| mastectomy |
The surgical removal of the breast; usually done as a treatment for breast cancer.
Ãâó: www.sexualcounselling.com/Glossary/Glossarym.htm
|
|---|---|
| mask |
In snorkelling, a covering for the face that helps you to see better underwater.
Ãâó: www.reefed.edu.au/glossary/m.html
|
| mast- |
An upright spar that supports sails and associated rigging.
Ãâó: www.reefed.edu.au/glossary/m.html
|
| mask |
a glass plate with a pattern of transparent and opaque areas used to photolithographically create patterns on wafers. A mask is commonly used to refer to a plate that has a pattern large enough to pattern a whole wafer at one time. See also, reticle.
Ãâó: www.icknowledge.com/glossary/m.html
|
| masturbation |
The Victorians were obsessed by it - stopping it, that is - even going as far as designing suits to prevent 'self-abuse'.
Ãâó: www.embassy.org.nz/encycl/m3encyc.htm
|
| MAS | have dominance or the power to defeat over |
|---|---|
| MAS | highly skilled or proficient |
| MAS | controlling |
| MAS | the principal bedroom in a house |
| MAS | an original creation (i.e., an audio recording) from which copies can be made |
| MAS | a cylinder that contains brake fluid that is compressed by a piston |
| MAS | (computer science) a computer file that is used as the authority in a given job and that is relatively permanent |
| MAS | a master's degree in business |
| MAS | a master's degree in questions of public concern |
| MAS | key that secures entrance everywhere |
| MAS | a degree granted for the successful completion of advanced study of architecture |
| MAS | a master's degree in arts and sciences |
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