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Carpal Tunnel
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OP
Carpal Tunnel
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strabismic, adjective. 1. = cross-eyed. 2. of or having to do with strabismus. 3. (Figurative.) distorted.
posology, noun. the branch of medical science that is concerned with the doses in which medicines should be administered.
coxa, noun, pl. coxae. 1. (Anatomy.) a. the hipbone. b. the hip joint. 2. (Zoology.) the joint by which the leg is articulated to the body in arthropods.
Daltonism or daltonism, noun. color blindness, especially the inability to distinguish red from green.
constative, adjective. (Grammar, Philosophy.) stating or asserting a wish, command, or plan, not its actual performance. "I hope to go" is a constative utterance; "I am going" is a performative utterance.
balistraria, noun. a cross-shaped opening in the wall of a medieval fortress through which a crossbow could be fired.
gavial, noun. any one of a family of large, harmless crocodilians of southern Asia that have long, extremely slender snouts. Also, garial.
salubrious, adjective. favorable or conducive to good health; healthful. Ex. a salubrious diet. Their salubrious effects, which include the relief of pain ... are seldom more than palliative and almost never permanent (New Yorker). (SYN) wholesome, salutary.
sheth, noun. 1. one of the ribs of the framework for the bottom or sides of a wagon. 2. the part of a plow to which the moldboard and share are attached.
I have to admit I have trouble visualizing the structure of either item.
consuetude, noun. 1. custom recognized as having legal force. 2. custom; usage; habit.
mendicant, adjective, noun. adj. begging. Ex. Mendicant friars ask alms for charity. And with that dejected air and mendicant voice (Samuel Richardson). noun 1. a beggar. Ex. We were surrounded by mendicants asking for money. 2. a member of a mendicant religious order.
fugacious, adjective. 1. passing quickly; tending to flee; fleeting; transitory. Ex. the fugacious nature of life and time (Harriet Martineau). (SYN) transient, fugitive, evanescent. 2. (Botany.) falling or fading early. Ex. If the calyx falls very early, it is called fugacious (Heber W. Youngken).
vug, vugg, or vugh, noun.(Mining.) a cavity; a hollow in a rock or lode, often completely lined with quartz.
This word has been used before, but I'll bet few of us (me included) femember it
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Joined: Sep 2001
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 6,296 |
Odd. Posing the possible doses? There's also nosology.
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Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 6,296
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 6,296 |
Subjunctive, isn't it, too?
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Joined: Jan 2001
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Carpal Tunnel
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OP
Carpal Tunnel
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And nosology is not the study of intranasal administration of medication. nosology n. 5ModL nosologia: see NOSO3 & 3LOGY6 1 classification of diseases 2 the branch of medicine dealing with this nosologic adj. nos#o[log$i[cal[ly adv.
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Joined: Jan 2001
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Carpal Tunnel
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OP
Carpal Tunnel
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Tut,tut, teacher dear! that's an imperative.
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Joined: Sep 2001
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Imperatively, tut-tut, yourself, wwh.
I was serious. What's the connection between constative and subjunctive as in, "I wish I were in the hereafter." There's got to be a connection between the two.
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Joined: Sep 2001
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 6,296 |
In reply to:
sheth, noun. 1. one of the ribs of the framework for the bottom or sides of a wagon. 2. the part of a plow to which the moldboard and share are attached.
I have to admit I have trouble visualizing the structure of either item.
wwh, I've got Britannica up. There's a photograph of a moldboard, which isn't a board at all, but a curved, short blade that appears to turn the cut earth up into the banked row. I suppose it's ok to paste this from Britannica:
"In its simplest form the moldboard plow consists of the share, the broad blade that cuts through the soil; the moldboard, for turning the furrow slice; and the landside, a plate on the opposite side from the moldboard that absorbs the side thrust of the turning action.
So there are three actions going on in such plowing: the share cuts the wide band through the soil, the moldboard blade, by virtue of its curved plane, pulls the soil up in the long, banked row, and this "landside" keeps the banked-up long row nice and tidy by keeping it from spilling over from the moldboard.
Although there is no mention of the sheth in the article here, I would guess that the sheth is simply the arm to which the share and moldboard blades are attached.
The 'digging stick' is the eloquent name of the antecedent to the plow, according to the article.
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