| inanition |
Exhaustion for want of nourishment. To die from inanition is to die from Exhaustion. [Dunglison1868]. The condition of being inane; emptiness; want of fullness, as in the vessels of the body; hence, specifically, exhaustion from want of food, either from partial or complete starvation, or from a disorder of the digestive apparatus, producing the same result. [Webster1913]
Ãâó: www.antiquusmorbus.com/English/EnglishI.htm
|
|---|---|
| inactivation |
Reduction in conductance of a voltage-gated channel even though the activating voltage is maintained.
Ãâó: www.ualberta.ca/~neuro/OnlineIntro/glossary.htm
|
| inapparent infection |
The presence of infection without symptoms. Also known as subclinical or asymptomatic infection.
Ãâó: www.sabin.org/vaccine_science_GlossaryH_K.htm
|
| inappetence |
Loss or lack of appetite
Ãâó: duke.usask.ca/~misra/virology/stud2005/vaccines6/t...
|
| inactivation |
means that living microorganisms are rendered nonviable.
Ãâó: www.setonresourcecenter.com/cfr/40CFR/P725_004.HTM
|
| INA | the state of being inactive |
|---|---|
| INA | unsatisfactoriness by virtue of being inadequate |
| INA | lack of an adequate quantity or number |
| INA | a lack of competence |
| INA | (sometimes followed by `to') not meeting the requirements especially of a task |
| INA | not sufficient to meet a need |
| INA | in an inadequate manner or to an inadequate degree |
| INA | unsatisfactoriness by virtue of being inadequate |
| INA | unacceptability as a consequence of not being admissible |
| INA | not deserving to be admitted |
| INA | the trait of forgetting or ignoring your responsibilities |
| INA | an unintentional omission resulting from failure to notice something |
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