| incarceration | <surgery> Abnormal retention or confinement of a body part, specifically: a constriction of the neck of a hernial sac so that the hernial contents become irreducible. Origin: L. Incarceration, incarceratio, Fr. L. Incarceratus (13 Nov 1997) |
|---|---|
| incarceration symptom | Intermittent pain, sometimes with nausea and emesis, caused by intermittent proximal obstruction of ureter. Originally believed due to a mobile kidney that caused ureter to kink with positional changes. Synonym: incarceration symptom. (05 Mar 2000) |
| incarceration |
captivity: the state of being imprisoned; "he was held in captivity until he died"; "the imprisonment of captured soldiers"; "his ignominious incarceration in the local jail"; "he practiced the immurement of his enemies in the castle dungeon"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
|
|---|---|
| incarceration |
(in
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspz...
|
| incarceration |
Imprisonment; confinement in a jail or penitentiary.
Ãâó: www.utcourts.gov/resources/glossary.htm
|
| incarceration |
the act of putting an offender in jail.
Ãâó: www.nationaltcc.org/tcc/
|
| incarceration s. |
Dietl's crisis.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
|
| incarceration | the state of being imprisoned |
|---|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|