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amputations

  • 1 amputations

    Новый англо-русский словарь > amputations

  • 2 amputations

    English-Russian smart dictionary > amputations

  • 3 amputations

    n
    ამპუტაციები

    English-Georgian dictionary > amputations

  • 4 Various Machete Amputations

    Military: VMA

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Various Machete Amputations

  • 5 intrauterine amputations

    Англо-русский медицинский словарь > intrauterine amputations

  • 6 ампутации

    Новый русско-английский словарь > ампутации

  • 7 amputation neuroma

    Amputations[stumpf]neurom n, Stumpfneurom n

    Fachwörterbuch Medizin Englisch-Deutsch > amputation neuroma

  • 8 adoración de los santos

    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    * * *

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    Spanish-English dictionary > adoración de los santos

  • 9 amputación

    f.
    amputation, maiming, ablatio.
    * * *
    1 amputation
    2 figurado cutting out
    * * *
    * * *
    femenino amputation
    * * *
    = excision, amputation.
    Ex. In the light of unpopular decisions about the financing of local government, public libraries have been prime candidates for excision.
    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    * * *
    femenino amputation
    * * *
    = excision, amputation.

    Ex: In the light of unpopular decisions about the financing of local government, public libraries have been prime candidates for excision.

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    * * *
    amputation
    * * *

    amputación f Med amputation
    * * *
    1. [de miembro] amputation
    2. [de libro, película] mutilation [by censor]
    * * *
    f amputation

    Spanish-English dictionary > amputación

  • 10 ayunar

    v.
    to fast.
    * * *
    1 to fast
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    VI (=no comer) to fast

    ayunar de algo — (fig) (=privarse) to go without sth

    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to fast
    * * *
    = fasting, fast.
    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    Ex. Since the dawn of recorded time, in fact since before the word 'doctor' came into existence, priests provided sanctuaries where people could go to fast.
    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to fast
    * * *
    = fasting, fast.

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    Ex: Since the dawn of recorded time, in fact since before the word 'doctor' came into existence, priests provided sanctuaries where people could go to fast.

    * * *
    ayunar [A1 ]
    vi
    to fast
    * * *

    ayunar ( conjugate ayunar) verbo intransitivo
    to fast
    ayunar verbo intransitivo to fast
    ' ayunar' also found in these entries:
    English:
    fast
    * * *
    ayunar vi
    to fast
    * * *
    v/i fast
    * * *
    ayunar vi
    : to fast

    Spanish-English dictionary > ayunar

  • 11 ayuno

    adj.
    devoid.
    m.
    fast.
    hacer ayuno to fast
    pres.indicat.
    1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: ayunar.
    * * *
    1 fast, fasting
    \
    guardar ayuno to fast
    * * *
    noun m.
    * * *
    1.
    SM fast, fasting
    2. ADJ
    1) (Rel etc) fasting
    2) (=privado) deprived
    * * *
    masculino fast, fasting
    * * *
    = fasting, fast.
    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    Ex. At the beginning of the fast, you burn glycogen, fat, and protein for energy but after approximately two weeks you burn mainly fat.
    * * *
    masculino fast, fasting
    * * *
    = fasting, fast.

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    Ex: At the beginning of the fast, you burn glycogen, fat, and protein for energy but after approximately two weeks you burn mainly fat.

    * * *
    fast, fasting
    hacer ayuno to fast
    ayuno y abstinencia fasting and abstinence
    * * *

    Del verbo ayunar: ( conjugate ayunar)

    ayuno es:

    1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo

    ayunó es:

    3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo

    Multiple Entries:
    ayunar    
    ayuno
    ayunar ( conjugate ayunar) verbo intransitivo
    to fast
    ayuno sustantivo masculino
    fast, fasting
    ayunar verbo intransitivo to fast
    ayuno sustantivo masculino fast, fasting
    guardar/hacer ayuno, to fast
    ' ayuno' also found in these entries:
    English:
    fast
    * * *
    ayuno nm
    fast;
    hacer ayuno to fast
    * * *
    m fast
    * * *
    ayuno nm
    : fast
    * * *
    ayuno n fast

    Spanish-English dictionary > ayuno

  • 12 donación de órganos

    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    * * *

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    * * *
    organ donation

    Spanish-English dictionary > donación de órganos

  • 13 pus

    m.
    pus.
    m. s.&pl.
    pus.
    * * *
    1 pus
    * * *
    SM pus
    * * *
    * * *
    = pus.
    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    * * *
    * * *
    = pus.

