TermGallery
English
English
Spanish
Catalan
Portuguese
Russian
EN
English
Español
Català
Português
Русский
1
Ralph was ending with an
incise
peroration that he had delivered more than once before.
2
But the old meaning of "write" is to
incise
,
or to cut, or engrave.
3
Winding streams on plains may thus
incise
their meanders in solid rock as the plains are gradually uplifted.
4
We developed an efficient, safe, reusable, and inexpensive instrument to
incise
the pelvis and ureter during laparoscopic pyeloplasty.
5
If after considerable tapping the tree did not yield much, it was advisable to
incise
the tree higher up.
6
You are indeed a cock whose comb wants cutting, and if all be well, we will
incise
it for your soul's good.
7
Next, use your saw blade to
incise
small ledges along both lips of the trench to anchor the blocks once they're stood up.
8
The isthmus is entitled to absolutely no consideration whatever in deciding the location at which to
incise
so vital a structure as the trachea.
9
This throws the trachea forward into prominence, and one deep slashing cut will
incise
all of the soft tissues down to the trachea.]
10
What does it show? I could see it was
incised
with figures.
11
Three varieties of wounds are described:
incised
,
punctured, and contused and lacerated.
12
Then the peritoneum was
incised
to find the apex of the prostate.
13
They had Latin
incised
into them and were, she believed, curse tablets.
14
It stayed there, right at home, now surrounded by
incised
figures and rays.
15
Runes were also carved, or
incised
,
in metal and in bone.
16
Fragments of pottery having
incised
designs, similar to the dark ware already described.
incise peroration
incise small
incise so
incise the pelvis