backbones - definição. O que é backbones. Significado, conceito
Diclib.com
Dicionário Online

O que (quem) é backbones - definição

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Backbone (disambiguation); Backbone (album); Backbone (film); Backbones; Backbone album; Backbone (song)

backbone         
n.
1.
Spine, spinal column, vertebral column.
2.
Firmness, nerve, resolution, courage, pluck, hardihood, manhood, steadfastness, stability, decision, moral principle, stamina.
backbone         
(backbones)
1.
Your backbone is the column of small linked bones down the middle of your back.
= spine
N-COUNT
2.
The backbone of an organization or system is the part of it that gives it its main strength.
The small business people of Britain are the economic backbone of the nation.
N-SING: usu with poss
backbone         
n.
courage
the backbone to + inf. (will he have the backbone to tell the truth?)

Wikipédia

Backbone

The backbone is the vertebral column of a vertebrate.

Exemplos de pronúncia para backbones
1. And that backbone was the backbone that was privatized,
How the Internet Became Commercial _ Shane Greenstein _ Talks at Google
2. as a backbone,
ted-talks_2466_DanielleFeinberg_2015P-320k
3. as a backbone.
Queer City _ Draper Shreeve, Henry Chalfant + More _ Talks at Google
4. back up to the backbone.
The Fatted Calf in the Charcuterie _ Taylor Boetticher + More _ Talks at Google
5. the backbone of rural India.
The Billionaire Raj - A Journey Through India's New Gilded Age _ James Crabtree _ Talks at Google
Exemplos do corpo de texto para backbones
1. It is these multitudes who are the financial backbones of the pro–democracy forces.
2. The researchers simulated common spinal cord injuries in mice by bruising their backbones at a specific point.
3. This is even more so on the long–haul, red–eye flights, which are the backbones of the intercontinental schedule.
4. Most biologists believe that simple invertebrates – animals with no backbones and limited nervous systems– cannot feel pain or experience–suffering.
5. In terms of the public good, the criminal–justice system was perceived as one of the backbones of a civilized country.