| dead space |
Area in the patient
Ãâó: www.datex-ohmeda.com/clinical/cw_issue_03_article5...
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| dead |
No store, that you frequent which usually has Hot Wheels, has any. Used to describe a condition lasting for a week or more.
Ãâó: www.terrystoybin.com/diecastdic.htm
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| dead |
when life stops. There is no longer brain activity. The heart does not beat. The lungs do not take in air. The body no longer feels heat, pain or cold.
Ãâó: t3.preservice.org/T0210542/circlelife/vocab.html
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| dead space |
A defect or cavity.
Ãâó: www.homehealthcarenurseonline.com/pt/re/homehealth...
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| dead time |
usually refers to the time between the whistle for a foul, which stops the clock, and the restarting of the clock after the ball is put in play, a maximum of three seconds.
Ãâó: www.diablowaterpolo.com/coaches/glossary.html
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| dead | the fruiting bodies of the fungi of the genus Xylaria |
|---|---|
| dead | (informal) accurate and to the point |
| dead | someone who fails to meet a financial obligation |
| dead | a father who defaults on his obligation to provide financial support for his offspring |
| dead | the part of a lock that is engaged or withdrawn with a key |
| dead | convert (metallic mercury) into a grey powder consisting of minute globules, as by shaking with chalk or fatty oil |
| dead | make less lively, intense, or vigorous |
| dead | become lifeless, less lively, intense, or active |
| dead | make vague or obscure or make (an image) less visible |
| dead | lessen the momentum or velocity of |
| dead | make vapid or deprive of spirit |
| dead | cut a girdle around (a plant) so as to kill by interrupting the circulation of water and nutrients |
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