| Greengard |
Paul, born 1925. American biochemist; co-winner, with Arvid Carlsson and Eric R. Kandel, of the Nobel prize for medicine or physiology in 2000 for discoveries concerning signal transduction in the nervous system.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| Greenland s. |
Somniosus microcephalus.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| greenstick f. |
fracture in which one side of a bone is broken, the other being bent (see Plate 18); an infraction; called also hickory-stick or willow f.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| Greenfield's disease |
[J. Godwin Greenfield, Brit. neuropathologist, 1884?1958] Metachromatic leukodystrophy.
Ãâó:
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| green |
The closely mown, carefully manicured target area in which the hole is cut.
Ãâó: www.oregongolf.com/glossary/
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| green | food fish of the northern Pacific |
|---|---|
| green | with green color |
| green | paying the raider to give up a takeover attempt (as by an extravagant buyback of the stock they hold in your corporation) |
| green | an open-air marketplace for farm products |
| green | the property of being green |
| green | lush greenness of flourishing vegetation |
| green | the state of not being ripe |
| green | ore of cadmium |
| green | an international organization that works for environmental conservation and the preservation of endangered species |
| green | a backstage room in a theater where performers rest or have visitors |
| green | any of various leafy plants or their leaves and stems eaten as vegetables |
| green | an olive-green sandstone containing glauconite |
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