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Cytopathology and from
* Cytopathology and chemical pathology of fluid aspirated from affected joints ( e. g. to differentiate between septic arthritis and gout )

Cytopathology and is
Cytopathology is also commonly used to investigate thyroid lesions, diseases involving sterile body cavities ( peritoneal, pleural, and cerebrospinal ), and a wide range of other body sites.
Cytopathology is generally used on samples of free cells or tissue fragments, in contrast to histopathology, which studies whole tissues.
Cytopathology is frequently, less precisely, called cytology, which means " the study of cells.
Cytopathology is best used as one of three tools, the second and third being the physical exam and medical imaging.

Cytopathology and cellular
* Cytopathology: the study of cellular disease and the use of cellular changes for the diagnosis of disease.

Cytopathology and .
In 1954 he published another memorable work, the " Atlas of Exfoliative Cytology ", thus creating the foundation of the modern medical specialty of Cytopathology.

from and Greek
While studying at the seminary in Andover, Adoniram had been working on a New Testament translation from the original Greek.
Those famous lines of the Greek Anthology with which a fading beauty dedicates her mirror at the shrine of a goddess reveal a wise attitude: `` Venus, take my votive glass, Since I am not what I was, What from this day I shall be, Venus, let me never see ''.
And then the Amen corner took hold, re-enacting a form of group participation in worship that stemmed from years before the Greek chorus, spreading down through the African forest, overseas to the West Indies, and then here in Alabama.
They answered him in monosyllables, nods, occasionally muttering in Greek to one another, awaiting the word from Papa, who restlessly cracked his knuckles, anxious to stuff himself into his white Cadillac and burst off to the freeway.
It was not even in writing Latin epigrams, sometimes bawdy ones, or in translating Lucian from Greek into Latin or in defending the study of Greek against the attack of conservative academics, or in attacking the conservative theologians who opposed Erasmus's philological study of the New Testament.
Scientists assume that cholesterol ( from the Greek chole, meaning bile, and sterios, meaning solid ) is somehow necessary for the formation of brain cells, since it accounts for about 2% of the brain's total solid weight.
It is similar to the Ancient Greek letter Alpha, from which it derives.
With the loss of the study of ancient Greek in the early medieval Latin West, Aristotle was practically unknown there from c. AD 600 to c. 1100 except through the Latin translation of the Organon made by Boethius.
In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, interest in Aristotle revived and Latin Christians had translations made, both from Arabic translations, such as those by Gerard of Cremona, and from the original Greek, such as those by James of Venice and William of Moerbeke.
After Thomas Aquinas wrote his theology, working from Moerbeke's translations, the demand for Aristotle's writings grew and the Greek manuscripts returned to the West, stimulating a revival of Aristotelianism in Europe that continued into the Renaissance.
The term " anthropology " is from the Greek anthrōpos (), " man ", understood to mean humankind or humanity, and-logia (- λογία ), " discourse " or " study.
Marie-Louise von Franz tells us the double approach of Western alchemy was set from the start, when Greek philosophy was mixed with Egyptian and Mesopotamian technology.
The genus Amoeba and amoeboids in general both derive their names from the ancient Greek word for change.
Following the tradition of these Ancient Greek folk etymologies, in the Doric dialect the word originally meant wall, fence from animals and later assembly within the agora.
Homer interprets Apollo as a terrible god ( δεινός θεός ) who brings death and disease with his arrows, but who can also heal, possessing a magic art that separates him from the other Greek gods.
Marble, Roman copy of a Greek original of the 4th century BCE, from the collection of Cardinal Albani
The evolution of the Greek sculpture can be observed in his depictions from the almost static formal Kouros type in early archaic period, to the representation of motion in a relative harmonious whole in late archaic period.
The evolution of the Greek art seems to go parallel with the Greek philosophical conceptions, which changed from the natural-philosophy of Thales to the metaphysical theory of Pythagoras.
The Greek words " ida " ( οίδα: know ) and " idos " ( είδος: species ) have the same root as the word " idea " ( ιδέα ), indicating how the Greek mind moved from the gift of the senses, to the principles beyond the senses.
According to the Greek tradition the Dipylon master was named Daedalus, and in his statues the limbs were freed from the body, giving the impression that the statues could move.
Such statues were found across the Greek speaking world, the preponderance of these were found at the sanctuaries of Apollo with more than one hundred from the sanctuary of Apollo Ptoios, Boeotia alone.

