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amputations

  • 1 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

  • 2 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

  • 3 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

  • 4 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

  • 5 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

  • 6 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

  • 7 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

  • 8 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

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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