals organically related to each other.
Finally, our work adds weight to the belief that condensing is an important property in the analysis of logic programs.
Effects of condensing agent and nuclease on the extent of ejection from phage lambda.
In addition, they have the desired property of condensing which our analysis does not have.
In this sense, threshing floors may have functioned as a symbolic shorthand, an imagery condensing and connoting both fields and houses.
This chromosome condensing activity is being further purified from this strain and the details will be published elsewhere.
Moreover, transposition was an ideal method of regulating ambiguous literary texts by condensing their cardinal features in dramatic form.
However, about 85% of electrondense bodies were condensing mitochondrial derivatives transforming into electron-dense bodies.