Proper noun
Tyr
(Norse mythology) The Norse god of war, identifiable with Tiu or Tiw.
Amino acid propensities Large aromatic residues (Tyr, Phe and Trp) and β-branched amino acids (Thr, Val, Ile) are favored to be found in β-strands in the middle of β-sheets. Source: Internet
Fenrir appears in modern literature in the poem "Om Fenrisulven og Tyr" (1819) by Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger (collected in Nordens Guder), the novel Der Fenriswolf by K. H. Strobl, and Til kamp mod dødbideriet (1974) by E. K. Reich and E. Larsen. Source: Internet
Chinese expeditions reached this area as early as the first half of the 15th century, when the fleets of the Ming eunuch Yishiha sailed several times from Jilin City all the way to Tyr on the lower Amur. Source: Internet
And there was the hero of the first martyrdom operation in Tyr, the operation that destroyed the enemy's arrogance before destroying one of its well-fortified strongholds. Source: Internet
However, her attorney, Tyr Loranger, almost derailed those plans, entering a motion centering on right to speedy trial laws. Source: Internet
The protein Tyr phosphatase (PTP) super-family forms the second group, and the aspartate-based protein phosphatases the third. Source: Internet