How To Use Extremity In A Sentence

  • I think it's certainly quite a lot of the comedy that I've been involved in is quite extreme, if you like, and the extremity is part of what's funny about it.
  • After prepping and draping the patient's extremity, the surgeon makes a stab incision and inserts the arthroscope into the knee joint through a standard inferolateral portal.
  • In Being and Time, Heidegger carried Emersonian subjectivity and self-reliance to a point of new extremity.
  • The purposes of this study were to report our experiences with high-energy wartime extremity wounds, to define the prevalence of heterotopic ossification in these patients, and to determine the factors that might lead to development of the condition," said lead author Lieutenant Commander Jonathan Agner Forsberg, MD. Dr. Forsberg and his team compared data from 243 patients who were treated for orthopaedic injuries between March 1, 2003 and December 31, 2006 at the medical center, including patients who underwent: amputation external or internal fixation of one or more fractures removal of damaged, dead or infected tissue, or 'debridement' EurekAlert! - Breaking News
  • By this action, the highly elastic axis must be bent at the lower extremity, where it is naturally slightly curved; and I imagine it is by this elasticity alone that the zoophyte is enabled to rise again through the mud. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
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  • The essence of New York is its extremity and diversity.
  • The singing, so difficult to bear for many listeners, never settles into a particular pitch, remaining agonisedly in motion; Jandek presents us with a voice in extremity, and an endless quarrying of pain and related states, in which infinite gradations of suffering are allowed to differentiate themselves. Archive 2007-10-01
  • The medial and lateral portions of the tendon of the Quadriceps pass down on either side of the patella, to be inserted into the upper extremity of the tibia on either side of the tuberosity; these portions merge into the capsule, as stated above, forming the medial and lateral patellar retinacula. III. Syndesmology. 7b. The Knee-joint
  • It's a show-stopping performance combining repulsive extremity with utter conviction. Times, Sunday Times
  • Because man's extremity is God's opportunity!
  • In some instances lameness is mixed as in joint ailments, involvement of the bicipital bursa (bursa intertubercularis), etc. In affections of the extremity there exists supporting leg lameness. Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
  • My disappointment with Christian rock has always been its lack of extremity, of the aching sorrow or joy, the celebration or desperation that fuels the best rock and traditional black gospel music.
  • the word for a pedal extremity is `foot'
  • This's a fair sketch of idiosyncrasy run amuck, but it's also a compelling portrait of mental and spiritual extremity.
  • It is a beautiful little town situated on the southern side of the Menai Strait at nearly its western extremity. Wild Wales : Its People, Language and Scenery
  • Koaara extends from the westernmost point to the northern extremity of the island; the whole coast between them forming an extensive bay, called Toe - yah-yah, which is bounded to the north by two very conspicuous hills. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume 17 Arranged in Systematic Order: Forming a Complete History of the Origin and Progress of Navigation, Discovery, and Commerce, by Sea and Land, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time
  • I became alienated from everything that was going on around me - because of the violence and extremity of it.
  • In situations of extremity one's body can and will come to one's aid. Times, Sunday Times
  • But, as he pressed upon her with a violence, of which the object could not be mistaken, and endeavoured to secure her right hand, she exclaimed, “Take it then, with a wanion to you!” — and struck him an almost stunning blow on the face, with the pebble which she held ready for such an extremity. Woodstock
  • Directly opposite the incisura angularis of the lesser curvature the greater curvature presents a dilatation, which is the left extremity of the pyloric part; this dilatation is limited on the right by a slight groove, the sulcus intermedius, which is about 2.5 cm, from the duodenopyloric constriction. XI. Splanchnology. 1F. The Stomach
  • I recommend seven or eight small pieces of iron to be prepared, a fathom in size, in thickness like a thick specillum, and bent at the extremity, and a broad piece should be on the extremity, like a small obolus. On Hemorrhoids
  • —The folium vermis (folium cacuminis; cacuminal lobe) is a short, narrow, concealed band at the posterior extremity of the vermis, consisting apparently of a single folium, but in reality marked on its upper and under surfaces by secondary fissures. IX. Neurology. 4a. The Hind-brain or Rhombencephalon
  • The upper mandible, which is strongly convex, exhibits upon its median line a slight ridge, which is quite wide at its origin, and then continues to decrease and becomes sensibly depressed as far as to the center of its length, and afterward rises on approaching the anterior extremity, where it terminates in a powerful hook, which seems to form Scientific American Supplement, No. 829, November 21, 1891
  • I had told my disci - ples: "He who kills you will believe he is performing ser - vice for God," and those words came back to me-a comfort in this extremity. The Gospel according to the Son
  • Surrounding the pistil are the stamens, few or many, the anther at the extremity containing the powdery pollen. My Studio Neighbors
  • Parapteron - era: small sclerites, articulated to the dorsal extremity of the episternum, just below the wings; absent on prothorax = the tegulae of Hymenoptera, and patagia of Lepidoptera: have been homologized with the elytra of Coleoptera. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • Neurapraxia of the brachial plexus or cervical nerve roots, often called a stinger or burner, causes pain and paresthesia in a single upper extremity, usually radiating from the neck into the shoulder, arm, or hand.
