| amb | ambient; ambiguous; ambulance; ambulatory |
|---|---|
| ambig | ambiguous |
| AMB | ambiguous |
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| ambiguous | Doubtful or uncertain, particularly in respect to signification; capable of being understood in either of two or more possible senses; equivocal; as, an ambiguous course; an ambiguous expression. "What have been thy answers? What but dark, Ambiguous, and with double sense deluding?" (Milton) Synonym: Doubtful, dubious, uncertain, unsettled, indistinct, indeterminate, indefinite. See Equivocal. Origin: L. Ambiguus, fr. Ambigere to wander about, waver; amb- + agere to drive. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| ambiguous atrioventricular connections | Connections in which half the atrioventricular junction is connected concordantly and the other half is discordantly connected. (05 Mar 2000) |
| ambiguous codon | <molecular biology> A codon that codes for more than one amino acid. (09 Oct 1997) |
| ambiguous external genitalia | External genitalia not clearly of either sex; most commonly designates external genitalia that are incompletely masculinised. (05 Mar 2000) |
| ambiguous nucleus | A very slender, longitudinal column of motor neurons in the ventrolateral medulla oblongata; its efferent fibres leave with the vagus and glossopharyngeal nerve and innervate the striated muscle fibres of the pharynx (including the musculus levator veli palatini) and the vocal cord muscles of the larynx. Synonym: ambiguous nucleus. (05 Mar 2000) |
| ambiguous |
equivocal: open to two or more interpretations; or of uncertain nature or significance; or (often) intended to mislead; "an equivocal statement"; "the polling had a complex and equivocal (or ambiguous) message for potential female candidates"; "the officer's equivocal behavior increased the victim's uneasiness"; "popularity is an equivocal crown"; "an equivocal response to an embarrassing question" having more than one possible meaning; "ambiguous words"; "frustrated by ambiguous instructions, the parents were unable to assemble the toy" having no intrinsic or objective meaning; not organized in conventional patterns; "an ambiguous situation with no frame of reference"; "ambiguous inkblots"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| ambiguous |
A large word, phrase, sentence, or other communication is called ambiguous if it can be reasonably interpreted in more than one way. The simplest case is a single word with more than one sense: The word "bank", for example, can mean "financial institution", "edge of a river", or other things. Sometimes this is not a serious problem because a word that is ambiguous in isolation is often clear in context. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambiguous
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| ambiguous |
not stable; changing
Ãâó: library.thinkquest.org/2647/geometry/glossary.htm
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| ambiguous genitalia |
a congenital physical abnormality where the outer genitals do not have the typical appearance of either sex. (source)
Ãâó: www.congenitaladrenalhyperplasia.org/cah/glossary....
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| ambiguous g. |
genital organs with characteristics typical of both male and female, as seen in hermaphroditism and some types of pseudohermaphroditism.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| ambiguous | having more than one possible meaning |
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| ambiguous | open to two or more interpretations |
| ambiguous | (psychology) having no intrinsic or objective meaning |
| ambiguous | in an ambiguous manner |
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