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Significats de ars en anglès
Damage to the body resulting from excessive exposure to ionizing radiation which causes symptoms like nausea, fatigue, vomiting, and diarrhea and in severe cases loss of hair, hemorrhage, inflammation and death.
Curious because Arafat didn't demonstrate the classic symptoms of acuteradiationsyndrome.
2
The Company's lead indications are critical limb ischemia (CLI), recovery after surgery for femoral neck fracture and acuteradiationsyndrome.
3
Within minutes to hours, most people exposed in these areas would begin to show signs of acuteradiationsyndrome: nausea, headache, dizziness, and vomiting.
4
Of the workers who tried to contain the emergency at Chernobyl, 134 suffered acuteradiationsyndrome; 28 died soon afterwards.
5
Fifty emergency rescue workers died from acuteradiationsyndrome and related illnesses, 4,000 children and adolescents contracted thyroid cancer, nine of whom died.
1
In it, she drew a link between tobacco use and radiationpoisoning.
2
And to extreme heat, radiationpoisoning or plague, wealth is no barrier.
3
He'd rather face an ITA firing squad than death from radiationpoisoning.
4
We are, all of us, already, dying slowly of radiationpoisoning.
5
Survivors of the blast would die of radiationpoisoning in the weeks afterward.
1
That leaves us no margin, even if we risk getting radiationsickness.
2
Somebody was telling Daddy that they've got radiationsickness in Townsville now.
3
The worst of the radiationsickness was over, and he was mending fast.
4
His features, I suddenly saw, were ashen with the radiationsickness.
5
Symptoms of radiationsickness may not be noticed for several days.
Ús de ars en anglès
1
The art of partially revealing is more telling, even, than the ars celare artem.
2
The genome of this strain was sequenced and revealed the presence of three ars clusters.
3
Leonhard was my teacher in the 'ars bibendi.'
4
Karasowski labours hard to surpass Enault, but is not like him a master of the ars artem celare.
5
Ut bene respondet Naturae ars docta!
6
Or that it did any waies become that hot-ars'd whorish Faustina, to govern that sage and understanding Emperor Marcus Aurelius.
7
Professor Sheridan Delapine says: "He was specially fond of quoting Sydenham's words: 'Tota ars medici est in observationibus.'"
8
Not least because my father died after many heart attacks at 71, so I've already beaten him by four ye ars.
9
Aristoni tragico actori rem aperit: huic et genus et fortuna honesta erant: nec ars, quia nihil tale apud Graecos pudori est, ea deformabat.
10
Artades, "just men" (according to Hesychhis), is probably akin to ars, "true, just," and may represent the ars-data, "made just," of the Zendavesta.
11
It is to Freemasonry the "ars artium," the art of arts, because to it the institution is indebted for its origin in its present organization.
12
Conclusion: The ARS transferred electric stimulation as effectively as the conventional stimulator.
13
Ars Technica has a nice overview of what Linux users can expect.
14
Ars2 appears to play a role in a subgroup of ABC-type DLBCLs.
15
A complete listing of sites is available at the Ars Electronica site.
16
So he had dispatched Mas Amedda and Ars Dangor in his stead.