  • M. Carnot was of opinion, that it was necessary, to declare the country in danger, call the federates and national guards to arms, place Paris in a state of siege, defend it, at the last extremity retire behind the Loire, form intrenchments there, recall the army of Memoirs of the Private Life, Return, and Reign of Napoleon in 1815, Vol. II
  • The eastern extremity of the peninsula is called Ackers Point.
  • The mouth of the crucible is closed with a luting of clay, or otherwise, and the opening, _d_, made in the upper side of the crucible, near its extremity, comes entirely within the retort, and forms a passage for the zinc fumes from the retort chamber into the condensing chamber. Scientific American Supplement, No. 508, September 26, 1885
  • Those people who smoke may have lower extremity temperatures, because they may have poor circulation. Times, Sunday Times
  • The North-East should be seen as a bridge to lands and opportunities beyond rather than as a cul-de-sac in a troublesome extremity of the country.
  • In 116 patients undergoing both CT venography and lower extremity ultrasound, Cham and colleagues found concordant results in 93% of cases.
  • As this margin inclines dorsally, it sweeps around in a distally concave arc to produce a rounded, distally pointing extremity adjacent to the dorsal margin.
  • At the right extremity of the transact was the organ-loft, The Dodge Club or, Italy in MDCCCLIX
  • The combat raged without intermission until nightfall: three cannon shots, discharged at the extremity of either line, then marked as if preconcertedly, the pause of battle; and both armies bivouacked exactly where the morning light had found them. The History of Napoleon Buonaparte
  • Asclera (TM) (polidocanol) Injection is indicated to sclerose uncomplicated spider veins (varicose veins, less than or equal to 1 mm in diameter) and uncomplicated reticular veins (varicose veins 1 to 3 mm in diameter) in the lower extremity. RedOrbit News - Technology
  • Because the complex series of articulations of the shoulder allows a wide range of motion, the affected extremity should be compared with the unaffected side to determine the patient's normal range.
  • The gunpowder without the mephitis being fired, the combustion was soon communicated to the other extremity of the train, and to the phosphorus, which took fire with decrepitation, burnt rapidly, with a bright flame, slightly coloured with veilow and green, and left on the wood a black mark, as of charcoal. A General collection of the best and most interesting voyages and travels in all parts of the world [microform] : many of which are now first translated into English : digested on a new plan
  • The person often describes previous episodes of low back pain with or without lower extremity radiation.
  • The lake is situated at the eastern extremity of the mountain range.
  • The fleshy appendage at the lower extremity of the sea-pen (described at Bahia Blanca) also forms part of the zoophyte, as a whole, in the same manner as the roots of a tree form part of the whole tree, and not of the individual leaf or flower-buds. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
  • The organ of hearing is injured _at its peripheral extremity_, or else the acusticus in its course; then occurs _difficulty of hearing_ or The Mind of the Child, Part II The Development of the Intellect, International Education Series Edited By William T. Harris, Volume IX.
  • The gut-appendages or caeca in birds, as has been observed, are few in number, and are not situated high up, as in fishes, but low down towards the extremity of the gut. The History of Animals
  • She had passed through the Empire, she had lived through a siege, had rubbed shoulders with the Commune, had seen everything, no doubt, of what men are capable in the pursuit of their desires or in the extremity of their distress, for love, for money, and even for honour; and in her precarious connection with the very highest spheres she had kept her own honourability unscathed while she had lost all her prejudices. The Arrow of Gold : A Story Between Two Notes
  • The abdomen of the young Cirripede is produced beneath the anus into a long tail-like appendage which is furcate at the extremity, and over the anus there is a second long, spine-like process; the abdomen in the Rhizocephala terminates in two short points, -- in a Facts and Arguments for Darwin
  • The portions which lie in the genital core fuse to form the uterus and vagina; the parts in front of this cord remain separate, and each forms the corresponding uterine tube—the abdominal ostium of which is developed from the anterior extremity of the original tubular invagination from the celom (Fig. 1110, B). XI. Splanchnology. 3. The Urogenital Apparatus
  • Objective To study the rehabilitation effect of the lower extremity orthosis on the sequelae of poliomyelitis.
