| fester |
Festers are gigantic, fat beasts, that appear to have been sewn together haphazardly. Though they represent the hideous death of drowned slaves, these monsters seem to actually be the slave traders themselves, forced to relive the fate they gave their human cargo. They attack with a gigantic flail. They can only be killed with the axe or by exploding them or setting them on fire. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Suffering_(game)
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| FES |
This is a technique, still in development, that uses electrical impulses to artificially trigger paralysed muscles to contract. Its effectiveness in helping the muscles involved in breathing, movement and urination in people with spinal cord injury, is being investigated.
Ãâó: www.spinalnet.co.uk/EEndCom/GBCON/homepage.nsf/0/8...
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| festination |
involontary shortening of stride and quickening of gait that occurs in some diseases (eg, Parkinson’s disease). It is most commonly used to describe gait disturbance, but it is also used to describe speech. For example, ones expression of words can accelerate while talking, and the space between words will become shorter and shorter. This happens to such a degree that it can be difficult to understand the individual who has festinating speech.
Ãâó: www.dbs-stn.org/glossary1.asp
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| FES |
The application of low-level, computer-controlled electric current to the neuromuscular system, including paralyzed muscle, to enhance or produce functions such as walking or bike exercises.
Ãâó: www.birf.info/home/bi-tools/qlinks_f.html
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| FES |
Functional Electrical Stimulation, a way of stimulating the muscles of paralysed limbs (usually the legs, occasionally the arms) by using computer-controlled electrical current. FES aims to provide armfunction in tetraplegia and to restore some degree of walking in paraplegia. It can also reduce muscle wasting and osteoporosis.
Ãâó: www.spinal.co.uk/about/default.asp
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| FES | involuntary shortening of stride and quickening of gait that occurs in some diseases (e.g., Parkinson's disease) |
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| FES | an organized series of acts and performances (usually in one place) |
| FES | a day or period of time set aside for feasting and celebration |
| FES | (Judaism) an eight-day Jewish holiday commemorating the rededication of the Temple of Jerusalem |
| FES | offering fun and gaiety |
| FES | any joyous diversion |
| FES | flower chains suspended in loops between points |
| FES | an embellishment consisting of a decorative representation of a string of flowers suspended between two points |
| FES | a curtain of fabric draped and bound at intervals to form graceful loops |
| FES | decorate with festoons |
| FES | flower chains suspended in loops between points |
| FES | a genus of tufted perennial grasses of the family Gramineae |
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