«LOCO DISEASE» İLE İLİŞKİLİ İNGILIZCE KİTAPLAR
loco disease sözcüğünün kullanımını aşağıdaki kaynakça seçkisinde keşfedin.
loco disease ile ilişkili kitaplar ve İngilizce edebiyattaki kullanımı ile ilgili bağlam sağlaması için küçük metinler.
It has been demonstrated that the so-called loco disease of the Plains is not
simply a matter of starvation, as many have supposed, though it. Figure 2. —
Distribution of the purple loco, Astragalus niollissimus. A small plant is shown in
figure 1.
Charles Dwight Marsh, A. B. Clawson, W. W. Eggleston, 1936
2
Vocabulario Vaquero/Cowboy Talk: A Dictionary of Spanish ...
The DARE glosses this as a distemper caused by ingesting noxious plants that
afflicts cattle. Its symptoms are erratic behavior, often characterized by lethargy
and impaired coordination. Also called loco disease, locoism. (4) DARE: 1852.
3
International Poisonous Plants Checklist: An Evidence-Based ...
Klench JP (1888) Rattleweed or loco-disease. Am Vet Rev 12:395-402. Marsh
CD (1908) Results of loco-weed investigations in the field. U S Dep Agric Bur
Plant Indus Bull #121(Part 3):37-38. Marsh CD (1909) The locoweed disease of
the ...
4
Pocket Medical Dictionary
2. The disease induced by eating loco. Locoism, Icf-ko-izm. Loco-disease.
Locomotion, lo-ko-mo'-shun. Animal movement. Locomo'tor. Relating to
locomotion. L. Ataz'ia. See A tar in. Locular, lof-u-lar. Divided into small cavities.
Locus, lo'-kus.
B. Jain Publishers Staff, 1999
5
Flowering plants and ferns of Arizona
It causes loco disease in horses. 36. Astragalus wootoni Sheldon, Minn. Geol.
and Nat. Hist. Survey Bot. Studies 1: 138. 1894. Phaca wootoni Rydb., North
Amer. Fl. 24: 350. 1929. Equally common in Arizona as A. allochrous and having
about ...
Thomas Henry Kearney, Robert Hibbs Peebles, 1942
6
A Selected Bibliography on Management of Western Ranges, ...
McEACHBAN, W. (1137) THE LOCO DISEASE. Colo. Agr. Expt. Sta. Rept. 1888:
78-79. 1889. M'lNTOBH, W. (1138) PLANTS POISONOUS TO DOMESTIC
ANIMALS. Agr. Gaz. Canada 5: 981-983. 1918. MCLAUGHLIN, A. R. (1139)
STUDIES ...
Edward Clayton Crafts, Lincoln Ellison, Mrs. Theo Campbell Hartman, 1938
7
North American Wildland Plants: A Field Guide
... leaves and scape arising directly from a branching caudex HISTORIC, FOOD,
AND MEDICINAL USES: famous in western history as one of the causes of "
locoed" animals LIVESTOCK LOSSES: poisonous; can cause loco disease in
horses, ...
James L. Stubbendieck, Stephan L. Hatch, L. M. Landholt, 2003
8
Common Medical Abbreviations
... learning disorder; learning disturbance; Leber's disease; left deltoid;
Legionnaires' disease; lethal dose; lie detector; light difference; limited dose;
liquid diet; Little's disease (cerebral palsy); loco disease; low dose; Lyme disease
lethal dose ...
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A dictionary of practical materia medica: in three volumes. ...
Gentry's observation of loco-disease in winter bears out what is said by other
writers, namely, that it is only in winter, when food is scanty, that animals can be
induced to commence eating the weed ; and then they cannot leave off. An
account ...
10
Webster's New World Dictionary
-ries [after J. H. Logan, who developed it 347 loco disease London (1881)] 1 a
hybrid bramble developed from the blackberry and the red raspberry 2 its
purplish-red fruit log a rithm (log'a nth am, lag'-ln. [ < Gr logos, ratio + arithmos,
number J ...
Victoria Neufeldt, Andrew N. Sparks, Webster's New World, 2003