  • The humerus is the largest bone of the upper extremity.
  • Initial physical examination revealed a mild right hemiparesis that was more pronounced in the upper than the lower extremity.
  • In addition, a thorough sensorimotor examination of the upper extremity should be performed, and the neck and elbow should be evaluated.
  • A chronic, progressive, hyperplastic-degeneration exists in some cases and the subjects are in time rendered unserviceable because of the burden of getting about encumbered by the affected extremity. Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
  • There was one occasion when house fires broke out at the same time in each extremity.
  • Upon a table lay an open psalter, with its long hanging cover and a ball at the extremity of the forel. Under the Rose
  • The pedestrian who halts on the Rue Culture – Sainte-Catherine, after passing the barracks of the firemen, in front of the porte-cochere of the bathing establishment, beholds a yard full of flowers and shrubs in wooden boxes, at the extremity of which spreads out a little white rotunda with two wings, brightened up with green shutters, the bucolic dream of Les Miserables
  • Yet his exceptionality captured on canvas, the very extremity he paints into being, seems to threaten us all.
  • If luxation is downward, traction on the extremity will tend to dislodge the head of the femur from the inferior acetabular margin making reduction possible. Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
  • And what surprises me is the extremity of the view he now expresses.
  • Lower extremity wounds in patients who are obese must be closed with interrupted absorbable sutures, and loose tissue must be debrided to reduce the cellulitis produced by fat necrosis.
  • Directly opposite the incisura angularis of the lesser curvature the greater curvature presents a dilatation, which is the left extremity of the pyloric part; this dilatation is limited on the right by a slight groove, the sulcus intermedius, which is about 2.5 cm, from the duodenopyloric constriction. XI. Splanchnology. 1F. The Stomach
  • [The one with singularly thick, firm, and rigid leaves, a foot long, linear attenuated at each extremity, pubescenti-sericeous, striated: the other with white acerose leaves pinnated in two pairs. Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia
  • For since one part of the soul is intelligent and rational, and the other devoid of reason and open to emotions, and on this account man has a middle position between God and brute, he thinks the highest, virtue, is divine, and the other extremity, evil, is brutelike. Essays and Miscellanies
  • Past medical history revealed symptomatic osteoarthritis of her large extremity joints.
  • The fore part of the belly shell towards its extremity, is formed somewhat like a spade, extends forward near three inches, and is about an inch and an half in breadth; its extremity is a little bifid, the posterior division of the belly shell, is likewise protended backwards considerably, and is deeply bifurcated. Travels Through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee Country, the Extensive Territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confederacy, and the Country of the Chactaws; Containing An Account of the Soil and Natural Producti
  • The processes at the summit of the _coracoid_, which receive the extremities of the furcula, form a more perfect cavity in some tumblers than in the rock-pigeon: in pouters these processes are larger and differently shaped, and the exterior angle of the extremity of the coracoid, which is articulated to the sternum, is squarer. The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication, Vol. I.
  • When an extremity has been invaded by bacteria and the blood supply is choked off, the limb begins to putrefy.
  • Set well back behind eroded cliffs close to the western extremity of St Abbs Head in Berwickshire, this is a boat dive in what could almost be described as a lagoon, protected from the chop and surge on the outside.
  • His clashes with Gerhard Siegel's penetrating Mime, grotesquely hunchbacked and absurd in the extremity of his fawning and malevolence, took on a broad, cartoonish humor that worked. Of Gods And Monsters
  • His right comprised Campanians, who were armed with axes; he hurled them against the Carthaginian left; the centre attacked the enemy, and those at the other extremity, who were out of peril, kept the velites at a distance. Salammbo
  • ‘There are not enough exclamation marks in this universe to convey the extremity of my recoil from a statement so reality-impaired,’ he wrote.
  • The monticle stands not far from the western extremity of the valley.
  • Conclusion: Spastic paralysis with intact of superficial sensation in the lower extremity following TIPSS should be considered as HM.
  • She starts, too, from positions of provoking extremity… but passes rapidly from violent identification to a blank disbelief in what she has undertaken to say.
