| listing | 1. The act or process of one who lists (in any sense of the verb); as, the listing of a door; the listing of a stock at the Stock Exchange. 2. The selvedge of cloth; list. 3. The sapwood cut from the edge of a board. 4. <agriculture> The throwing up of the soil into ridges, a method adopted in the culture of beets and some garden crops. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| Listing's law | When the eye leaves one object and fixes upon another, it revolves about an axis perpendicular to a plane cutting both the former and the present lines of vision. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Listing's reduced eye | A representation that simplifies calculations of retinal imagery: radius of anterior refracting surface, 5.1 mm; total length, 20 mm; distance of nodal point to retina, 15 mm. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Listing, Johann | <person> German physiologist, 1808-1882. See: Listing's reduced eye, Listing's law. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Liston's knives | Long-bladed knives of various sizes used in amputations. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Liston's shears | Strong shears for cutting plaster of Paris bandages. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Liston's splint | A long splint extending from the axilla to the sole of the foot. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Liston, Robert | <person> English surgeon, 1794-1847. See: Liston's knives, Liston's shears, Liston's splint. (05 Mar 2000) |
| lisuride | <chemical> An ergot derivative that acts as an agonist at dopamine d2 receptors, may also act as an antagonist at dopamine d1 receptors, and as an agonist at some serotonin receptors. It has been used in parkinsonism but it may be hepatotoxic. It is commonly used as a research tool. Pharmacological action: antiparkinson agents, dopamine agonists, serotonin agonists. Chemical name: Urea, N'-((8alpha)-9,10-didehydro-6-methylergolin-8-yl)-N,N-diethyl- (12 Dec 1998) |
| lissencephaly |
The brain is small and smooth. For more information see The Lissencephaly Network
Ãâó: kid-power.org/definitions.html
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| Lister |
(also known as Elstree) The vaccine strain most commonly used in Europe and was widely used during the smallpox eradication.
Ãâó: www.stanford.edu/~juliakl/Smallpox/Glossary.htm
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| Lister |
(1827-1912) English surgeon who discovered that germs cause post operative infections. He then insisted doctors use antiseptics, substances that kill germs, on their hands and instruments before surgery. This process greatly reduced the number of deaths caused by infection after surgery.
Ãâó: regentsprep.org/Regents/global/vocab/topic_alpha.c...
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| lisp |
a computer language; the name is an abbreviation of LISt Processing. Lisp is a functional language in which an operation (function name) is written, followed by its arguments, inside parentheses, eg (+ x 3).
Ãâó: www.cs.utexas.edu/users/novak/cs307vocab.html
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| lisp |
Programming language; name derived from "List Processing"
Ãâó: www.wtec.org/loyola/kb/ag_gloss.htm
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| LIS | the act of hearing attentively |
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| LIS | attending to or alert for sound |
| LIS | a watch established for the reception of traffic of interest to the unit maintaining the watch |
| LIS | moldboard plow with a double moldboard designed to move dirt to either side of a central furrow |
| LIS | assessor who makes out the tax lists |
| LIS | English surgeon who was the first to use antiseptics (1827-1912) |
| LIS | moldboard plow with a double moldboard designed to move dirt to either side of a central furrow |
| LIS | moldboard plow with a double moldboard designed to move dirt to either side of a central furrow |
| LIS | genus of terrestrial orchids having usually a single pair of broad shining leaves near the middle of the stem |
| LIS | small orchid with two elliptic leaves and a slender raceme of small green flowers |
| LIS | orchid having two triangular leaves and a short lax raceme of green to rust-colored flowers with the lip flushed mauve |
| LIS | orchid having a pair of ovate leaves and a long slender raceme of green flowers sometimes tinged red-brown |
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