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caries

[ UK /kˈe‍əɹiz/ ]
NOUN
  1. soft decayed area in a tooth; progressive decay can lead to the death of a tooth

How To Use caries In A Sentence

  • Apothecaries would not sugar their pills unless they were bitter. 
  • Oral disease, especially dental caries, is complicated and multifactorial, and it often begins to develop during infancy.
  • I made a mistake: the detailed, similar snout anatomy present in both suids and peccaries is more likely shared, not convergent. More on what I saw at the zoo
  • Collared peccaries, or javelinas, may be the agents most responsible for moving leguminous tree seeds back upstream.
  • Are bitewings of value in epidemiological studies of dental caries?
  • T. caries (Fig. 1a), the merger of Buller's drop with a prominent adaxial drop is associated with a much greater change in surface tension that powers the longer flight of the spore. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • Do you know what the scariest thing is? To not know your place in this world, to not know why you're here.
  • Until recently there was just a single wire fence seperating the peccaries from the public, and I always thought this was a bit dangerous in view of the immense teeth these animals have. More on what I saw at the zoo
  • In the other place, stating the several orders of the citizens, they place their ministers after their apothecaries; that is, the physician of the soul after the drugster of the body: a fit practice for those, who, if they were to rank things as well as persons, would place their religion after their trade. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. I.
  • Besides, since nature supplies cold as sparingly, we must do as the apothecaries do who, when they cannot get a simple, take its succedaneum or quid pro quo, as they call it — such as aloes for balsam, cassia for cinnamon. The New Organon
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