  • -- Please exalt your chin, sir, and keep your head a little to one side -- there, sir, "added Toby, cammencing his operations with the brush, and hoarifying my barbal extremity, as the facetious Thomas Hood would probably express it. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 12, No. 339, November 8, 1828
  • Amidst the chaos, the heartfelt moments of confession and intimacy anchor the characters and remind us that they're human too, in spite of the extremity of their divorce from the consensus.
  • This was a very serious calamity to the Dominicans, for as they, like the Franciscans, belonged to what were known as the mendicant orders, and depended for their daily bread upon what they could beg, they were reduced to extremity. Las Casas 'The Apostle of the Indies'
  • Clift which is also perpendicular; between this abrupt extremity of the ledge of rocks and the perpendicular bluff the whole body of water passes with incredible swiftness. immediately at the cascade the river is about 300 yds. wide; about ninty or a hundred yards of this next the Lard. bluff is a smoth even sheet of water falling over a precipice of at least eighty feet, the remaining part of about 200 yards on my right formes the grandest sight I ever beheld, the hight of the fall is the same of the other but the irregular and somewhat projecting rocks below receives the water in it's passage down and brakes it into a perfect white foam which assumes The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
  • Figure c has at one extremity a trifid appendage, recalling a feather ornament on the head of a bird shown in plate CXXXVIII, a. Archeological Expedition to Arizona in 1895 Seventeenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895-1896, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1898, pages 519-744
  • Ron Noy, a New York-based sports orthopedist, said weight inevitably increases stress on lower extremity joints, such as hips, knees and ankles, as well as the lower spine. Will Cholesterol Kill Baseball?
  • The intensity and extremity of this expansion of experience is paralleled by the deepening of communion, by which particularity and individuation are shared with others.
  • In this extremity they sighted a Spanish ship belonging to a "flota" which had become separated from her consorts. Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates; fiction, fact & fancy concerning the buccaneers & marooners of the Spanish main
  • The lake is situated at the eastern extremity of the mountain range.
  • Neurologic and vascular examinations of the upper extremity should be completed and documented.
  • Moreover, the fuci that are found in the northern extremity of the Florida stream are generally decayed, while those which are seen in the southern extremity appear quite fresh -- this difference would not exist if they emanated from the Gulf. A Ramble of Six Thousand Miles through the United States of America
  • Others, descending from on high, take root as soon as their extremity touches the ground, and appear like shrouds and stays supporting the mainmast of a line-of-battle ship; while others, sending out parallel, oblique, horizontal and perpendicular shoots in all directions, put you in mind of what travellers call a matted forest. Wanderings in South America
  • The extremity of dying agonies is no obstruction to the living comforts that wait for holy souls on the other side death. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
  • The medial pterygoid plate is long and narrow; on the lateral side of its base is the scaphoid fossa, for the origin of the Tensor veli palatini, and at its lower extremity the hamulus, around which the tendon of this muscle turns. II. Osteology. 5c. The Exterior of the Skull
  • Traumatic vascular injuries involving the extremity are rare and penetrating trauma accounts for the majority of such injuries.
  • This is achieved by applying sustained external pressure to the affected lower extremity.
  • [2688] Sometimes the extremity of the ears tingle, and are red, sometimes the whole face, Etsi nihil vitiosum commiseris, as Lodovicus holds: though Aristotle is of opinion, omnis pudor ex vitio commisso, all shame for some offence. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • The small firn also rises with a common footstalk from the radix and are from four to eight in number. about 8 inches long; the central rib marked with a slight longitudinal groove throughout it's whole length. the leafets are oppositely pinnate about 1/3 rd of the length of the common footstalk from the bottom and thence alternately pinnate; the footstalk terminating in a simple undivided nearly entire lanceolate leafet. the leafets are oblong, obtuse, convex absolutely entire, marked on the upper disk with a slight longitudinal groove in place of the central rib, smooth and of a deep green. near the upper extremity these leafets are decursively pinnate as are also those of the large f rn. The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806
  • I recalled a well-known acoustic phenomenon," he wrote, "namely if you place your ear against one end of a wooden beam, the scratch of a pin at the other extremity is most distinctly audible … Taking a sheaf of paper, I rolled it into a very tight roll, one end of which I placed over the praecordial region, while I put my ear to the other. New at Creativity-Portal.com
  • In extremity, they rebelled and rioted with regularity and enthusiasm.
  • Every extremity is a fault.
