| fire-damp |
Methane, CH4, found in coal mines.
Ãâó:
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|---|---|
| fireworks burn |
Injury from explosives; usually a burn, often with embedded foreign bodies and a high incidence of infection and tetanus, which should be prevented by meticulous care of injury and use of antitetanus toxoid and immune globulin.
Ãâó:
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| first cranial nerves |
The nerves supplying the nasal olfactory mucosa. They consist of delicate bundles of unmyelinated fibers, the fila olfactoria, which pass through the cribriform plate and terminate in the olfactory bulb. The fila are the cen
Ãâó:
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| first intention healing |
Healing that takes place when wound edges are held or sutured together without the formation of obvious granulation tissue. SEE: healing.
Ãâó:
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| first pass metabolism |
The metabolism of a substance that occurs immediately as it enters the body, and before it can exert any effect, or before it can be measured at its target organ.
Ãâó:
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| FIR | (a piece of) a substance that burns easily and can be used to start a coal or coke fire |
|---|---|
| FIR | a muzzle loader having a flintlock type of gunlock |
| FIR | play in which children take the roles of firemen and pretend to put out a fire |
| FIR | a member of a fire department who tries to extinguish fires |
| FIR | a pitcher who does not start the game |
| FIR | a laborer who tends fires (as on a coal-fired train or steamship) |
| FIR | an ax that has a long handle and a head with one cutting edge and a point on the other side |
| FIR | an ax that has a long handle and a head with one cutting edge and a point on the other side |
| FIR | the act of carrying a person over your shoulder |
| FIR | a city in central Italy on the Arno River |
| FIR | an open recess in a wall at the base of a chimney where a fire can be built |
| FIR | an upright hydrant for drawing water to use in fighting a fire |
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