| effluvia |
A usually invisible emanation or exhalation, as of vapor or gas.; Miasma. [Heritage]. Exhalations or emanations, applied especially to those of noxious character. In the mid-nineteenth century, they were called "vapours" and distinguished into the contagious effluvia, such as rubeola (measles); marsh effluvia, such as miasmata; and those arising from animals or vegetables, such as odors. [NGSQ1988]
Ãâó: www.antiquusmorbus.com/English/EnglishE.htm
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| effector |
An organ of the body, either a muscle or a gland, that responds to a motor neuron impulse.
Ãâó: www.nutrabio.com/Definitions/definitions_e.htm
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| efficacy |
The effectiveness or ability of a drug to control or cure an illness. The efficacy of an anti-HIV drug usually refers to the drugs ability to lower viral load.
Ãâó: www.aegis.com/pubs/cria/2003/CR030902.html
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| eflornithine |
An investigational drug that reduces the growth of tumor cells and may stop abnormal cells from turning into cancer cells.
Ãâó: nydailynews.healthology.com/nydailynews/15836.htm
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| effect |
The influence of an external factor on the plant, eg, drought, fertilizer, flooding. In statistics, that which is measured and analyzed as in treatment effect.
Ãâó: www.knowledgebank.irri.org/glossary/Glossary/E.htm
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| EF | radiating or as if radiating light |
|---|---|
| EF | give out or emit (also metaphorically) |
| EF | flow forth, as of water |
| EF | pour out, of liquids |
| EF | flow under pressure |
| EF | an unrestrained expression of emotion |
| EF | extravagantly demonstrative |
| EF | uttered with unrestrained enthusiasm |
| EF | in an effusive manner |
| EF | a friendly open trait of a talkative person |
| EF | United States violinist (born in Russia) (1889-1985) |
| EF | a newt in its terrestrial stage of development |
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