  • The right upper extremity was normal, but weak; there was wrist-drop on the left side and the deltoid was wasted and powerless; on the other hand the fingers could be flexed, and although the elbow could not be, there were signs of returning power in the biceps, and some movements of the shoulder could be performed by the capsular muscles. Surgical Experiences in South Africa, 1899-1900 Being Mainly a Clinical Study of the Nature and Effects of Injuries Produced by Bullets of Small Calibre
  • He was dressed point-device, and almost to extremity, in the splendid fashion of the time, which suited well with his age, probably about five-and-twenty, with The Fortunes of Nigel
  • I examined microscopically and compared with the hair of fair and blue-eyed persons, the hair of negroes, and as a matter of curiosity with the reindeer hair and the hair-like appendage found on the fringy extremity of the baleen plates in the mouth of a "bowhead" whale. The First Landing on Wrangel Island With Some Remarks on the Northern Inhabitants
  • Quentin, although rather surprised, was at the same time pleased with the ready, or at least the unrepugnant acquiescence of Hayraddin in their change of route, for he needed his assistance as a guide, and yet had feared that the disconcerting of his intended act of treachery would have driven him to extremity. Quentin Durward
  • The elbow is a joint that serves to move the distal extremity to position the hand for fine motor activities.
  • It appears to be rearing up on end, as if the extremity saddled with the ballonet were weighted. Aeroplanes and Dirigibles of War
  • [2193] Equidem ego is sum, qui servitutem extremum omnium malorum esse arbitror: I am he (saith Boterus) that account servitude the extremity of misery. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • For centuries it was part of a Roman burial ground, an unclean extremity lying beyond the walls of the City of London.
  • So they sailed round the Cape, calling the southeasterly extremity "Point Cave," till they came to an island which they named Martha's Vineyard (now called No Man's Land), and another on which they dwelt awhile, which they named Elizabeth's Island, in honor of the queen, one of the group since so called, now known by its Indian name Cuttyhunk. Cape Cod
  • The wood lies on the southern extremity of the estate.
  • The Post and Courier - metropolis SC newspaperBut in extremity cases, the discompose crapper be related with a information titled cubital delve syndrome. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • Three days afterwards we observed at the extremity of the artery, a grume which plugged up its orifice.
  • The anterior part is broadly pyriform, somewhat plastic and hyaline, with an oral extremity which is sometimes hollow, sometimes evaginated and convex. Marine Protozoa from Woods Hole Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission 21:415-468, 1901
  • At the very sight of it, one felt the agonizing suffering in the immense faubourg, which had reached that point of extremity when a distress may become a catastrophe. Les Miserables
  • At that moment, when we in our wanderins had reached the furthest extremity that we attained onto, I tell you my blood friz, an my har riz in horror! Lost in the Fog
  • Indeed, the intensity of belonging to a culture of extremity is repeatedly amplified through the media.
  • It was evident in the extremity of his frown that Paul was trying to imagine what sort of a man could actually beat up Robert Matthews, and five others in the bargain-
  • Timor, Baton Island, and the delightful Sauva Island, were successively passed; and finally, upon the 16th "Frimaire," the western extremity of the south-western coast of New Holland, which was discovered by Leuwin in 1622, was sighted. Celebrated Travels and Travellers Part 2. The Great Navigators of the Eighteenth Century
  • A power-driven pontoon will carry visitors and their vehicles across the Orange River near the park's western extremity.
  • In the posterior part of the pharynx is the superior extremity of the gullet, the canal through which the feed and water pass to the stomach. Special Report on Diseases of the Horse
  • If we cannot find the language we have not found the clear thought, for aporias are met when we arrive at thought's extremity: some matters are simply, and finally unable to be settled by human intellect and thought.
  • Empire, she had lived through a siege, had rubbed shoulders with the Commune, had seen everything, no doubt, of what men are capable in the pursuit of their desires or in the extremity of their distress, for love, for money, and even for honour; and in her precarious connection with the very highest spheres she had kept her own honourability unscathed while she had lost all her prejudices. The Arrow of Gold
  • It soon becomes clear that there are no markers by which extremity can actually be determined, whether in sexual terms or any other.
  • When, during locomotion, injury is inflicted upon the mesial side of an extremity by the swinging foot of the other member, the condition is termed interfering. Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
  • The lake is situated at the eastern extremity of the mountain range.
  • In extremity, they rebelled and rioted with regularity and enthusiasm.
