| Fox s. |
delicate, fine-pointed scissors designed to gain access to interproximal areas for the removal of small tissue tabs or slight soft tissue deformities during gingivoplasty or gingivectomy.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| Fox-Fordyce d. |
a chronic, usually pruritic disease chiefly seen in women, characterized by the development of small follicular papular eruptions of apocrine glandbearing areas, especially the axillae and pubes, and caused by obstruction and rupture of the intraepidermal portion of the ducts of affected apocrine glands, resulting in alteration of the regional ductal epidermis, apocrine secretory tubule, and adjacent dermis. Called also apocrine miliaria.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| fox | a small dugout with a pit for individual shelter against enemy fire |
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| fox | a mounted hunter who follows the hounds in pursuit of a fox |
| fox | mounted hunters follow hounds in pursuit of a fox |
| fox | large pelagic shark of warm seas with a whiplike tail used to round up small fish on which to feed |
| fox | exceptionally large arboreal squirrel of eastern United States |
| fox | English inventor who published the first book illustrated with photographs (1800-1877) |
| fox | small lively black-and-white terriers formerly used to dig out foxes |
| fox | a ballroom dance in quadruple time |
| fox | low evergreen shrub of high north temperate regions of Europe and Asia and America bearing red edible berries |
| fox | any of several plants of the genus Digitalis |
| fox | a family of dicotyledonous plants of the order Polemoniales |
| fox | a small dugout with a pit for individual shelter against enemy fire |
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