Either of two types of cells (erythrocytes and leukocytes) and sometimes including platelets.
Sinónimos
Examples for "corpuscle"
Examples for "corpuscle"
1The strongest and reddest corpuscle had been the gift of his mother.
2He had the red corpuscle, the deep convolution, and so was King.
3The morning swims in the lagoon had thickened the red corpuscle.
4Sometimes the foremost segment has the corpuscle at one end, sometimes the other.
5The white corpuscle has but two dumping places now, the lungs or kidneys.
1Background: Red blood cell variants protect African children from severe falciparum malaria.
2The new blood cell techniques can be completed in a few days.
3This new role for the hormone doesn't alter red blood cell production.
4Sarah clutched a squishy foam model of a normal red blood cell.
5Complete blood cell counts before and at the first restaging were measured.
1On blood corpuscles, see 'Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science,' April 1874, p.
2His bones were hollow, since he needed no marrow for producing blood corpuscles.
3The blood consists of a liquid, the plasma, containing minute particles, the blood corpuscles.
4On each side of the large ducts is a vein filled with blood corpuscles.
5These germs are animal germs and are in the red blood corpuscles, feeding on them.
6So is the microscopic examination for blood corpuscles.
7Some of the white blood corpuscles escape from the blood-vessels through the thin walls of the capillaries.
8The same thing seemed to be true of certain cells of higher organisms, as the blood corpuscles.
9Opsonin is what you butter the disease germs with to make your white blood corpuscles eat them.
10Besides these, the protoplasm contains a generally grayish homogeneous nucleus as large as one or two red blood corpuscles.
11Leukaemia is a disease marked by an excessive and permanent increase in the white blood corpuscles and consequent progressive anæmia.
12The white and red blood corpuscles can be distinguished, the red appearing as oval discs and the white as colorless spheres.
132.-AmœboidMovement of a Human White Blood Corpuscle.
14The red color is due to the union of oxygen with the iron in the blood corpuscles, forming rust, roughly speaking.
15And even now, about all we know is that autopsical research reveals absolutely nothing but the general disorganisation of the blood corpuscles.
16Blood counts before and after a cold-water application show a very marked increase in the number of red and white blood corpuscles.
Translations for blood corpuscle