What's the difference between busto and gusto?

Busto


Definition:

  • (n.) A bust; a statue.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In the rest of the province, for the first period of cancer registration (1976-81), the incidence was significantly higher than in Busto Arsizio, especially for ages 35-64.
  • (2) Dr Patricio Bustos, who directs Chile's Medical Legal Service, announced the autopsy results, which he described as definitive, on Tuesday.
  • (3) The experience at the Busto Arsizio Hip Center (Director Prof. R. Bombelli) with more than 2,800 R.M.
  • (4) The results presented in this paper are in agreement and could explain the decrease in the kinetic of the sperm acrosome reaction that we have observed in experimentally hypercholesterolaemic rabbits (Díaz-Fontdevila & Bustos-Obregón, 1992).
  • (5) Naranjo and Busto's algorithm was used for the causality of adverse effects.
  • (6) Fourteen cases of breast cancer in males observed between 1950 and 1974 at the Busto Arsizio Hospital Surgery Divsion are presnted.
  • (7) Malignant melanoma of the anus, anorectal junction and ampulla respectively was observed in 3 patients treated at the Busto Arsizio Hospital's General Surgery Division in the period 1967 to 1978.
  • (8) The existence of two classes of spermatogonial stem cells in the rat testis, i.e., reserve type A0 spermatogonia and renewing, types A1-A4 spermatogonia, postulated by Clermont and Bustos-Obregon ('68), was reexamined in a quantitative analysis of type A spermatogonia in both whole mounts of tubules and in radioautographed sections of testes from animals killed at various times, up to 26 days, after one or multiple injections of 3-H-thymidine.
  • (9) The histological examination of all the surgically removed appendices at the Busto Arsizio Hospital started in 1966.
  • (10) Inside Northampton County, where voters flipped from Obama to Trump Read more “Donald Trump is a master marketer and that is what we are up against,” Cheri Bustos, an Illinois representative who co-chairs the House Democrats’ messaging committee, told the Guardian.
  • (11) In Italy, health care personnel at the General Hospital in Busto Arsizio randomly assigned 10 healthy women, 22-33 years old, using combined oral contraceptives (OCs) over a long time to either the group receiving 500 mg oral ciprofloxacin twice a day for 7 days for 2 consecutive cycles or to the placebo group.
  • (12) As a control group, people living in Cannero (a nonindustrialized village on lake Magiore), in Busto Arsizio (a small industrial town near Milan) and in Lentate (a noncontaminated zone near Seveso) were chosen.
  • (13) In the Varese province (409,142 female inhabitants in 1981), which has been covered by a cancer registry since 1976, cytologic screening for cervical cancer began in the early sixties in the municipality of Busto Arsizio (41,818 female inhabitants in 1981) and subsequently spread to the rest of the province.
  • (14) 95 splenectomies carried out at the General Surgery Division of the Busto Arsizio Circolo Hospital between 1967 and 1977 are reported.
  • (15) In Busto Arsizio a survey of the hospital archives has been carried out to identify the cases of cervical cancer diagnosed from 1966 to 1985: in this 20-year period, the incidence of cervical cancer decreased markedly, but only in those ages frequently screened.
  • (16) They make up 5% of our observations in the Department of Oncology-Hematology at the Busto Arsizio Hospital.
  • (17) A series of isogenic pneumococcal transformants differing in their levels of penicillin resistance and containing altered penicillin-binding proteins were compared for their cell wall structures by using a recently developed technique that can resolve the peptidoglycan stem peptides of Pneumococcus strains to over 40 components (J. F. Garcia-Bustos, B. T. Chait, and A. Tomasz, J. Biol.

Gusto


Definition:

  • (n.) Nice or keen appreciation or enjoyment; relish; taste; fancy.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Norris said it was a privilege to be given the job, and he would "attack it with as much gusto and vitality as I have".
  • (2) Can I just say to the Bernie or Bust people: you are being ridiculous,” said Sanders-supporting comedian Sarah Silverman as she called for unity and backed Clinton “with gusto”.
  • (3) It's alarming to see the Financial Times leader this week join in with gusto: "It's time to chop up Auntie," it began.
  • (4) Pakistanis leap on every story, scrutinising and commenting, particularly on Twitter, a medium many have embraced with gusto.
  • (5) The government wanted digital switchover for its own purposes but the BBC took up the challenge with gusto, believing it faced potential irrelevance if it didn't play a big part in the new broadcasting environment.
  • (6) A bit too much gusto perhaps, for he picked up a European suspension as the team gained Cup Winners Cup entry after winning the Welsh Cup.
  • (7) Many of the questions raised by currently available data about bleeding risk are being addressed in the ongoing Global Utilization of t-PA and Streptokinase (GUSTO) Trial.
  • (8) Segel threw himself into the movie with gusto, and merrily dances alongside his puppet pals in full-scale song-and-dance numbers.
  • (9) Responses of 109 male and 99 female university students to the EVS were found stable over a 2-week period and revealed five factors, identified as Gusto, Easy Necessity, Orderliness, Gourmet, and Social Approval.
  • (10) On menu at Queen's banquet for Xi Jinping: Balmoral venison and The Spy Who Loved Me Read more A double-page spread in the Beijing Youth Daily marvelled over the gusto with which China’s leader had been embraced and asked: “How does Buckingham Palace plan a bespoke visit for a foreign dignitary?” Another article explored the Communist party leader’s previous encounters with monarchs from countries including Spain and Cambodia.
  • (11) They included ITV's first, with Nescafe featuring its Dolce Gusto coffee machine on This Morning.
  • (12) The effect is barely visible to the human eye because dogs tend to wag their tails too fast, but it can be seen with slow motion video, or in some larger breeds that wag their tails with less gusto.
  • (13) Neither can I erase that as a young hack keen to prove his worth I threw myself into working at the Daily Star with gusto.
  • (14) The crowds sang Land of Hope and Glory with their usual gusto at Saturday's last night of the proms.
  • (15) He was behind in the service cycle, as well as the psychological war that had developed every so subtly, Murray prodding here and there, Kyrgios giving vent to his emotions with full-throated gusto.
  • (16) 'I started shopping with gusto in October and was finished by the end of the month' Joanna Lee, 43, an eyelash technician from Middlesex, buys for 30 people Well-organised Christmas shopper Joanna Lee.
  • (17) Rangers played with gusto and for a while looked the more likely winners but they wound up empty-handed.
  • (18) They have no predators, they are untouchable, they laugh at the law, they sneer at parliament, they have the power to hurt us and they do with gusto and precision."
  • (19) West Brom have now come from behind to earn points in their last three games – beating Arsenal and drawing at West Ham – and with the wind swirling wildly around and the Hawthorns crowd finally buying into “Tony Pulis’s blue and white army” with encouraging gusto, Spurs of yore might have wilted.
  • (20) The recent data, collectively, have set the stage for a new greater than 30,000 patient mortality reduction trial entitled Global Utilization of Streptokinase and t-PA for Occluded Coronary Arteries (GUSTO).

Words possibly related to "busto"

Words possibly related to "gusto"