Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Arnzen sits on the editorial board for two literary journals associated with genre fiction (Paradoxa and Dissections) and has edited college literary magazines and more.
Interview: Michael Arnzen odysseyworkshop 2009
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Dissections she conducted revealed heart lesions and brain hemorrhages, but what was causing the disease?
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Dissections she conducted revealed heart lesions and brain hemorrhages, but what was causing the disease?
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--- Dissections of our Wall Street and economic debacle are ample, solutions for what any of us should do not are quite as plentiful.
James Warren: This Week in Magazines: Fixing Schools, Money, and the World 2008
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Dissections of their forebrain hypothalamus found that the glands in both the women and the gay men were less than half the size of those in the straight men.
Gays and Genes Hacker, Andrew 2003
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Dissections were made but the knowledge acquired was not applied; amputation was common but not always necessary or effective.
Medicine in Virginia, 1607-1699 Thomas Proctor Hughes
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Dissections of parts of the human body to be arranged to meet the needs of students who wish to review Anatomy I of the Medical Department.
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Dissections of parts of the human body to be arranged to meet the needs of students who wish to review Anatomy I of the Medical Department.
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Dissections were carried out, chiefly upon animals, and human subjects were occasionally used.
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Dissections were impossible; their physiology was of the crudest character, strongly dominated by the philosophies.
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