Medical Terminology for Health Professionals u04a1 Practice Exercises Due Date: May 5‚ 2013 1:00 PM By: Chapter 5‚ pages 159-166: Matching Word Parts 1: Exercises 5.1–5.5. Write the correct answer in the middle column 5.1: aorta: aort/o 5.2: artery: arteri /o 5.3: plaque‚ fatty substance: arther/o 5.4: relating to blood or lymph vessels: angi/o 5.5: slow: brady Matching Word Parts 3: Exercises 5.11–5.15. Write the correct answer in the middle column 5.11: white: leuk/o 5.12: vein:
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Theoretical problems of terminology………………………………………..…..6 1.1 Terms‚ their definition and classification 1.2 Terminology 3. Chapter 2 Semantic peculiarities of English and Ukrainian medical terminology ……………………………….................................................................................15 4. Conclusions……………………………………………….................................26 5. The list of literature used…………………………………………………..…...28 Anotation Terminology appears spontaneously
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with our documentation‚ using the proper standardized healthcare terminology to establish a uniform representation of nursing care; an “unambiguous description of how nursing problems‚ interventions and outcomes are documented” (Hebda & Czar‚ 2013‚ p. 300). Our textbook (Hebda & Czar‚ 2013‚ p. 298) uses the definition of standardized terminology as; “structured and controlled languages that have been developed according to terminology development guidelines and have been approved by an authoritative
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pollutants‚ and to exaggerate the dangers of chemicals. Paracelsus‚ the father of toxicology‚ once wrote: "Everything is poison‚ there is poison in everything. Only the dose makes a thing not a poison." The legal definition of "poison" is stricter. A medical condition of poisoning can also be caused by substances that are not legally required to carry the label "poison". Environmentally hazardous substances are not necessarily poisons and vice versa. For
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Part 1 Language related tasks. Model sentence: He’s (he has) lost his passport. a) Analysis of meaning: He’s lost his passport on his way to the airport “presently speaking about an action that had taken place in the past”. b) Conveying meaning: My friend Ali had booked a plane to Malaysia. He asked me to take him to the airport. He left the house with his passport‚ at some point between him leaving the house and being in transit he must have lost his passport. As he arrived to the departure
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Which of the following is the best definition of economics? the study of how individuals and societies choose to use the scarce resources that nature and previous generations have provided Opportunity cost is that which we forgo‚ or give up‚ when we make a choice or a decision. The reason that opportunity costs arise is that resources are scarce. If your tuition is $5‚000 this semester‚ your books cost $600‚ you can only work 20 rather than 40 hours per week during the 15
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ANCHOR TERMINOLOGY: 1)ANCHOR AWEIGH:THE ANCHOR IS SAID TO BE AWEIGH THEMOMENT IT IS BROKEN OUT OF THE GROUND AND CLEAR OF THESEA BED. 2)ANCHOR A-COCKBILL:WHEN THE ANCHOR IS HANGINGVERTICALLY FROM THE HAWSEPIPE‚ WITH THE FLUKES TURNEDINTO THE SHIPS SIDE. IN THIS POSITION IT WILL NOT STOWCORRECTLY IN THE HAWSE PIPE. 3)ANCHOR BUOY:A BUOY USED TO INDICATE THE POSITION OF THESHIPS ANCHOR WHEN ON THE BOTTOM. 4)ANCHOR COMING HOME:WHEN THE ANCHOR IS BEING DRAWNTOWARDS THE SHIP IN THE OPERATION OF HEAVING
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DIDLS Breakdown DIDLS Diction‚ Imagery‚ Details‚ Language‚ and Syntax Use diction to find tone. Use imagery‚ details‚ language and syntax to support tone. TONE Author’s attitude toward the subject‚ toward himself‚ or toward the audience. DICTION Adjectives‚ nouns‚ verbs‚ adverbs‚ negative words‚ positive words‚ synonyms‚ contrast. Look at the words that jump out at you - Evaluate only those words to find tone Also look at: Colloquial (Slang) Old-Fashioned Informal (Conversational)
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1. Above board On or above the deck‚ in plain view‚ not hiding anything. 2. Above-water hull The hull section of a vessel above the waterline‚ the visible part of a ship. Also‚ topsides. 3. Act of Pardon or Act of Grace A letter from a state or power authorising action by a privateer. Also see Letter of marque. 4. Abaft Toward the stern‚ relative to some object ("abaft the fore hatch"). 5. Abaft the beam Further aft than the beam: a relative bearing of greater than 90 degrees
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CH 202 Breakdown UV/Vis: Molecules containing π-electrons or non-bonding electrons (n-electrons) can absorb the energy in the form of ultraviolet or visible light to excite these electrons to higher anti-bonding molecular orbitals. The more easily excited the electrons (i.e. lower energy gap between the HOMO and the LUMO)‚ the longer the wavelength of light it can absorb. Conjugation raises the energy of the bonding orbitals and lowers the energy of the antibonding molecular orbital. This
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