  • Towards the south-west the enclosure is considerably sunk and an enormous mass of scorious lava seems glued to the extremity of the brink. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • Advocates of performing the vascular repair prior to lower extremity fixation argue that reversal of ischaemia in the limb is the most important factor in limb survival and should take precedence.
  • Above the nectaries is a 5-angled crown, the extremity of the receptacle; in each angle a black anther. The Medicinal Plants of the Philippines
  • The clinician should ask the patient to stand so lower extremity alignment may be observed.
  • The largest rock, Big Black Carr, can be seen at the seaward extremity of St Abbs Bay, as you look out from the harbour mouth.
  • Swarming on the extremity of the branches among which the formicary is constructed, the defenders, projecting their terminal segments as far into space as possible, eject formic acid in the direction of the enemy. Tropic Days
  • The ungual phalanges, in form, resemble those of the fingers; but they are smaller and are flattened from above downward; each presents a broad base for articulation with the corresponding bone of the second row, and an expanded distal extremity for the support of the nail and end of the toe. II. Osteology. 6d. 3. The Phalanges of the Foot
  • The town stands on a hill, and I was taken into the public garden at the extremity of the town.
  • Parapteron - era: small sclerites, articulated to the dorsal extremity of the episternum, just below the wings; absent on prothorax = the tegulae of Hymenoptera, and patagia of Lepidoptera: have been homologized with the elytra of Coleoptera. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • Nothing specific epitomises New York; its essence is extremity, and diversity, packed into the highest possible density.
  • I was near a dead man myself, that night, mostly in stupor, only dimly aware at times of the extremity of cold and wet that I endured. Chapter 19
  • Alviso is a mostly Hispanic area in the city's northern extremity.
  • The new gymnasium is situated at the eastern extremity of the city.
  • The letter was borne by the chief of the _bedaouenda_, and they placed the elephant at the extremity of the _balei_. Malayan Literature
  • The prostatic portion (pars prostatica), the widest and most dilatable part of the canal, is about 3 cm. long, It runs almost vertically through the prostate from its base to its apex, lying nearer its anterior than its posterior surface; the form of the canal is spindle-shaped, being wider in the middle than at either extremity, and narrowest below, where it joins the membranous portion. XI. Splanchnology. 3b. 4. The Male Urethra
  • Every extremity is a fault.
  • The caddis-larva is as a rule of the eruciform type, but with well-developed thoracic legs, and with hook-like tail-appendages; by means of the latter it anchors itself to the extremity of its curious The Life-Story of Insects
  • Those people who smoke may have lower extremity temperatures, because they may have poor circulation. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘In HELL, if you will have my thoughts of it,’ said my gudesire, driven to extremity, ‘in hell! with your father, his jackanape, and his silver whistle.’ Redgauntlet
  • They are considered the Olympics of extremity.
  • In consequence of the proportions and mobility of the thumb, it is what is termed "opposable"; in other words, its extremity can, with the greatest ease, be brought into contact with the extremities of any of the fingers; a property upon which the possibility of our carrying into effect the conceptions of the mind so largely depends. On the Relations of Man to the Lower Animals
  • A thickened band at the caudal extremity of the inferior pharyngeal constrictor forms the upper esophageal sphincter, or cricopharyngeus muscle.
  • Deans, even in this extremity of suffering, had he known that his daughter was applying the casuistical arguments which he had been using, not in the sense of a permission to follow her own opinion on a dubious and disputed point of controversy, but rather as an encouragement to transgress one of those divine commandments which The Heart of Mid-Lothian
  • The man who (in a native word of praise) is _mata-ainga_, a race-regarder, has his hand always open to his kindred; the man who is not (in a native term of contempt) _noa_, knows always where to turn in any pinch of want or extremity of laziness. A Footnote to History Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa
  • In this extremity he sought no miraculous escape, no sudden revelation of a known lake.
  • These recommended practices provide guidelines for use of pneumatic tourniquets, which primarily are used to occlude blood flow and obtain a near bloodless field for extremity surgery.
  • The drapes include a plastic U-shaped drape that is placed around the patient's surgical leg and a lower extremity drape.
  • In phlegmasia cerulea dolens, there is an acute and nearly total venous occlusion of the entire extremity outflow, including the iliac and femoral veins. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • The final major feature is Circus Rift, which is at the western extremity of the Upper Series.
  • Complete dislocation of the acromioclavicular joint with avulsion of the trapezoid and deltoid muscle results in a decrease in upper extremity strength.
