[
US
/ˈpɝfɝˌeɪtɪd/
]
[ UK /pˈɜːfəɹˌeɪtɪd/ ]
[ UK /pˈɜːfəɹˌeɪtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
having a number or series of holes
a perforated steel plate
perforated cancellation
perforated stamp -
having a hole cut through
a perforated eardrum
a punctured balloon
pierced ears
How To Use perforated In A Sentence
- Immediately above the anterior perforated substance, the pear-shaped head of the caudate nucleus is confluent with the putamen of the lentiform nucleus.
- The water vascular system of the sea stars open up at the madreporite, a perforated opening in the central part of the animal.
- Early appendicectomy was first recommended and performed for non-perforated acute appendicitis in the 1880s.
- Churinga, over a foot in length, they tell us, are not usually perforated; many churinga are not perforated, many are: _but the Arunta do not know why some are perforated_. The Clyde Mystery a Study in Forgeries and Folklore
- These games could be defined simply as ` handball played with a paddle, 'the only difference being that paddleball employs a perforated wooden racquet and a large spongy ball, while racquetball, which is rapidly pushing both handball and paddleball into obscurity, employs a small strung racquet and a lively rubber ball. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIX No 1
- The electrodes consist of metal grills covered with platinum or some other inoxidizable metal, and are placed in a vat with the intervention of perforated earthenware plates. Scientific American Supplement, No. 620, November 19,1887
- However,… the world does not in fact break easily along neatly perforated lines.
- It contains a double fold of pia mater, and its floor is formed by a transverse band of white substance, the anterior white commissure, which is perforated by bloodvessels on their way to or from the central part of the medulla spinalis. IX. Neurology. 3. The Spinal Cord or Medulla Spinalis
- It perforated the sheer fabric of her chemise, ran through her body and whipped up the flotsam in her heart.
- It presents a large, smooth, concave surface, called the iliac fossa, which gives origin to the Iliacus and is perforated at its inner part by a nutrient canal; and below this a smooth, rounded border, the arcuate line, which runs downward, forward, and medialward. II. Osteology. 6c. The Bones of the Lower Extremity. 1. The Hip Bone