| LEEP |
(loop electrosurgical excision procedure) - Procedure for treating cervical dysplasia in which a fine wire loop and low-energy current are used to remove abnormal tissue from the cervix.
Ãâó: www.ukhealthcare.uky.edu/patient/glossary/glossary...
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|---|---|
| leech |
(Fishing) A bloodsucking worm that trout love to eat.
Ãâó: outdoorstore.espn.com/servlet/catalog.CFPage
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| leeches |
A bloodsucking worm used to drain blood from a wound
Ãâó: www.kented.org.uk/ngfl/subjects/history/medhist/pa...
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| leeches |
an aquatic macroinvertebrate of the phylum Annelida, class Hirudinea; aquatic worms that do not have legs; tolerant of pollution.
Ãâó: www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/LFB/glossary/l_m.html
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| leech |
A group of blood-sucking annelid worms.
Ãâó: el.erdc.usace.army.mil/emrrp/turtles/glossary.html
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| Lee | a city on the River Aire in West Yorkshire in northern England |
|---|---|
| Lee | related to onions |
| Lee | plant having a large slender white bulb and flat overlapping dark green leaves |
| Lee | a suggestive or sneering look or grin |
| Lee | a facial expression of contempt or scorn |
| Lee | look suggestively or obliquely |
| Lee | showing sly or knowing malice in a glance |
| Lee | (of a glance) sidelong and slyly lascivious |
| Lee | openly distrustful and unwilling to confide |
| Lee | the sediment from fermentation of an alcoholic beverage |
| Lee | Dutch pioneer microscopist who was among the first to recognize cells in animals and who gave the first accurate descriptions of microbes and spermatozoa and blood corpuscles (1632-1723) |
| Lee | the side of something that is sheltered from the wind |
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