| TENS |
is a method of nerve stimulation. Electrodes are placed on the skin near the area of pain and connected to a small, battery-powered TENS unit. The low level of electrical current is believed to work by stimulating the release of endorphins or by blocking pain impulses. This treatment is commonly done at home.
Ãâó: www.tricesportsmedicine.com/Terms.aspx
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| tense |
a property of verbs relating primarily to the time at which the action or event denoted by the verb takes place. For example, past tense verbs, as in Sam left, describe events in the past.
Ãâó: www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/clmt/MTbook/HTML/node9...
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| tensor |
(rhd) - Anatomy 'a muscle structure that stretches or tightens some part of the body'; Mathematics 'a set of functions that are transformed in a particular way when changing from one coordinate system to another'.
Ãâó: www.unb.ca/web/transpo/mynet/mtq47a.htm
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| tension |
??A force that pulls or stretches.
Ãâó: www.wsdot.wa.gov/Projects/I82/KeysRd/BridgeGlossar...
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| tension |
In common usage, tension refers to a sense of heightened involvement, uncertainty, and interest an audience experiences as the climax of the action approaches. In the school of literary theory called "New Criticism" in the 1930s and later, the word tension refers more specifically to the quality of balanced opposites that can provide form and unity to a literary work of diverse components. ...
Ãâó: web.cn.edu/kwheeler/lit_terms_T.html
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