| holistic health |
A non-medical philosophy of well-being that considers the physical, mental and spiritual aspects of life as closely interconnected and balanced.
Ãâó: www.destinationspa.com/travel_pros/spaGlossary.htm
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| holistic medicine |
An approach to therapy which focuses on the use of natural substances, and in which all the physical, mental, and social aspects of the patient's life are taken into account in understanding and curing their illness as opposed to merely treating their symptoms.
Ãâó: www.drfoster.co.uk/cam/objectlist.aspx
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| hollow |
Lacking in middle flavors and structure; the sense that something is missing between the first taste and the finish. Hollow wines are often the result of yields that are too large, diluting the quality of the grapes.
Ãâó: www.eosvintage.com/glossary.html
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| holistic |
Many complementary therapies make a point of focusing on holistic care (which has become known internationally as 'wellness' care) concentrating on maintaining and improving health rather than just treating pain and disease. It describes an approach to patient care in which the physical, mental, and social factors in the patient's condition are taken into account, rather than just the diagnosed disease.
Ãâó: www.drfoster.co.uk/cam/objectlist.aspx
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| hole |
noun - A linear division between two sets of points; a gap that separates two objects in planespace or lower. A hole can penetrate objects in realmspace or higher without splitting them. It is the planespace analog of the chasm in realmspace and the gully in teteraspace.
Ãâó: tetraspace.alkaline.org/glossary.htm
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| hol | type genus of the family Holocentridae |
|---|---|
| hol | bright red fish of West Indies and Bermuda |
| hol | a squirrelfish found from South Carolina to Bermuda and Gulf of Mexico |
| hol | on reefs from Bermuda and Florida to northern South America |
| hol | fish with high compressed head and a body tapering off into a long tail |
| hol | chimaeras and extinct forms |
| hol | (Apocrypha) the Assyrian general who was decapitated by the biblical heroine Judith |
| hol | the intermediate photograph (or photographic record) that contains information for reproducing a three-dimensional image by holography |
| hol | handwritten book or document |
| hol | written entirely in one's own hand |
| hol | written wholly in the handwriting of the signer |
| hol | written entirely in one's own hand |
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