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    * * *
    pus
    * * *

    pus sustantivo masculino
    pus
    pus sustantivo masculino pus
    ' pus' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    champú
    English:
    discharge
    - matter
    - pus
    - ooze
    * * *
    pus nm
    pus
    * * *
    m pus
    * * *
    pus nm
    : pus

    Spanish-English dictionary > pus

  • 14 ritualista

    adj.
    ritualistic.
    f. & m.
    ritualist.
    * * *
    1 ritualistic
    1 ritualist
    * * *
    1.
    ADJ ritualistic, ritual
    2.
    * * *
    = ritualistic, ritualised [ritualized, -USA].
    Ex. However, the pomp and ostentation of the annual meeting, first called Council, then General Conference (alias Congress), which attracts growing numbers of professionals, leads to IFLA taking on a mythical or ritualistic aspect where appearances replace content.
    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    * * *
    = ritualistic, ritualised [ritualized, -USA].

    Ex: However, the pomp and ostentation of the annual meeting, first called Council, then General Conference (alias Congress), which attracts growing numbers of professionals, leads to IFLA taking on a mythical or ritualistic aspect where appearances replace content.

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    * * *
    ritualistic
    ritualist

    Spanish-English dictionary > ritualista

  • 15 órgano del cuerpo

    (n.) = limb, body part
    Ex. 'No, let a charming chintz and Brussels lace wrap my cold limbs, and shade my lifeless face so as not to be frightful of death'.
    Ex. Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.
    * * *
    (n.) = limb, body part

    Ex: 'No, let a charming chintz and Brussels lace wrap my cold limbs, and shade my lifeless face so as not to be frightful of death'.

    Ex: Ethnographic data & mythological accounts illuminate practices such as chastity, fasting, mummification, organ donation, ritualized use of body parts, cannibalism, saint worship, 'holy' amputations, & pus drinking.

    Spanish-English dictionary > órgano del cuerpo

  • 16 Paré, Ambroise

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 1510 Laval, Maine, France
    d. 20 December 1590 Paris, France
    [br]
    French physician, surgeon and anatomist recognized as the founder of the rational approach to the practice of surgery and the treatment of wounds.
    [br]
    After a barber-surgeon apprenticeship in Paris, Paré was appointed Resident Surgeon to the Hôtel-Dieu in 1533. From 1537 he served as a military surgeon in the Wars of Religion under Henri II, François II, Charles IX and Henri III. His immense experience of battlefield surgery led him to initiate new treatments of wounds and amputations, replacing the destructive and infecting procedures then practised. His first book, published in 1549, advocated the use of simple ointments and ligatures for amputations.
    During the following years he experienced many adventures and vicissitudes and survived the St Bartholomew's Day massacre probably as a result of royal intervention. His numerous surgical and anatomical discoveries and innovations appeared in two major sets of works published in 1564 and 1572. In 1574 he was appointed premier chirurgien, conseiller et valet-de-chambre to Henri II, and a further collection of writings was published in 1575.
    His attempts to unite French surgeons under his leadership were consistently opposed by the Faculty of Physicians, who not only objected to his writing in French rather than Latin, but also to his refutation of such therapies as "mummies and unicorn's horn".
    Of his many contributions to medicine, his insistence on rational treatments is outstanding, and two aphorisms are representative: "Then I resolved never again to so cruelly burn the poor wounded by gunshot"; "I removed the stone but God cured the patient".
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1575, Les Oeuvres de M.Ambroise Paré, Paris.
    Further Reading
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Paré, Ambroise

  • 17 VMA

    1) Компьютерная техника: Valid Memory Access
    4) Техника: valid memory address
    5) Сокращение: vanillylmandelic acid
    6) Физиология: Vacuolar Membrane Arc
    7) Вычислительная техника: Virtual Memory Address
    9) Деловая лексика: Virtual Marketing Assistance
    10) Расширение файла: Virtual Memory Allocation
    11) Единицы измерений: Volume Moving Average

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > VMA

  • 18 penal officer

    работник (чиновник, офицер) пенитенциарной системы

    Ferdinand Waldo Demara, Jr, a high-school dropout, posed as a monk, a professor of psychology, a cancer researcher, a penal officer, a teacher, and a surgeon, all without the proper education or certification. As a surgeon he successfully performed amputations and even thoracic surgery.

    Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > penal officer

  • 19 thoracic surgery

    мед. торакальная хирургия, грудная хирургия

    As a surgeon he successfully performed amputations and even thoracic surgery.

    Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > thoracic surgery

  • 20 mkato

    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] amputation
    [English Plural] amputations
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata
    [Terminology] medical
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] compartment
    [English Plural] compartments
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata V
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] cutting trees (act of)
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Derived Word] kata
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] cutting down
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Derived Word] kata
    [Swahili Example] njia ya mkato
    [English Example] shortcut.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] decisiveness
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Derived Word] kata
    [Swahili Example] maneno ya mkato
    [English Example] resolute words.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] deduction
    [English Plural] deductions
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata V
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] determination
    [English Plural] determinations
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata
    [Swahili Example] maneno ya mkato
    [English Example] resolute words.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] division
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata V
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] felling trees (act of)
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Derived Word] kata
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] felling
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata V
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] firmness
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Derived Word] kata
    [Swahili Example] maneno ya mkato
    [English Example] resolute words.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] incision
    [English Plural] incisions
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata V
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] reduction
    [English Plural] reductions
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata
    [Swahili Example] njia ya mkato
    [English Example] shortcut.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] section
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 3/4
    [Derived Word] kata V
    [Swahili Example] mkato wa duara
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] mkato
    [Swahili Plural] mikato
    [English Word] shortening
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Derived Word] kata
    [Swahili Example] njia ya mkato
    [English Example] shortcut.
    ------------------------------------------------------------

    Swahili-english dictionary > mkato

См. также в других словарях:

  • amputations — am·pu·ta·tion || ‚æmpjÊŠ teɪʃn n. cutting off; surgical removal …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Acrotomophilia — refers to the sexual interest in amputees (from the Greek akron [extremity] , tomein [to cut] and philein [to love] ). The term amelotatism has also been used to describe this interest. The sexual interest in being an amputee is apotemnophilia… …   Wikipedia

  • Amputation — Classification and external resources J. McKnight, who lost his limbs in a railway accident in 1865, was the second recorded survivor of a simultaneous triple amputation. ICD 10 T14.7 …   Wikipedia

  • Amputation — Scène d amputation d un membre inférieur au XVIe siècle. L amputation est l ablation d une extrémité du corps suite à un traumatisme ou un acte chirurgical. Dans le cadre de la chirurgie, elle sert à limiter l expansion incurable d affections… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • TRAUMATISMES — Le terme de traumatisme s’applique généralement, d’une façon globale, à toutes les lésions corporelles subies par un sujet au cours d’une agression externe. Mais c’est le plus souvent l’énergie cinétique qui est à la base de ces atteintes… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Medecine dans la prehistoire et la protohistoire — Médecine dans la Préhistoire et la Protohistoire Crâne de jeune fille trépané au silex, Néolithique (3500 Av. J. C.) ; la cicatrisation des os indique que la patiente a survécu à l opération Sommaire 1 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Médecine Dans La Préhistoire Et La Protohistoire — Crâne de jeune fille trépané au silex, Néolithique (3500 Av. J. C.) ; la cicatrisation des os indique que la patiente a survécu à l opération Sommaire 1 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Médecine dans la Préhistoire et la Protohistoire — Crâne de jeune fille trépané au silex, Néolithique (3500 Av. J. C.) ; la cicatrisation des os indique que la patiente a survécu à l opération Sommaire 1 Sources …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Médecine dans la préhistoire et la protohistoire — Crâne de jeune fille trépané au silex, Néolithique (3500 Av. J. C.) ; la cicatrisation des os indique que la patiente a survécu à l opération Sommaire 1 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Médecine préhistorique — Médecine dans la Préhistoire et la Protohistoire Crâne de jeune fille trépané au silex, Néolithique (3500 Av. J. C.) ; la cicatrisation des os indique que la patiente a survécu à l opération Sommaire 1 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Prosthesis — For other uses, see Prosthesis (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Orthotic. A man with two prosthetic arms playing table football …   Wikipedia

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