10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SECERNMENT»
Discover the use of
secernment in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
secernment and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Origins: A Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English
Secernere yields'to secern', whence then secernment (cf discernment). 3. L
secrētusleads to the Evsecrete, to conceal, (inBio) to separate; derivative secrētiō
,o/s secrētiōn, becomes lateMFF secrétion, whenceE secretion. The F secrétoire
...
2
Help me!: A way to guide troubled youth
Secernment At times a child may be so worked up he actually needs some
physical control. However, it is to be emphasized that physical punishment is not
acceptable in a treatment setting! Two or more staff persons may need to bodily ...
Dorothy Goos, LuEtta C. Al-Saadi, 1970
3
Monograph of the genus Aristea
... more or less reduced in the mastigophors and amastigophors, and 3) that the
mastigophors and amastigophors can contain a secernment, not found in the
holotrichs. Though these arguments, as it seems to me, are of rather little
importance ...
4
Acta Universitatis Lundensis: Nova series
... more or less reduced in the mastigophors and amastigophors, and 3) that the
mastigophors and amastigophors can contain a secernment, not found in the
holotrichs. Though these arguments, as it seems to me, are of rather little
importance ...
5
A view of the structure, functions, and disorders of the ...
... which, through the medium of secernment, is detained in the reservoir of that
particular gland, whose secretion possesses the greatest chemical affinity for it.
The smallest conceivable portion having thus been deposited, furnishes a
nucleus ...
6
New York Journal of Medicine and the Collateral Sciences
The retention of the menses, or rather non-secernment of them, is mostly the
effect of a peculiar condition of the blood, not the cause of it. Delicate women, of a
spare habit of body, have usually a large quantity of this peculiar secretion. This
is ...
7
An English-Welsh pronouncing dictionary: with an analysis of ...
... ymneillduwr; gwrthgilydd Secern, si-sern', v. a. cuddio, celu, gwa- hanu; rhidio i
Secernent, si-sern'-ent, s. rhidydd I Secernment, si-sem'-ment, s. rbidiad;
gwahaniad, banrediad Secess, si see', s. encil, enciliad, encilfa Secession, si-
sesh'-yn, ...
8
The study of medicine: with a physiological system of nosology
... fifteen minutes after its secernment. The perfection of pus seems to depend
upon the large proportion which its globules bear to its other parts. It is
specifically heavier than water, and approaches nearly to that of blood. It has a
sweetish, ...
9
Memoirs of the Life, Writings, and Character, of the Late ...
Separation; secernment; or secretion. Dys - . . . . . . - (dug) . - . . . . . .Morbid state or
action generally; emphatical, when accompanied with distress or difficulty. Ec, ex
...-(is, éE)........ Epi,ep, eph(é1rt, 511', in) . . . ~Out 0f; outwards; over; above.
10
On the power, wisdom and goodness of God: as manifested in ...
... required by the several systems at work in the body, and conveying them to
their proper stations; and the means also for rejecting from the body the residuum
after the secernment for the above purposes of the finer life-supporting products.