What's the difference between collet and colley?

Collet


Definition:

  • () An inferior church servant. [Obs.] See Acolyte.
  • (n.) A small collar or neckband.
  • (n.) A small metal ring; a small collar fastened on an arbor; as, the collet on the balance arbor of a watch; a small socket on a stem, for holding a drill.
  • (n.) The part of a ring containing the bezel in which the stone is set.
  • (n.) The flat table at the base of a brilliant. See Illust. of Brilliant.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He underwent Rastelli operation at the age of 10 months with the diagnosis of truncus arteriosus (Collet & Edwards Type I).
  • (2) The 16 people named in the charges are: Patricia Quinn; Sean Quinn Junior; Collete Marie Quinn; Aoife Quinn; Brenda Quinn; Ciara Quinn; Paddy McKillen; Séamus Ross; Brian O'Farrell; John McCabe; Gerard Maguire; Patrick Kearney; Gerard Conlon; Gerard Gannon; Seán Reilly and Joseph O'Reilly.
  • (3) When two primitive PAs shared a single root, the consequence was either pulmonary trunk hypoplasia, as is seen in tetralogy of Fallot, or type I persistent truncus arteriosus (PTA) as classified by Collet and Edwards.
  • (4) But at this stage we’re focusing on the immediate humanitarian needs.” The head of Oxfam in Vanuatu, Colin Collet van Rooyen, said the lack of clean water and sanitation were the most pressing needs.
  • (5) A Collet-Sicard syndrome was observed in a 53-year-old patient with a coiling of the left internal carotid artery just below the skull base.
  • (6) A 71-year-old man developed unilateral palsies of the 9th through 12th cranial nerves (Collet-Sicard syndrome) due to a fracture of the occipital condyle, which was diagnosed by computed tomography.
  • (7) In April 1989 Collets, the left-wing bookshop, and Dillons were firebombed for stocking the Rushdie novel.
  • (8) In any event, Collet's argument misperceives the heuristic mode in which PCA is used in actual studies.
  • (9) First, since Collet's analysis was based on the correlation matrix only, it cannot disprove assumptions of PCA which do not constrain the correlation (or covariance) matrix.
  • (10) There were two cases which could not be classified according to the Collet and Edwards classification.
  • (11) Data were colleted during 2 6-hour naturalistic home observations using a modified time-sampling technique.
  • (12) Data on perceived community security and reported medical, social and mental coping reactions were colleted, using a simply and directly worded, precoded, stimulus-response instrument developed by the author.
  • (13) Using the Collet and Edwards classification, type I truncus arteriosus was the most frequent (62.5%).
  • (14) Her injuries were: a large left facial entrance wound with a single sinus cavity that was converted from destruction of the paranasal sinuses, a right Collet-Sicard syndrome, and a right vertebral artery pseudoaneurysm at the C1 level.
  • (15) A 41-year-old man experienced intense headache and neck pain, bruits, and a complete unilateral cranial nerve palsy IX-XII (Collet-Sicard syndrome) after a trivial back trauma.
  • (16) To increase the practicability of Ilisarov's ring fixation apparatus, we introduced the following modifications: Clamping of the fixation wires using a quick collet with a force indicator, which enables reproducibly preuse and rapid clamping.
  • (17) A single right ventricle with common atrioventricular (AV) valve was associated with (Collet & Edwards type II) truncus arteriosus communis, and appeared to have a single coronary artery with an abnormally high take-off near the origin of the right subclavian artery.
  • (18) A 67-year-old man developed paralysis of the right ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth cranial nerves (Collet-Sicard syndrome) after sustaining a closed head injury.
  • (19) The same does not hold true when one is confronted with Collet-Sicard's syndrome or cochleovestibular syndrome accompanied by otoliquorrhea.
  • (20) Six species of common desert range plants; Achillea sp., Aristida plumosa, Artemisia herba-alba, Haloxylon articulatum, and Heliotropium ramosissimum were colleted from Western Desert in Iraq.

Colley


Definition:

  • (n.) See Collie.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The daughters and the son have a less severe Colley disease originating by such a double heterozygosity.
  • (2) Market power would be much increased as the major supermarkets would have little choice but to buy from the merged business,” said Professor John Colley of Warwick business school.
  • (3) Meanwhile Tom German, a BBC news editor in Manchester in the 1970s, was “probably aware” that Hall was having sex on the corporation’s premises and should have shared concerns with Colley, but he had not known that any underage girls were involved.
  • (4) Hydroxylation and subsequent glycosylation are inhibited by alpha,alpha'-dipyridyl (Colley, K. J., and Baenziger, U. U.
  • (5) Raymond Colley, a regional TV manager at BBC Manchester from 1970 to 1986, spoke to Hall about his conduct and challenged him about rumours that he was having sex with women in his dressing room.
  • (6) In the 18th century, “this England” became “rule Britannia”, a process brilliantly described by the historian Linda Colley in her book Britons.
  • (7) The primary cyst walls contained numerous broad spatula-like protrusions and the cysts were identified as S. singaporensis Zaman and Colley, 1976.
  • (8) But Colley just warned Hall as to his future conduct and failed to check further.
  • (9) Councillor Fiona Colley Cabinet member for regeneration, Southwark council
  • (10) Linda Colley's book Britons persuasively argues that the forging of Britishness during the 18th and 19th centuries was based on three elements.
  • (11) John Colley, a professor at Warwick Business School, said the planned cost cuts appeared meagre and left room for a rival bidder to offer more to LSE shareholders.
  • (12) In the 1960s, Cambridge produced a remarkable generation of historians – David Cannadine, Linda Colley and Simon Schama among others – but one name acquired a particular resonance.
  • (13) It is understood that Smith warned BBC executives that she knows Ray Colley, a BBC regional manager who worked with Hall in Manchester.
  • (14) Louise Colley, head of protection at Aviva, said: "As care costs rise, it's quite possible we will see more and more couples relying on one salary while the other person looks after the children – simply because they may actually be worse off if both people work.
  • (15) A similar increase in PKC activity is measured following the induction of a long-lasting potentiation with abbreviated high-frequency stimulation (HFS) in combination with PKC-activating phorbol esters (Colley et al., 1989).
  • (16) That’s just the nature of social care as a business, in its loosest term.” And, says Julie Colley, director of operations, learning and marketing at the Avalon Group, graduates often have strong IT skills – essential in a role that requires data collection for evidence-based practice and CQC compliance.
  • (17) As I read particular writers and thinkers, among them Neal Ascherson, Linda Colley and Norman Davies, I detect that, beyond the battleground on individual issues - our relationship with Europe, devolution and the constitution, asylum and immigration - some common ground does exist.
  • (18) The case of a girl affected by a Colley's disease of moderate severity is reported.
  • (19) Smith's husband was formerly married to a woman who is now Colley's wife.
  • (20) The most recent example came when the Goole defender Karl Colley was asked to leave the club earlier this year, after taking exception to some robust “feedback” from the crowd during a Northern Premier game, running into the stands and attempting to attack the fan responsible.

Words possibly related to "colley"