| ¿µ¹® | cervical vertebra | ÇÑ±Û | ¸ñ»À, °æÃß |
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| ¼³¸í | ôÃß Áß¿¡¼ ¸ñºÎºÐÀ» ÀÌ·ç´Â ôÃß»À¸¦ À̸£´Â ¸»ÀÌ´Ù. ôÁÖÀÇ ½ÃÀÛÀΠù¹øÂ° ôÃß»À¿¡¼ºÎÅÍ 7¹øÂ° ôÃß»À±îÁö¸¦ ¸»ÇÑ´Ù. ¸ñÀÖ´Â Æú¸³(sessile polyp) ±â½ÃºÎ°¡ ³ÐÀº ¸ð¾çÀ» °¡Áö°í ³»°³»·Î µ¹ÃâµÇ¾î ³ª¿Â Æú¸³À» ¸»ÇÑ´Ù. ÀÌ¿¡ ºñÇØ Á¼Àº Áٱ⿡ ÀÇÇØ ÁöÅʵǴ Æú¸³À» ¸ñÀÖ´Â Æú¸³À̶ó ÇÑ´Ù. |
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| TV | talipes varus; television; tetrazolium violet; thoracic vertebra; tickborne virus; tidal volume; tot... |
|---|---|
| FRAME | Fund for the Replacement of Animals in Medical Experiments |
| LOR | long open reading frame; lorazepam; loricrin; loss of righting reflex |
| LORF | long open reading frame |
| OHFT | overhead frame trapeze |
| PPVT | Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test |
|---|---|
| PPVT--R | Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test--Revised |
| PACS | Picture Archival and Communication System |
| PACS | Picture Archive and Communication System |
| PACS | Picture Archiving Communication System |
| picture frame vertebra | Radiographically diminished density of trabecular bone with relative preservation of the cortex, a sign of osteopenia. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| rosenzweig picture-frustration study | A projective test depicting cartoon-like characters in frustrating situations. The scoring of the subject's responses indicates the direction of hostility or aggression, that is, whether he blames himself, the other person, or the set of circumstances. (12 Dec 1998) |
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| picture | 1. The art of painting; representation by painting. "Any well-expressed image . . . Either in picture or sculpture." (Sir H. Wotton) 2. A representation of anything (as a person, a landscape, a building) upon canvas, paper, or other surface, produced by means of painting, drawing, engraving, photography, etc.; a representation in colours. By extension, a figure; a model. "Pictures and shapes are but secondary objects." (Bacon) "The young king's picture . . . In virgin wax." (Howell) 3. An image or resemblance; a representation, either to the eye or to the mind; that which, by its likeness, brings vividly to mind some other thing; as, a child is the picture of his father; the man is the picture of grief. "My eyes make pictures when they are shut." (Coleridge) Picture is often used adjectively, or in forming self-explaining compounds; as, picture book or picture-book, picture frame or picture-frame, picture seller or picture-seller, etc. Picture gallery, a gallery, or large apartment, devoted to the exhibition of pictures. Picture red, a rod of metal tube fixed to the walls of a room, from which pictures are hung. Picture writing. The art of recording events, or of expressing messages, by means of pictures representing the actions or circumstances in question. The record or message so represented; as, the picture writing of the American Indians. Synonym: Picture, Painting. Every kind of representation by drawing or painting is a picture, whether made with oil colours, water colours, pencil, crayons, or India ink; strictly, a painting is a picture made by means of coloured paints, usually applied moist with a brush. Origin: L. Pictura, fr. Pingere, pictum, to paint: cf. F. Peinture. See Paint. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| picture element | <microscopy> Any segment of a video scan line whose dimension along the line is equal to the line spacing. (05 Aug 1998) |
| Balkan frame | An overhead frame, supported on uprights attached to the bedposts or to a separate stand, from which a splinted limb is slung in the treatment of fracture or joint disease. Synonym: Balkan beam, Balkan splint. (05 Mar 2000) |
| blocked reading frame | A sequence of DNA that cannot be translated into a viable protein; usually due to the interruption by one or more termination codons. Synonym: closed reading frame. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Bradford frame | An oblong rectangular frame made of pipe, over which are stretched transversely two strips of canvas; permits trunk and lower extremities of a bed-ridden patient to move as a unit. (05 Mar 2000) |
| reading frame | One of the three possible ways of reading a nucleotide sequence. As the genetic code is read in nonoverlapping triplets (codons) there are three possible ways of translating a sequence of nucleotides into a protein, each with a different starting point. For example: given the nucleotide sequence: AGCAGCAGC, the three reading frames are: AGC AGC AGC, GCA GCA, CAG CAG. (18 Nov 1997) |
| reading frame, open | An open reading frame in DNA has no termination codon, no signal to stop reading the nucleotide sequence, and so may be translated into protein. (12 Dec 1998) |
| closed reading frame | A sequence of DNA that cannot be translated into a viable protein; usually due to the interruption by one or more termination codons. Synonym: closed reading frame. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Whitman's frame | A frame similar to the Bradford frame, but with curved sides. (05 Mar 2000) |
| space frame | Three-dimensional optical bench that holds laser components stable from vibrational and thermal excursions. (09 Oct 1997) |
| Stryker frame | A frame that holds the patient and permits turning in various planes without individual motion of parts. (05 Mar 2000) |
| occluding frame | <dentistry> A special holder for models of your teeth. The articulator holds the models in the same alignment as your jaw so the orthodontist can look carefully at your bite. (08 Jan 1998) |
| open reading frame | <molecular biology> A reading frame in a sequence of nucleotides in DNA that contains no termination codons and so can potentially translate as a polypeptide chain. (18 Nov 1997) |
| overlapping reading frame | <molecular biology> Start codons in different reading frames which generate different polypeptides from the same DNA sequence. (09 Oct 1997) |
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