| whole blood |
A general description for a sample of Blood taken from the venous or arterial circulation. It is composed of Blood cells, platelets, and plasma.
Ãâó: www.bloodbook.com/glossary.html
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| whole milk |
Regular milk. Close to 4% fat.
Ãâó: webexhibits.org/butter/glossary-sz.html
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| whole blood |
Being related by both the father and mother's side; this phrase is used in contradistinction to half, blood, (qv) which is relation only on one side. See Blood.
Ãâó: www.new-york-lawyer.ws/law-dictionary/wheel.htm
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| whole milk |
Milk from which the cream has not been removed.
Ãâó: www.cyberpathway.com/whispers/food/cookterm.htm
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| whole |
[L:98] In distinguishing pure from empirical concepts, Kant opposes the dynamic and mathematical whole. In pure concepts, "the whole...is prior to the part" and thus pure ideas cannot by obtained by composition"; for Kant, a pure concept "is one that is not abstracted from experience but springs from the understanding even as to content." To this is contrasted "the mathematical generation of a whole".
Ãâó: www.texttribe.com/text/kant_glossary.htm
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| whole | (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent |
|---|---|
| whole | bread made with whole wheat flour |
| whole | flour made by grinding the entire wheat berry including the bran |
| whole | milk from which no constituent (such as fat) has been removed |
| whole | a word that names the whole of which a given word is a part |
| whole | a musical note having the longest time value |
| whole | any of the natural numbers (positive or negative) or zero |
| whole | a rest equal in duration to a whole note |
| whole | everything available |
| whole | (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent |
| whole | common snipe of Eurasia and Africa |
| whole | a musical interval of two semitones |
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