How to Use double helix in a Sentence
double helix
noun-
The story comes to us in two twisted strands, a double helix of past and present.
—Ron Charles, Washington Post, 12 June 2024
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Steckl said the magic stems from the double helix shape of salmon DNA.
—Laine Welch | Fish Factor, Anchorage Daily News, 28 Dec. 2021
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There’s a double helix in my local Sephora.
—Ellen Cushing, The Atlantic, 22 Jan. 2026
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There’s a double helix in my local Sephora.
—Will Gottsegen, The Atlantic, 23 Jan. 2026
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Kahn implemented a double helix design that allowed cars to go down and up on the same ramp at the same time.
—Dan Austin, Detroit Free Press, 1 Sep. 2017
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First, the process would heat the DNA to break its double helix structure into two strands.
—Roxanne Khamsi, Scientific American, 16 Feb. 2022
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Watson, a dining table made from carbon fiber and thin layers of wood, has legs that form double helixes.
—Tim McKeough, ELLE Decor, 16 May 2011
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With strong suction and a double helix brush roll, the stick vacuum is designed to keep hard floors and carpets spotless.
—Isabel Garcia, Peoplemag, 23 Mar. 2023
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Its approach involved taking single strands of the double helix and stuffing them through a protein pore.
—John Timmer, Ars Technica, 30 Jan. 2018
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The double helix fragments, and bases change identity or fall off entirely.
—ArsTechnica, 13 May 2026
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Many will dance, embodying that double helix of the sacred yet campy that Mormons have mastered.
—Andrew Kay, Longreads, 17 July 2021
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Revive Music produces concerts that engage a double helix of jazz and hip-hop.
—Giovanni Russonello, New York Times, 13 Sep. 2017
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To form the i-motif, the double helix untwists and then one of the strands bunches up with a bunch of cytosine molecules.
—Avery Thompson, Popular Mechanics, 24 Apr. 2018
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In a country where the cultural DNA is more ski track than double helix, this is just how it’s done.
—Stuart Stevens, Outside Online, 12 Dec. 2017
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The basic unit of DNA is the base pair, one of the rungs on the twisted ladder that makes up the double helix.
—Cathleen O'Grady, Ars Technica, 24 Nov. 2018
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Each copy of the genome — almost every cell has its own copy — consists of about 3 billion base pairs lined up in the famous double helix structure.
—The Physics Arxiv Blog, Discover Magazine, 9 Aug. 2023
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This model has the benefit of a spinning double helix of water streams that’s certain to douse your opponent.
—Zachary MacK, Popular Mechanics, 30 June 2022
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Different countries have different restrictions on what people can and can’t do to twist up that tiny double helix.
—Sarah Scoles, Discover Magazine, 17 Nov. 2015
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Each one is a single strand of the famous double helix that folds into a U-shape, designed to interlock with four neighbours.
—Ed Yong, Discover Magazine, 29 Nov. 2012
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One of the most familiar shapes in science is DNA’s double helix structure.
—Avery Thompson, Popular Mechanics, 24 Apr. 2018
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But right now, most of the world doesn’t have regulations about what scientists — and someday, hobbyists — can and can’t do to the double helix.
—Sarah Scoles, Discover Magazine, 17 Nov. 2015
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The year before that, there was a floral double helix, an decorative ode to that year’s theme, Manus x Machina.
—Madeleine Luckel, Vogue, 20 Apr. 2018
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Still another has twisting twin strands erupting from her dress like a giant DNA double helix.
—Anne Nickoloff, cleveland.com, 10 Oct. 2017
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The base pairing that holds the double helix together always involves pairing a one-ringed base with a two-ringed base, which maintains a constant width of the helix.
—John Timmer, Ars Technica, 4 Oct. 2019
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About 99% of the 6 billion steps in the spiral staircase of DNA’s double helix are the same for all of us.
—Robert Plomin, WSJ, 15 Nov. 2018
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Nearby, gleeful screams emanated from a ride shaped like a double helix, and a child reached into a shoulder holster of baby-pink cotton candy for a bite of fluff.
—Ella Quittner, New York Times, 14 Oct. 2023
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This is one sick twist of a tryst, with the two forming a strange — and ultimately tiresome — double helix of sadomasochistic desire and overweening ego.
—Ann Hornaday, Washington Post, 21 Nov. 2023
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The famous double helix of a DNA strand twists right, along with the sugars that comprise its backbone; the amino acids in proteins twist left.
—Luba Ostashevsky, Ars Technica, 26 Feb. 2018
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Her grandmother, Odile Crick, was an artist who created the double helix so familiar today.
—Amy Wang | The Oregonian/oregonlive, OregonLive.com, 11 Jan. 2018
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To avoid collisions, Moreira and his team developed a double helix orbit; the satellites travel along an ellipse and corkscrew around each other.
—IEEE Spectrum, 30 June 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'double helix.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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