  • To this short and apparently insignificant weapon a strong rope is secured, about twenty feet in length, at the extremity of which is a buoy or float, as large as a child's head, formed of an extremely light wood called ambatch (Aanemone mirabilis) that is of about half the specific gravity of cork. In the Heart of Africa
  • The first-aid guidelines (which were last revised in 2005 and will appear in the AHA's journal Circulation) reaffirm that applying vinegar is the best way to treat jellyfish stings; they also call for "applying a pressure immobilization bandage to any venomous snake bite, with pressure being applied around the entire length of the bitten extremity. First aid and CPR guidelines revisited
  • The spiracles in orbitremitids pierce the adoral extremity of deltoid faces and are bounded laterally by ambulacral plates, which is the condition seen in the Chinese specimens.
  • The enteric nerve cells migrate following two pathways, one from each extremity of the neural crest, to implant along the whole of the vestigial gut.
  • All patients underwent bilateral lower extremity venography after finishing their prophylaxis regimen.
  • Frequently on a 24-hour basis, one medical officer and two nurse anesthetists managed four patients undergoing emergent surgery for abdominal, chest, and extremity wounds in the OR.
  • At the lateral extremity of the condyle is a small tubercle for the attachment of the temporomandibular ligament. II. Osteology. 5b. 8. The Mandible (Lower Jaw)
  • A left 'ilium', almost perfect, and belonging to the femur: a fragment of the right 'scapula'; the anterior extremity of a rib of the right side; and the same part of a rib of the left side; the hinder part of a rib of the right side; and lastly, two hinder portions and one middle portion of ribs, which from their unusually rounded shape, and abrupt curvature, more resemble the ribs of a carnivorous animal than those of a man. Lectures and Essays
  • The film is bursting with all the richness and extremity of life and death. Times, Sunday Times
  • Neurapraxia of the brachial plexus or cervical nerve roots, often called a stinger or burner, causes pain and paresthesia in a single upper extremity, usually radiating from the neck into the shoulder, arm, or hand.
  • a small hole closed by the upper extremity of the columella, nature has not furnished monkeys with the means of opening the ligneous pericarp, as it has of opening the covercle of the lecythis, called in the missions the covercle of the monkeys 'cocoa. Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America, During the Year 1799-1804 — Volume 2
  • At the further extremity of this peninsula, the river again turns, and stretches in a long reach, between the white and < P 356 > towering cliffs of Lancaut, and the rich acclivities of Piercefield woods.
  • A review of upper-extremity ultrasonograms and venograms that were positive for clotting identified thrombotic episodes.
  • Some benefit has been observed when using epidural opiates alone for mastectomy, thoracotomy, extremity surgery and lower abdominal surgery.
  • For the meantime he could only smile as if the world were bright and wonderful and hope that the extremity of his happiness would tell them something had changed.
  • Now the people with whom she sits are ones drawn to her very extremity.
  • [The one with singularly thick, firm, and rigid leaves, a foot long, linear attenuated at each extremity, pubescenti-sericeous, striated: the other with white acerose leaves pinnated in two pairs. Journal of an Expedition into the Interior of Tropical Australia
  • His uncle was stationed in command of the imperial naval base at Misenum, on the north-west extremity of the Bay of Naples.
  • Many will find fault with such writing, written in conditions of extremity, and which rely on the immediacies of direct address.
  • For the reader who doesn't share Harrison's fascination with physical extremity, though, the journey can seem less sensuous or revelatory than furtively pornographic.
  • Creek, both falling into a pond situated at the eastern extremity of a point of the mountain jutting down in the plain on the south side of Day's Creek. Life in the Rocky Mountains
  • And he, who had been hurled uninjured through the air by a miracle of fortune, had divined that white men in themselves were truly dynamite, compounded of the same mystery as the substance with which they shot the swift-darting schools of mullet, or blow up, in extremity, themselves and the ships on which they voyaged the sea from far places. CHAPTER X
  • In so doing, he rejects the historicist injunction of authoritatively re-enacting the extremity of the past in favor of a modernist staging of the uncertain history of the present.
  • Yet the idea that some things should not be shown is persistent, and present even in extremity.
  • The intensity and extremity of this expansion of experience is paralleled by the deepening of communion, by which particularity and individuation are shared with others.
  • Whole body endurance training studies demonstrate reductions in lactic acidosis with exercise, improvements in oxidative enzymes and metabolism of muscle, and improvements in muscle strength of the lower extremity.
