Annoying night sound

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Possible Answers: SNORE, DRIP.

Last seen on: –Universal Crossword – Nov 5 2018

Random information on the term “SNORE”:

Desert racing is the act of racing through the desert in a 2 or 4 wheeled off-road vehicle. Races, which generally consist of two or more loops around a course covering up to 40 miles, can take the form of Hare and Hound or Hare scramble style events, and are often laid out over a long and harsh track through relatively barren terrain.

Point-to-point–style races, including the famous Baja 1000, attract nationally ranked and celebrity drivers. This type of racing tests the endurance and capabilities of racer and machine, and while organized clubs or teams sometimes field multiple sponsored riders for particular events, desert racing in its purest form is largely an individual endeavor. Winning racers accrue points to advance their rank and placement in future contests.

Desert racing vehicles, which include rugged enduro-style motorcycle, four wheeled all-terrain vehicles, pickup trucks (like Trophy Trucks), and dune buggies, have specialized suspensions with increased wheel travel. The now-defunct Barstow to Vegas, which was held in the Mojave Desert from 1964 to 1989, was a well-known example of desert racing in North America. Desert racing, in its most organized form, began in Southern California in the 1920s.

SNORE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “DRIP”:

Mediator is a multiprotein complex that functions as a transcriptional coactivator in all eukaryotes. It was discovered in the lab of Roger D. Kornberg, winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Mediator[a] complexes interact with transcription factors and RNA polymerase II. The main (but not exclusive) function of mediator complexes is to transmit signals from the transcription factors to the polymerase.

Mediator complexes are variable at the evolutionary, compositional and conformational levels. The first image shows only one “snapshot” of what a particular mediator complex might be composed of,[b] but it certainly does not accurately depict the conformation of the complex in vivo. During evolution, mediator has become more complex. The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (a simple eukaryote) is thought to have up to 21 subunits in the core mediator (exclusive of the CDK module), while mammals have up to 26.

Individual subunits can be absent or replaced by other subunits under different conditions. Also, there are many intrinsically disordered regions in mediator proteins, which may contribute to the conformational flexibility seen both with and without other bound proteins or protein complexes. A more realistic model of a mediator complex without the CDK module is shown in the second figure.

DRIP on Wikipedia