单词 | devitalise |
例句 | So devitalised and neurasthenic are many of our pretty young girls, that their flowerlike faces, topping over-tall and undeveloped bodies, suggest delicate blossoms crowning long attenuated, sapless stems. Feminism and Sex-Extinction 2011-11-11T03:00:29.100Z The mentally developed have made the devitalising of life a code of conduct. Stand Up, Ye Dead Shops, crowds, the vibrations of both, devitalised and confused her. The Paliser case The manœuvring of the elder, which might easily have been vulgarised on the one hand or devitalised on the other, just remains refreshingly and believably human. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 147, November 4, 1914 In England a devitalised Deism laid its chilly hand not only upon the world of scholars and men of letters, but even upon the church. The New Theology I gathered, more from her tone than from her actual words that only an effete, devitalised creature would call on me. Gossamer 1915 Humanity, however devitalised, however incapable of varied passions, does not lose the love passion so long as it has the animal instinct of the fly and the rudimentary human instinct to idealise. Personality in Literature In one instance of ligature of the anterior tibial artery for such hæmorrhage three-quarters of the whole lumen of the vessel had been devitalised. Surgical Experiences in South Africa, 1899-1900 Being Mainly a Clinical Study of the Nature and Effects of Injuries Produced by Bullets of Small Calibre Twenty years ago, in the days of "schedules" and "percentages," elementary education was, on balance, an actively devitalising agency. What Is and What Might Be A Study of Education in General and Elementary Education in Particular A faint scent of gardenias was at that moment being wafted in from his well-kept, rich gardens, where somehow his boys managed to make flowers grow in the brown, devitalised earth. Civilization Tales of the Orient Further, bacteria may gain access to devitalised tissues by way of the blood-stream, being carried hither from some infected area elsewhere in the body. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. No wonder public-houses are the landmarks of London locomotion; they are the Temples of Oblivion, where the devitalised multitudes seek to forget themselves, that they may regain the courage to live at all. The Quest of the Simple Life Only Rodney's had been solidified and developed by the contacts and exigencies of his career, and Neville's disembodied, devitalised and driven inwards by her more dilettante life. Dangerous Ages It has others, especially one at the Ch�teau des Halles, thirty kilometers from Lyons, which take the devitalised, convalescent and tubercular cases. Out To Win The Story of America in France He himself was nearly ready for the grave, ready because of pure boredom, through pure inertia, quite ready to succumb to the devitalising effect of this life. Civilization Tales of the Orient Thin, devitalised tags of skin often stretch from side to side of the ulcer. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. The chatter rose and fell spasmodically in short devitalised bursts of polite effort. The Jervaise Comedy But this devitalising influence is present within the Church, not only in one country but in many, and far more widely than is suspected. The Grey Book This was only one suggestion among many that the dance has been devitalised under the respectabilising influence of the policeman and village elders who had forgotten their youth. The Foundations of Japan Notes Made During Journeys Of 6,000 Miles In The Rural Districts As A Basis For A Sounder Knowledge Of The Japanese People It was, perhaps, a thought too pale—mild and sweet as a kind old face, but a little devitalised, even wan…. Widdershins If one of the varieties gain the ascendancy, the poisons produced by the others so devitalise the tissue cells, and diminish their power of resistance, that the virulence of the most active organisms is increased. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. "Who was that?" asked the sick woman, in her ghostly, devitalised voice. Cheerful—By Request He had thrown her a burden on the convent that sheltered her so willingly only for want of will power to conquer the weakness that had devitalised brain and body. The Shadow of the East It is even easier to practise a really shallow and devitalising pessimism. Watchers of the Sky Averting his gaze, Mr. Marrapit took the legs that Old Tom had devitalised. Once Aboard the Lugger An unhealthy or devitalised condition of the patient's tissues also hinders the reparative process. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. The more War becomes in this manner devitalised so much the more its theory becomes destitute of the necessary firm pivots and buttresses for its reasoning; the necessary is constantly diminishing, the accidental constantly increasing. On War — Volume 1 Thorough purification with antiseptics, excision of devitalised tissues, and drainage of the wound are first carried out. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. In each of the divided vessels a clot forms, and extends as far as the nearest collateral branch; and on the surface of the wound there is a microscopic layer of bruised and devitalised tissue. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. They are doubtless due to the action of skin bacteria, which attack the tissues devitalised by the erysipelas. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. Bed-sores are most frequently met with in old and debilitated patients, or in those whose tissues are devitalised by acute or chronic diseases associated with stagnation of blood in the peripheral veins. Manual of Surgery Volume First: General Surgery. Sixth Edition. |
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