reata

NOUN
  1. a long noosed rope used to catch animals
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How To Use reata In A Sentence

  • The loss of the plant led to thousands of children dying from malaria, tuberculosis and other treatable diseases.
  • The patient's condition was untreatable and he sought hospice support.
  • Young F has been reading about it in Brendan O'Brien's The Story of Ireland, and although now reassured that the danger from fleas and rats has been much reduced, and that in any case bubonic plague is treatable with modern antibiotics, he is keen to learn more. This is a long shot, but...
  • The first concern is to rule out treatable forms of dementia such as encephalitis or chronic meningitis.
  • Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy is important to recognise because it is treatable.
  • The clinician must look for tuberculosis, and confirm or exclude this treatable malady in any patient who presents with gastrointestinal disease.
  • Doctors say his condition is treatable. The Sun
  • Even cancer, so often an intractable ailment, may be made more treatable with chronobiological principles. THE RIGHT TIME FOR A CURE
  • Meaning it can go undiagnosed while still being highly treatable. The Sun
  • The reata in those days was nearly always made of plaited raw hide, and often made by the boys themselves, though a good reata required a long time to complete and peculiar skill in the making of it. Ranching, Sport and Travel
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