| indic | indication, indicated |
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| indican | 1. <chemistry> A glucoside obtained from woad (indigo plant) and other plants, as a yellow or light brown sirup. It has a nauseous bitter taste, a decomposes or drying. By the action of acids, ferments, etc, it breaks down into sugar and indigo. It is the source of natural indigo. 2. <physiology> An indigo-forming substance, found in urine, and other animal fluids, and convertible into red and blue indigo (urrhodin and uroglaucin). Chemically, it is indoxyl sulphate of potash, C8H6NSO4K, and is derived from the indol formed in the alimentary canal. Synonym: uroxanthin. See: Indigo. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| indicanidrosis | Excretion of indican in the sweat. Origin: indican + G. Hidros, sweat (05 Mar 2000) |
| indicant | That which indicates or points out; as, an indicant of the remedy for a disease. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| indicanuria | An increased urinary excretion of indican, a derivative of indol formed chiefly in the intestine when protein is putrefied; indol is also formed during the putrefaction of protein in other sites. (05 Mar 2000) |
| indicate | 1. To show the probable presence of existence or nature or course of: give fair evidence of: be a fairly certain sign or symptom of. 2. To demonstrate or suggest the probable necessity or advisability. (18 Nov 1997) |
| indication | A circumstance which points to or shows the cause, pathology, treatment or issue of an attack of disease, that which points out, that which serves as a guide or warning. Origin: L. Indicatio (18 Nov 1997) |
| indicative | That indicates, that points out more or less exactly, that reveals fairly clearly. (18 Nov 1997) |
| indicator | An event, entity or condition that typically characterises a prescribed environment or situation, indicators determine or aid in determining whether or not certain stated circumstances exist or criteria are satisfied. (09 Oct 1997) |
| indicator dilution method | hamilton-Stewart method |
| indicator dilution techniques | Methods for assessing flow through a system by injection of a known quantity of an indicator, such as a dye, radionuclide, or chilled liquid, into the system and monitoring its concentration over time at a specific point in the system. (12 Dec 1998) |
| indicator organisms | Organisms that respond predictably to various environmental changes, and whose presence, or abundance, are used as indicators of environmental conditions. (09 Oct 1997) |
| indicator plant | Plant species indicating some specific characteristic of a certain locality. (09 Oct 1997) |
| indicator system | In in vitro immunological tests, a combination of reagents used to determine the degree to which immunological reagents have combined (e.g., sensitised erythrocytes in complement-fixation tests; enzyme and substrate in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays). (05 Mar 2000) |
| indicator yellow | A compound formed in the bleaching of rhodopsin by light; it is chrome yellow at pH 3.3-4.0 and pale yellow at pH 9.0-10.0. (05 Mar 2000) |
| indicator-dilution curve | Graph of the serial concentrations (dilutions) of a dye, e.g., Evans blue, following its intravascular or intracardiac injection; useful in the diagnosis of congenital cardiac shunts, measurement of cardiac output, and detection of cardiovalvular incompetence. Synonym: indicator-dilution curve. (05 Mar 2000) |
Synonyms : 1H-Indol-3-ol Hydrogen Sulfate Ester, Indican Monopotassium Salt, Indican Monosodium Salt, Indoxyl Sulfate, Monopotassium Salt, Indican, Monosodium Salt, Indican, Sulfate, Indoxyl
Synonyms : Dilution Technics, Indicator Dilution Technics, Dilution Technic, Dilution Technic, Indicator, Dilution Technics, Indicator, Dilution Technique, Dilution Technique, Indicator, Dilution Techniques, Indicator, Indicator Dilution Technic, Technic, Dilution
Synonyms : Indicators, Reagents and Indicators
| indicant |
indication: something that serves to indicate or suggest; "an indication of foul play"; "indications of strain"; "symptoms are the prime indicants of disease" index: a number or ratio (a value on a scale of measurement) derived from a series of observed facts; can reveal relative changes as a function of time
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| indication |
something that serves to indicate or suggest; "an indication of foul play"; "indications of strain"; "symptoms are the prime indicants of disease" the act of indicating or pointing out by name (medicine) a reason to prescribe a drug or perform a procedure; "the presence of bacterial infection was an indication for the use of antibiotics" something (as a course of action) that is indicated as expedient or necessary; "there were indications that it was time to leave" reading: a datum about some physical state that is presented to a user by a meter or similar instrument; "he could not believe the meter reading"; "the barometer gave clear indications of an approaching storm"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| indictment |
a formal document written for a prosecuting attorney charging a person with some offense an accusation of wrongdoing; "the book is an indictment of modern philosophy"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| indicator |
index: a number or ratio (a value on a scale of measurement) derived from a series of observed facts; can reveal relative changes as a function of time a signal for attracting attention a device for showing the operating condition of some system (chemistry) a substance that changes color to indicate the presence of some ion or substance; can be used to indicate the completion of a chemical reaction or (in medicine) to test for a particular reaction
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| indictment |
In the common law legal system, an indictment is a formal charge of having committed a serious criminal offense. In those jurisdictions which retain the concept of a felony, the serious crime offence would be a felony; those jurisdictions which have abolished the concept of a felony often substitute instead the concept of an indictable offence, i.e. an offence which requires an indictment. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indictment
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| indic | a branch of the Indo-Iranian family of languages |
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| indic | a number or ratio (a value on a scale of measurement) derived from a series of observed facts |
| indic | something that serves to indicate or suggest |
| indic | give evidence of |
| indic | be a signal for or a symptom of |
| indic | indicate a place, direction, person, or thing |
| indic | to state or express briefly |
| indic | suggest the necessity of an intervention |
| indic | a datum about some physical state that is presented to a user by a meter or similar instrument |
| indic | something (as a course of action) that is indicated as expedient or necessary |
| indic | something that serves to indicate or suggest |
| indic | (medicine) a reason to prescribe a drug or perform a procedure |
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