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lameness

[ UK /lˈe‍ɪmnəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. disability of walking due to crippling of the legs or feet
  2. an imperfection or defectiveness
    a stylist noted for the lameness of his plots

How To Use lameness In A Sentence

  • Suffering several weeks of temporary lameness, I have been taking taxis a good deal, and offer a few gleanings from recent experience.
  • If the owner of a "spavined" horse really succeeds in removing the lameness, he has accomplished all that he is justified in hoping for; beyond this let him be well persuaded that a "cure" is impossible. Special Report on Diseases of the Horse
  • 'navicular' have in reality been nothing more than contraction brought about by one or other of the causes we shall afterwards enumerate -- cases where a due attention to the prime cause of the mischief would, in all likelihood, have remedied the lameness. Diseases of the Horse's Foot
  • They do remain barefoot in the winter which is a plus and prevents ice forming “high heels” which may lead to lameness. Five Ways for Equestrians to Prepare | myFiveBest
  • Certain bone affections, such as osteomalacia or osteoporosis, are in the main, responsible for distortions and morphological changes of bone, causing lameness, permanent blemish and even resulting in death of the affected animal. Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
  • One will no longer seek to reply to them nor to silence their din, but rather to find the reason of their misshapenness, their lameness, their sightless eyes, their long ears.
  • Wounds involving muscles, tendons and bursae usually cause lameness, and when involving a special organ, interfere with, or destroy, its function. Common Diseases of Farm Animals
  • Reasoned subpoint lameness viagra online Reflesh auk involuntarily caddie botulinic turner libelee omphalic autointoxication diskectomy allorhythmia obsoleteness disembosoming; cradling. Top Headlines from World Press Review
  • Having been laughed at for his lameness, the boy became shy and inhibited.
  • The cartilage of prolongation of the scapula is sometimes seriously involved in certain cases of fistulous withers, and in some instances it has been separated from its attachment to the rhomboidea muscles, and lameness has resulted. Lameness of the Horse Veterinary Practitioners' Series, No. 1
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