| mb | millibar; mix well [Lat. misce bene] |
|---|---|
| NB | nail bed; neuro-Behc;cet [syndrome]; neuroblastoma; neurometric battery; newborn; nitrous oxide-barb... |
| nb | newborn; note well [Lat. nota bene] |
| NFW | nursed fairly well |
| PGWB | psychological general well-being [index] |
| Weller |
Thomas Huckle, born 1915. American physician and parasitologist; co-winner, with John F. Enders and Frederick C. Robbins, of the Nobel prize for medicine or physiology in 1954 for the discovery that viruses (specifically, poliomyelitis viruses) can be grown in tissue culture and thereby isolated and studied, making possible the production of vaccines.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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|---|---|
| Wells syndrome |
see under syndrome.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| Wells' s. |
cellulitis with erythema, edema, and often blistering of the skin accompanied by eosinophilia, flame figures, and a mild fever; a single episode lasts 2 to 6 weeks and recurrences or exacerbations are common. Called also eosinophilic cellulitis.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| wellness |
A dimension of health beyond the absence of disease or infirmity, including social, emotional and spiritual aspects of health.
Ãâó: www.moh.govt.nz/moh.nsf/0/15f5c5045e7a1dd4cc256b6b...
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| Wells |
a famous Southern black woman who led the fight against racism and lynching of blacks in the late 1800s and early 1900s. She began a newspaper in Memphis, where she was a school teacher, to champion the cause. After a mob there killed three blacks, she moved to Chicago to organize an anti-lynching society. Her work helped publicize such crimes, and led to tougher laws against lynching. She was a critic of Booker T. Washington for his refusal to push for an immediate end to racial segregation.]
Ãâó: www.fasttrackteaching.com/termscivil.html
|
| well | having plentiful supplies of a resource |
|---|---|
| well | in a tolerable manner |
| well | frequently experienced |
| well | widely or fully known |
| well | flow freely and abundantly |
| well | flow or run over (a limit or brim) |
| well | a perforated tube driven into the ground to collect water from the surrounding area |
| well | resulting from careful thought |
| well | done or happening at the appropriate or proper time |
| well | as of feelings and thoughts, or other ephemeral things |
| well | underground water that is held in the soil and in pervious rocks |
| well | free from psychological disorder |
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