from and kytos
Cytology ( from Greek, kytos, " a hollow "; and ,-logia ) means " the study of cells ".
Cell biology ( formerly cytology, from the Greek kytos, " contain ") is a scientific discipline that studies cells – their physiological properties, their structure, the organelles they contain, interactions with their environment, their life cycle, division and death.
Red blood cells are also known as RBCs, red cells, red blood corpuscles ( an archaic term ), haematids, erythroid cells or erythrocytes ( from Greek erythros for " red " and kytos for " hollow ", with cyte translated as " cell " in modern usage ).
Chondrocytes ( from Greek chondros cartilage + kytos cell ) are the only cells found in healthy cartilage.
A schistocyte or schizocyte ( from Greek schistos for " divided " or schistein for " to split ", and kytos for " hollow " or " cell ") is a fragmented part of a red blood cell.
Myzocytosis ( from Greek: myzein, () meaning " to suck " and kytos () meaning " container ", hence referring to " cell ") is a method of feeding found in some heterotrophic organisms.

from and hollow
Ramey's fist and the air expelled from the man's collapsing cheek made a hollow pop in the air like cupped hands clapping together.
Then, without knowing why, she found herself running from them, fleeing wildly through the trees, dodging her own shadows until she came to a little hollow in the rocky ground with a big stone in the center behind which she knelt and hid, listening to the madness of her heart and wanting for once to cry.
The fundamental bilateral body form is a tube with a hollow gut cavity running from the mouth to the anus, and a nerve cord with an enlargement ( a ganglion ) for each body segment, with an especially large ganglion at the front, called the brain.
Their name is derived from their long, hollow structure with the walls formed by one-atom-thick sheets of carbon, called graphene.
Cannon is derived from the Old Italian word cannone, meaning " large tube ", which came from Latin canna, in turn originating from the Greek κάννα ( kanna ), " reed ", and then generalized to mean any hollow tube-like object ; cognate with Akkadian term qanu and Hebrew qāneh, meaning " tube " or " reed ".
* With the alveolar clicks, written with an exclamation mark,, the tip of the tongue is pulled down abruptly and forcefully from the roof of the mouth, sometimes using a lot of jaw motion, and making a hollow pop!
The notion of " thinking matter " is upheld and the " argument from design " discarded ... as hollow and unconvincing.
The viron is nonenveloped, hollow, cylindrical and formed from a coiling fiber.
The materials are mainly dark red carnelian, with agate and sard entering usage from the 3rd to the 1st centuries BC, along with purely gold finger rings with a hollow engraved bezel setting.
Like the huldra in Norway and Sweden, they are hollow when seen from the back.
Singer wrote: " My conclusion there is, and here I back Shklovsky, that if the satellite is indeed spiraling inward as deduced from astronomical observation, then there is little alternative to the hypothesis that it is hollow and therefore martian made.
) In the case of percussion caps the hammer was hollow on the end to fit around the cap in order to keep the cap from fragmenting and injuring the shooter.
The term has been used in English since 1727, borrowed from glyphe ( in use by French antiquaries since 1701 ), from the Greek γλυφή, glyphē, " carving ," and the verb γλύφειν, glýphein, " to hollow out, engrave, carve " ( cognate with Latin glubere " to peel " and English cleave ).
Purportedly verifiable hypotheses of a " concave hollow Earth " need to be distinguished from a thought experiment
Cyrus Teed, a doctor from upstate New York, proposed such a concave hollow Earth in 1869, calling his scheme " Cellular Cosmogony ".
is quite different from the hollow earth theory.
Another set of scientific arguments against a hollow Earth or any hollow planet comes from gravity.
This was first shown by Newton, whose shell theorem mathematically predicts a gravitational force ( from the shell ) of zero everywhere inside a spherically symmetric hollow shell of matter, regardless of the shell's thickness.
The word ham is derived from the Old English ham or hom meaning the hollow or bend of the knee.
Blade length, thickness ( width ), and curvature ( rocker / radius ( front to back ) and radius of hollow ( across the blade width ) are quite different from speed or figure skates.

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