A thick, whitish cord of nerve tissue which is a major part of the vertebrate central nervous system.
1There was evidently a canal in the centre of the spinal marrow.
2From the brain runs the spinal marrow through the spine or backbone.
3The ball had penetrated the spinal marrow and death had been instantaneous.
4Well, there's the spinal marrow where you found it just now.
5Plato, that it is the deflux of the spinal marrow.
6The Dox say y' act direct on the spinal marrow.
7Jerry heard the tremendous sounds for the first time, and quaked in his spinal marrow.
8He leads him down the long line of the Rhine, the spinal marrow of Mediaeval Europe.
9I divided the spinal marrow of a very lively snake between the second and third vertebrae.
10The bullet had severed the spinal marrow, passing through the vertebræ and away on the other side.
11The white part of the brain and spinal marrow consists solely of conducting tubes to transmit this influence.
12The Spinal Cord, or spinal marrow, fills the spinal canal in the vertebral column, or "backbone."
13Mills and O'Hara, both of Philadelphia, have recorded instances of recovery after penetrating wound of the spinal marrow.
14Eventually, they thought the best thing they could do was to apply a steel magnet to his spinal marrow.
15The conducting nerves between the brain and the spinal marrow have been overworked: too much activity, too constant a strain.
16It is the central nervous system, and contains within itself the elements of the brain and spinal marrow of higher forms.
Esta colocación está formada por:
Spinal marrow a través del tiempo
Spinal marrow por variante geográfica