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21 bandage d'extension
Bandage servant à maintenir en place les parties d'un os fracturé après qu'elles ont été remises dans leur position naturelle.Bandage used to hold the parts of a fractured bone together for healing.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > bandage d'extension
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22 clavicule
Os long, en forme de S allongé, qui s'articule en dehors avec la partie de l' omoplate nommée acromion, et en dedans avec le sternum et le premier cartilage costal.Syn. clavicle -
23 côte
côte fOs plat, en forme d'arc, qui s'articule sur la colonne vertébrale et le sternum. -
24 cuboïde
cuboïde mOs du tarse situé en avant du calcanéum.A tarsal bone which articulates posteriorly with the calcaneus. -
25 fibula
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26 ginglyme
ginglyme fArticulation à charnière, telle que celle du genou ou du coude, permettant la flexion sur un seul plan.Uniaxial joint in which a broad, transversely cylindrical convexity on one bone fits into a corresponding concavity on the other, allowing extensive motion in just one plane. -
27 humérus
humérus m -
28 jambe
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29 omoplate
omoplate fOs plat, large, mince, situé en haut du dos et constituant avec la clavicule la ceinture scapulaire.Syn. scapula -
30 os
os mChacune des pièces du squelette.Any of the various structures that make up the skeleton in most vertebrates. -
31 os cunéiforme
Les trois os de la seconde rangée du tarse.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > os cunéiforme
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32 péroné
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33 radius
radius mOs long constituant, avec le cubitus, le squelette de l' avant-bras, dont il est l'élément externe. -
34 rotule
rotule fOs triangulaire situé à la face antérieure de l' articulation du genou.A flat triangular bone that sits at the front of the knee joint.Syn. patella -
35 sacrum
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36 sternum
sternum mOs plat situé à la partie antérieure et médiane du thorax, s'articulant avec les vraies côtes et avec les clavicules.A flat bone, extending from the base of the neck to just below the diaphragm and forming the front part of the skeleton of the thorax.Syn. sternum -
37 testostérone
Principal hormone mâle, sécrétée par les testicules chez l'homme et par les ovaires et les glandes surrénales chez la femme et contribuant au développement musculaire ainsi qu'au comportement agressif.Sex hormone produced by the testicles and, in small amounts, by the ovaries, and which stimulates the development of male sex characteristics as well as bone and muscle growth, and which, if administered as a drug, can cause gain in lean body mass and possibly aggressive behaviour.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > testostérone
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38 tibia
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39 pèlerin
—1. LAT Cetorhinus maximus (Gunnerus)2. RUS гигантская акула f3. ENG basking [bone, elephant, giant, oil] shark4. DEU Riesenhai m, Mandelhai m5. FRA pèlerin m, requin m pèlerin [flaneur], squale géant [pèlerin] -
40 requin flaneur
—1. LAT Cetorhinus maximus (Gunnerus)2. RUS гигантская акула f3. ENG basking [bone, elephant, giant, oil] shark4. DEU Riesenhai m, Mandelhai m5. FRA pèlerin m, requin m pèlerin [flaneur], squale géant [pèlerin]DICTIONNAIRE DES NOMS DES ANIMAUX EN CINQ LANGUES > requin flaneur
См. также в других словарях:
Bone — (b[=o]n; 110), n. [OE. bon, ban, AS. b[=a]n; akin to Icel. bein, Sw. ben, Dan. & D. been, G. bein bone, leg; cf. Icel. beinn straight.] 1. (Anat.) The hard, calcified tissue of the skeleton of vertebrate animals, consisting very largely of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bone — heißen: Annaba (früher frz. Bône), algerische Stadt Bone (Comic), Serie von Jeff Smith Bone (Kabupaten), Region (Kabupaten) in Süd Sulawesi, Indonesien Bone (Reich), Sultanat der Bugis in Süd Sulawesi Watampone, Hauptstadt der indonesischen… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Bone — is the substance that forms the skeleton of the body. It is composed chiefly of calcium phosphate and calcium carbonate. It also serves as a storage area for calcium, playing a large role in calcium balance in the blood. The 206 bones in the body … Medical dictionary
bone — ► NOUN 1) any of the pieces of hard, whitish tissue making up the skeleton in vertebrates. 2) the hard material of which bones consist. 3) a thing resembling a bone, such as a strip of stiffening for an undergarment. ► VERB 1) remove the bones… … English terms dictionary
BONE — (or Bona, ancient Hippo Regius, named Annaba after Algerian independence from French rule), Mediterranean port in northeastern Algeria close to the Tunisian border. Located on a gulf between capes Garde and Rosa, it became one of the Maghreb s… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Bone — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Bone Formato Serie limitada Primera edición 1991 Última edición 2004 Editorial Self publishing Creador(es) Jeff Smith … Wikipedia Español
bone — [bōn] n. [ME bon < OE ban, bone, esp. of a limb, akin to Ger bein, a leg; only Gmc] 1. any of the separate parts of the hard connective tissue forming the skeleton of most full grown vertebrate animals 2. this tissue, composed essentially of… … English World dictionary
Bone — (b[=o]n), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Boned} (b[=o]nd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Boning}.] 1. To withdraw bones from the flesh of, as in cookery. To bone a turkey. Soyer. [1913 Webster] 2. To put whalebone into; as, to bone stays. Ash. [1913 Webster] 3. To… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bone — Bone, v. t. [F. bornoyer to look at with one eye, to sight, fr. borgne one eyed.] To sight along an object or set of objects, to see if it or they be level or in line, as in carpentry, masonry, and surveying. Knight. [1913 Webster] Joiners, etc … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
bone up on — bone up (on (something)) to study or improve your understanding of something, esp. for a test. The test includes history, math, and languages, so I ll have to bone up on a lot of subjects. With new developments in medicine happening all the time … New idioms dictionary
bone up — (on (something)) to study or improve your understanding of something, esp. for a test. The test includes history, math, and languages, so I ll have to bone up on a lot of subjects. With new developments in medicine happening all the time, doctors … New idioms dictionary