Results 251 to 260 of about 27,344 (306)
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MYTHICAL ‘TAILS OF LOCKWOOD’

ANZ Journal of Surgery, 2008
The cause of testicular ectopia has long been a mystery, and over the years, many hypotheses have been suggested to explain the condition. The most famous of these hypotheses is that of the ‘Tails of Lockwood’. This developed from a paper written in 1888 by Charles Barrett Lockwood.
Sophie S, Nightingale   +2 more
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The mythical task

Proceedings of the 8th annual international conference on Systems documentation, 1990
We confront a time in society when phrases such as “information anxiety” have become cliches. As documentation developers, we have a mission to sort information into structures that help users perform their work on computers. Task-based documentation has emerged as one of the most popular models for explaining the principals of sorting information into
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The mythical readmissions explosion

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1983
During the past decade and a half, readmissions increased substantially as a proportion of all admissions to state mental hospitals, and the absolute number of readmissions appeared to rise. These trends were interpreted widely, but incorrectly, as reflecting an accelerated rate of return to the hospitals by discharge patients.
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The Mythic

Diogenes, 1954
We have learned by now not to see myth as simple entertainment or a babbling. Where the nineteenth-century eye could find only an out-of-date toy left behind by childish peoples or a cultural stage-set for leisured social circles, the human sciences have taught us to recognise an authentic expression of man: myth says with utmost seriousness something ...
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The Migration of the Mythic Lesbian

Journal of Lesbian Studies, 2004
Abstract In the process of becoming increasingly visible and vocal, lesbians have lost the mystique that surrounded their lifestyles in the first half of the twentieth century. This article suggests that the former mythic qualities are emerging again in the stories of ex-lovers.
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Mythic and Non-Mythic Artists in Ovid's Metamorphoses

Ramus, 1984
The interpretation of Ovid's epic that is argued here has three related parts that have not been drawn together before:I. Ovid's panoramic presentation of myth, theMetamorphoses, presents provocative reflections in dramatic guise concerning human psychology, society, and art. Ovid is an engaged poet as well as an amusing one.II. TheMetamorphosesinclude,
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The ailing mythical osteocyte

Medical Hypotheses, 1975
Abstract If bone is fixed in formalin and impregnated with ammoniacal silver nitrate prior to decalcification, structures are seen in the decalcified sections which are never seen in bone that has been decalcified prior to staining. These silverstained structures are assumed to represent pools of fluid or gel that is argyrophilic and is normally ...
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Mythical Scotland

2012
Abstract Historically, Scotland's myths have been subject to the fickleness and changing whims of ideological fashion, and turn out to have had much less staying power than the nation, whose supposed enduring essence they are meant to represent. It is possible to discern at least four distinct ‘moments’ of national mythmaking in Scotland
Colin Kidd, James Coleman
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The mythical arguments for decentralisation

Australian Planner, 1973
PETER L. SIMONS, NOEL G. LONERGAN
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Mythic Ideals

The American Journal of Bioethics, 2004
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