| DG | dentate gyrus; deoxyglucose; desmoglein; diacylglycerol; diagnosis; diastolic gallop; DiGeorge [anom... |
|---|---|
| DGA | DiGeorge anomaly |
| DVA | developmental venous anomaly; distance visual acuity; duration of voluntary apnea; vindesine |
| MCA | major coronary artery; Maternity Center Association; medical care administration; methylcholanthrene... |
| MCA/MR | multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation [syndrome] |
| eugnathic anomaly | An abnormality that is limited to the teeth and their immediate alveolar supports. Synonym: eugnathic anomaly. Origin: eu-+ G. Gnathos, jaw (05 Mar 2000) |
|---|---|
| Uhl anomaly | Right ventricular myocardial aplasia, causing a dilated, thin-walled right ventricle without murmurs; death results in early childhood. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Freund's anomaly | A narrowing of the upper aperture of the thorax by shortening of the first rib and its cartilage; formerly believed to predispose to tuberculosis because of defective expansion of the lung apex. (05 Mar 2000) |
| anomaly |
Any sound that was not part of (or not intended for) the original soundtrack. Such sounds include buzzes, hum, clicks, pops, electronic noises, etc. Optical soundtracks (stripes found along one or both edges of a film) typically have characteristics similar to those of vinyl records. Digital soundtracks can suffer from electronic noises during playback and "new" anomalies can manifest during dubbing.
Ãâó: home.earthlink.net/~vigilant/stajGloss01.html
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| anomaly |
the deviation of the value of a parameter, such as temperature, from its average over a specified period
Ãâó: www.epa.nsw.gov.au/soe/95/28.htm
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| anomaly |
The prefix a(n) stand for “not”. An anomaly is something ab-normal in a scientific sense, an irregularity.
Ãâó: www.himalayasaltcrystal.com/glossary.htm
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| anomaly |
A difference between a predicted an measured phenomena.
Ãâó: www.curtin.edu.au/curtin/centre/waisrc/OKLO/Access...
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| anomaly |
A deviation, irregularity, or an unexpected result. A data anomaly may occur when a data field defined for one purpose is used for another. Examples of anomalies are negative numeric fields that should be positive (negative number of dependents), abnormally high numeric values (person weighing 3000 pounds), pairs of values in related columns that make no sense (male patient having a hysterectomy).
Ãâó: it.csumb.edu/departments/data/glossary.html
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