| dwarf |
(see table.)
Ãâó: www.hostafarm.com/glofhote.html
|
|---|---|
| dwarfism |
Any type of body situation that results in a very small person. Jeunes syndrome is one form of dwarfism.
Ãâó: www.childrenscolumbus.org/gd/gd.aspx
|
| dwarf |
The description of a variety or cultivar that is smaller than the species plant, though it has the same basic characteristics. Dwarfing can also occur through natural causes, dwarf cultivars are bred to be small. Top E
Ãâó: www.brusselsbonsai.com/Definitions.html
|
| dwarf c. |
a bacterial colony smaller than normal and containing poorly developed forms; called also D c.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
|
| dwarf p. |
a small pelvis seen in several types of dwarfism.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
|
| DWA | small silky-haired pouched rodent |
|---|---|
| DWA | Asiatic shrub cultivated for its rosy red flowers |
| DWA | very small (to 8 feet) sperm whale of central coasts of Atlantic and Pacific |
| DWA | European erect or depressed annual weedy spurge adventive in northeastern United States |
| DWA | common nonpoisonous shrub of eastern North America with compound leaves and green paniculate flowers followed by red berries |
| DWA | small early-blooming tulip |
| DWA | widely distributed boreal shrubby willow with partially underground creeping stems and bright green glossy leaves |
| DWA | a low perennial white-flowered trillium found in the southeastern United States |
| DWA | atypically small |
| DWA | smallness of stature |
| DWA | a genetic abnormality resulting in short stature |
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