  • The case of Vancouver's mass-murder of sex trade workers was rare because of its extremity, but violence on the stroll is nothing new.
  • The wood lies on the southern extremity of the estate.
  • Buffalmaco and the rest that were there present, seeming as if they were seriouslie consulting together, and perceived nothing of his fantastick behavior, according as Bruno had appointed, could scarse refraine from extremity of laughter, they noted such antick trickes in Calandrino. The Decameron
  • He took breath, then, hoisting himself up, he managed to reach the extremity of the cutwater. The Mysterious Island
  • In the extremity of what was to be his most passionate experience in Strassburg, it was to Salzmann that he poured forth all the tumult of his passion, and the very act of laying bare his heart to such a counsellor was a suggestion of the necessity of a certain measure of self-control. The Youth of Goethe
  • Although the Maginot Line stopped short of the Ardennes, much of this area consisted of steep hills covered by thick forest, and its western extremity was protected by the deep and wide River Meuse with its steeply escarped banks.
  • ‘Extremely sorry,’ stammered Watkins, assisting himself to currie and parsley and butter, in the extremity of his confusion. Sketches by Boz
  • Here they reëmbarked, following a river of wonderful windings, and through a series of magnificent and beautiful lakes, and through a country which they described as charming in the extreme, until they entered the magnificent expanse of Green Bay, at its southern extremity. The Adventures of the Chevalier De La Salle and His Companions, in Their Explorations of the Prairies, Forests, Lakes, and Rivers, of the New World, and Their Interviews with the Savage Tribes, Two Hundred Years Ago
  • At its western extremity this ridge merged into the Bois des Corbeaux that flanked the Mort Homme directly from the northeast.
  • The head (capitulum mallei) is the large upper extremity of the bone; it is oval in shape, and articulates posteriorly with the incus, being free in the rest of its extent. X. The Organs of the Senses and the Common Integument. 1d. 3. The Auditory Ossicles
  • Occurring in one in 15,000 live births, they are produced by thin bands of amniotic membrane wrapping around various parts of the extremity in utero.
  • In the thumb, which has only two phalanges, the first phalanx articulates by its proximal extremity with the metacarpal bone and by its distal with the ungual phalanx. II. Osteology. 6b. 3. The Phalanges of the Hand
  • In the latter case the foremost upper molar is small; the fibula is distinct, and never united, except in some cases where it is attached to the extremity of the tibia; the zygomatic arch is formed chiefly by the malar, which is not supported beneath by a continuation of the zygomatic process of the maxillary; collar-bones perfect; upper lip cleft; the muffle small and naked; tail cylindrical and hairy (except in _Castoridae_). Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon
  • If we intervene only in extremity, only in order to stop mass murder and mass deportation, the idea that we are defending X's norms and not Y's is simply wrong.
  • Are you a great gun yourself, that you so recoil, to the extremity of your breechings, at that discharge?
  • This range is rocky and abrupt throughout, but at the extremity it rises in height, and becomes a sheer precipice. EMPIRES OF THE PLAIN: Henry Rawlinson and the Lost Languages of Babylon
  • The humerus is the strongest bone of the upper extremity. A Practical Physiology
  • The hotel boasts stunning sea views and lies at the southern extremity of the Sinai peninsula.
  • The _ulnaris lateralis_ (flexor metacarpi externus) has its origin from the lateral epicondyle of the humerus and inserts to the proximal extremity of the fourth metacarpal (outer splint) bone and by another attachment to the accessory carpal bone (trapezium) with the tendon of the flexor carpiulnaris (flexor metacarpi medius). Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
  • On physical examination, it is important to look for postural changes in vital signs, presence of arrhythmias, carotid bruits, visual problems, gait and balance abnormalities, lower extremity strength, and joint function.
  • The matter thrown out was a stream of metal and minerals, rendered liquid by the fierceness of the fire, which boiled up at the mouth like water at the head of a great river; and having run a little way, the extremity thereof began to crust and cruddle, turning into large porous stones, resembling cakes of burning sea-coal. A Museum for Young Gentlemen and Ladies Or, a Private Tutor for Little Masters and Misses
  • The letters manage to humanise his juxtapositions of emotional extremity and spiritual clarity.
  • Laid work might be described as couching on a more extended scale -- a given space is covered with threads taken from side to side in parallel lines close together, fixed at either extremity by entering the material. Embroidery and Tapestry Weaving
  • Since the criteria of her anthology require a poet to have personally experienced political or social extremity, technically her own work is disqualified.

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