| distal |
situated farthest from point of attachment or origin, as of a limb or bone directed away from the midline or mesial plane of the body
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| distance |
the property created by the space between two objects or points a distant region; "I could see it in the distance" size of the gap between two places; "the distance from New York to Chicago"; "he determined the length of the shortest line segment joining the two points" indifference by personal withdrawal; "emotional distance" keep at a distance; "we have to distance ourselves from these events in order to continue living" the interval between two times; "the distance from birth to death"; "it all happened in the space of 10 minutes" a remote point in time; "if that happens it will be at some distance in the future"; "at a distance of ten years he had forgotten many of the details" outdistance: go far ahead of; "He outdistanced the other runners"
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| distemper |
any of various infectious viral diseases of animals ill humor: an angry and disagreeable mood a painting created with paint that is made by mixing the pigments with water and a binder paint with distemper a method of painting in which the pigments are mixed with water and a binder; used for painting posters or murals or stage scenery
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| distend |
dilate: become wider; "His pupils were dilated" cause to expand as it by internal pressure; "The gas distended the animal's body" swell from or as if from internal pressure; "The distended bellies of the starving cows"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| distention |
dilatation: the state of being stretched beyond normal dimensions the act of expanding by pressure from within
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