Download

How To Use Anatomically In A Sentence

  • Results Total tumor removal 95 %, of which 82 % cases the facial nerve was anatomically preserved.
  • It is called the philtrum anatomically and has a nerve cluster. Times, Sunday Times
  • The kagu has long been classified with the gruiform birds, a grab bag of anatomically diverse families such as the familiar cranes and rails.
  • Results Total tumor removal 95 %, of which 82 % cases the facial nerve was anatomically preserved.
  • I need my pictures to be anatomically correct.
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
Fix common errors and boost your confidence in every sentence.
Get started
for free
Enhance Your English Writing Skills
  • In case you don't know, caecilians have sensory tentacles, sometimes have protrusible eyes, sometimes lack eyes entirely, often exhibit sophisticated parental care [maternal skin-feeding is going on in the middle image above], are incredibly long-bodied yet often lack tails, sometimes possess large, anatomically complex, eversible male sexual organs, and so on and so forth. ScienceBlogs Channel : Life Science
  • You look at them anatomically, and they're a hodgepodge of little quirks and jury-rigged adaptations that work.
  • We define primary bronchiolar disorders as those diseases in which an isolated pathologic process is limited to bronchioles anatomically.
  • She undressed the not-so-jolly green giant only to discover that the doll is anatomically correct. Boing Boing: July 6, 2003 - July 12, 2003 Archives
  • Therefore, the dwarf mutation in X. helleri is caused by the developmental defect in spinal column, and the vertebral malformation underlies the body type alteration anatomically.
  • Anatomically, rice grains vary in the grain length, grain shape, translucency and the chalkiness.
  • The most abundant source of astaxanthin in nature is the single-cell microalga Haematococcus pluvialis, which accumulates astaxanthin in lipid (fat) vesicles (small, anatomically normal sac- or bladderlike structures) during periods of nutrient deficiency and environmental stress. Forever Young
  • They may represent a distinct lineage of early nautiloids, perhaps quite different anatomically to the contemporary and superficially similar oncocerids.
  • It showed the client, today’s trainee, along with his fellow executive retreatantsdoubtless exhausted after a hard day of budget cutting and crunching numbersdrinking rum punch dispensed from the breasts of anatomically correct female ice sculptures, to the accompaniment of a steel drum band, a limbo bar, and scantily clad waitresses dressed asoh dearmermaids. Excerpt: Boomsday by Christopher Buckley
  • To avoid these the ligature should be applied as low down on the vessel as possible, and, in point of fact, the operation called ligature of the third stage of the axillary is, anatomically speaking, really ligature of the brachial high up, and where there is room at all, there will be the less chance of secondary hæmorrhage, the greater the distance is between the ligature and the great subscapular branch. A Manual of the Operations of Surgery For the Use of Senior Students, House Surgeons, and Junior Practitioners
  • If the reason for nasal decongestant addiction was anatomically based - say, a deviated septum - then surgery may be necessary.
  • Another theory of the origin of modern humans, known as the multiregional hypothesis, holds that earlier forms of humans originated in Africa and then slowly developed their anatomically modern form in every area of the Old World. The Mother of All Languages
  • The reproductive system is anatomically simple, and it seems that the two ovaries derive nutrition directly from the midgut, a feature also seen in freshwater chaetonotoid gastrotrichs.
  • Go back down anatomically and I would certainly like to see big gaskins.
  • Feduccia laments that "the major and most worrying problem of the feathered dinosaur hypothesis is that the integumental structures have been homologized with avian feathers on the basis of anatomically and paleontologically unsound and misleading information. Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • The politically (and anatomically) correct term is pygostyle -- literally rump post -- for the structure of fused vertebra that anchors the turkey's magnificent tail feathers (rectrices) and also harbors the uropygial gland, source of preen oil, the yummy fat the bird uses to groom its plumage. Cold Turkey
  • “Dr. P’s fornicatory dolls”— mute and anatomically correct, just the way his nineteenth-century customers liked them. Crashed
  • anatomically correct
  • It turns out that in some pulmonates mating is anatomically reciprocal, while in others unilateral (for example, see Davison & Mordan, 2007). Archive 2009-05-01
  • January 6th, 2006 at 8: 40 pm click says: contriver: anatomically devise tributes: fertilized Lowell. speedups Think Progress » EU wants answers on secret prisons.
  • Brain images from the schizophrenic patients showed abnormalities in two functionally and anatomically different neural pathways - the uncinate fasciculus and the cingulate bundle.
  • The palate is defined anatomically as the roof of the mouth.
  • The dancer, with her eyes shut and lips slightly parted, is in the posture we associate with the can-can—except that her legs are at an awkward, anatomically almost impossible, position to each other. The Artistry of Toulouse-Lautrec and His Dancing Muse Jane Avril
  • The spleen is anatomically well adapted for use in these experiments, and the replantation of this organ can be taken as characteristic of this kind of operation. Alexis Carrel - Nobel Lecture
  • We turn next to crocodiles and alligators, in which the heart has two anatomically separate ventricles.
  • Through Lowson's kitchen window we see an anatomically suggestive, sexually charged landscape, and so it is with many of these poems.
  • A butcher stands in the tail of his pigboat like a Venetian gondolier; a pig's head is nailed to the prow, the rest of the carcass laid out in the anatomically correct order down the length of the boat. "Unidentified Objects" by James P. Blaylock
  • It was only the size of one of Katie's baby dolls, but it was perfectly proportioned and anatomically correct.
  • It was these anatomically modern humans which joined or supplanted the Neanderthals in Europe some 40,000 years ago.
  • The most abundant source of astaxanthin in nature is the single-cell microalga Haematococcus pluvialis, which accumulates astaxanthin in lipid (fat) vesicles (small, anatomically normal sac- or bladderlike structures) during periods of nutrient deficiency and environmental stress. Forever Young
  • Feduccia laments that "the major and most worrying problem of the feathered dinosaur hypothesis is that the integumental structures have been homologized with avian feathers on the basis of anatomically and paleontologically unsound and misleading information. Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • For example, the Lower Carboniferous green volcanic ashes and agglomerates from Oxroad Bay in East Lothian, Scotland contain abundant anatomically preserved plants that were overlooked by those studying the geology.
  • Our work is based on the principle that the mammalian central nervous system is functionally and anatomically well-organized.
  • It begins attached to the inferior end of the stomach as a fold of the dorsal mesogastrium which later fuses to form the structure we recognise anatomically.
  • In fact, anatomically modern humans existed at least 160,000 years ago, and Neanderthals became extinct only 30,000 years ago.
  • The politically (and anatomically) correct term is pygostyle -- literally rump post -- for the structure of fused vertebra that anchors the turkey's magnificent tail feathers (rectrices) and also harbors the uropygial gland, source of preen oil, the yummy fat the bird uses to groom its plumage. Cold Turkey

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):