| NYHA | New York Heart Association Heart Disease¿¡ ´ëÇÑ Functional Classification &nbs... |
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| BKWP | below knee walking plaster |
| CW | cardiac work; case work; cell wall; chemical warfare; chemical weapon; chest wall; children's ward; ... |
| Cw | crutch walking |
| LLWC | long-leg walking cast |
| 6-MWD | 6 min walking distance |
|---|---|
| MWD | Maximal walking distance |
| M.W.D. | Maximum Walking Distance |
| walking | <molecular biology, technique> A class of techniques for cloning large regions of a chromosome. (14 Nov 1997) |
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| walking pneumonia | <chest medicine> A term used to describe Mycoplasmal pneumonia. most commonly affects those under 40 years of age and is commonly spread in families or closed populations. Symptoms include headache, muscle aches, fever, cough, chest pain, sore throat and rashes (in some individuals). Treatment is with antibiotics (for example erythromycin) (27 Sep 1997) |
| chromosome walking | A procedure to find and sequence a gene whose approximate position in a chromosome is known by classical genetic linkage studies. Starting with the known sequence of a gene shown by classical genetics to be near to the novel gene, new clones are picked from a genomic library by hybridisation with a short probe generated from the appropriate end of the known sequence. The new clones are then sequenced, new probes generated and the process repeated until the gene of interest is reached. (18 Nov 1997) |
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Synonyms :
| walking |
walk-to(a): close enough to be walked to; "walking distance"; "the factory with the big parking lot...is more convenient than the walk-to factory" walk: the act of traveling by foot; "walking is a healthy form of exercise"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| walking |
A method for cloning large regions of a chromosome. Starting from a known site, a gene library is screened for clones that hybridize to DNA probes taken from the ends of the first clone. These clones are then isolated, and their ends used to screen the library again. These clones are then isolated and their ends used, and so on. See gene walking; chromosome walking.
Ãâó: www.fao.org/docrep/003/X3910E/X3910E26.htm
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| walking wounded |
sick or Wounded personnel who can walk from the place where they became a casualty to the place where they can receive medical treatment, also called ambulant cases
Ãâó: home.att.net/~steinert/united_states_army_general_...
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| walking |
The tendency for SLCDs to creep, cares first, into a crack when lateral force is applied to their stern; can compromise the security of the placement and can be minimized by using a sling extension
Ãâó: www.rock-climbing.ws/rock-climbing-terminology/
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| walking d. |
cheyletiellosis (def. 1).
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| walking | the act of traveling by foot |
|---|---|
| walking | close enough to be walked to |
| walking | traveling by foot |
| walking | a union representative who visits workers at their jobs to see whether agreements are observed |
| walking | ferns having lanceolate fronds that root at the tip |
| walking | a horse marked by stamina and trained to move at a fast running walk |
| walking | tropical insect having a flattened leaflike body |
| walking | ferns having lanceolate fronds that root at the tip |
| walking | a state of extreme happiness |
| walking | a notice of dismissal or discharge |
| walking | a light comfortable shoe designed for vigorous walking |
| walking | any of various mostly tropical insects having long twiglike bodies |
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