What's the difference between cordal and corral?

Cordal


Definition:

  • (n.) Same as Cordelle.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These dysgeneses are characterized by the presence of cordal epithelial structures and of stroma.
  • (2) Some H felis were closely associated with the plasmalemma of cordal reticular cells and also were located in intracytoplasmic vacuoles of the cells without being influenced by the phagocytic process.
  • (3) The sinus-cordal rearrangement and, particularly, the increase in the volume of pulp cords may cause a slowing down of blood cell circulation with resultant increased phagocytosis and hypersplenism.
  • (4) Site of origin has never been considered a possible prognostic factor for such cordal neoplasms; such factors could possibly make the choice between treatments significant.
  • (5) Moreover, it is suggested that the changes observed in the arterial bed of the spleen in hairy cell leukaemia involve both a reduced blood supply per unit volume of splenic pulp and a more marked conditioning of blood cells prior to their screening by cordal macrophages.
  • (6) Research is still needed concerning the follow-up of the intubated patients in order to limit the pressures exerted between the cordal mucosa or the tracheal mucosa in contact with the endotracheal tube.
  • (7) The cordal arrangement and adluminal shift of the diverse spermatogonia will be discussed along with the cyclic transformations of Sertoli cell processes and their junctions.
  • (8) This study aimed to evaluate the usefulness and efficacy of intracordal silicone injection in the treatment of cordal paralysis after thoracic surgery or due to tumor invasion of the recurrent nerve.
  • (9) Stereoscopic observations of scanning electron micrographs clearly demonstrated the three-dimensional fine architecture of the splenic sinuses, the spongy cordal reticular tissue and the intracordal vasculature.
  • (10) Mitral valve prolapse is the main cause of mitral incompetence; spontaneous cordal rupture is a late complication in the natural history of this disease, thus warranting prompt surgical valve repair or replacement.
  • (11) Prolonged sojourn of these elements in a metabolically unfavorable environment results in cellular damage, increased exposure to cordal macrophages, and premature destruction with the evolution of a hypersplenic syndrome.
  • (12) At surgery, a solid mass, localized on the right side, inside the medulla oblongata and the spinal cordal, with a cyst at each extremity, reaching C4 in the lower part and the recessus lateralis in the upper part.
  • (13) The transmission (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) studies demonstrated predominantly red cell retention in the cords of HS spleens, red cell phagocytosis by cordal macrophages in AHA spleens and in a lesser intensity in HS spleens, and phagocytosis of haematic corpuscles by sinus endothelial cells (SEC) in the cases of HS.
  • (14) The AVPL perfusion fixation of these spleens clearly visualized complicated three-dimensional fine architecture of the red pulp and provided much important information on in situ morphology and dynamic change of the terminal vascular bed, including venous pressure-dependent size change of the stomata and three-dimensional shapes of the capillary terminal, with positive proof of their opening into the cordal reticular tissue.
  • (15) Thirty (5.6%) of 535 patients followed 5-25 years after treatment of cordal carcinoma (T1A,B) developed a second primary laryngeal carcinoma.
  • (16) The cause of the cordal paralysis was injury to the recurrent nerve incurred during operation for oesophageal or lung cancer in nineteen patients, and direct invasion of malignant neoplasm to the recurrent nerve in the other three patients.
  • (17) The results are as follows: Vocal nodules: no real advantages are offered by the CO2 laser in the treatment of these pathologies, whereas, in a small percentage of cases, the occurrence of reactive nodules or scars was noted; Cordal polyps are better removed with the traditional procedures, whereas the CO2 laser allows a more accurate excision of voluminous polyps or edemas of Reinke because of the bloodless operative field; Dyskeratoses: better functional results can be obtained using the laser.
  • (18) Cordal capillaries were exclusively open into labyrinthine reticular tissue space of the cord with a funnel-shaped or a perforated saccular or ampullar terminal.
  • (19) Leukemic myeloblasts infiltrated the cordal space of the red pulp.
  • (20) In four patients who were treated with this procedure 7 months following thoracic operation and three who had cordal paralysis due to invasion of malignant tumors, in all of whom aspiration had not been noted, dysphonia disappeared completely after the silicone injection.

Corral


Definition:

  • (n.) A pen for animals; esp., an inclosure made with wagons, by emigrants in the vicinity of hostile Indians, as a place of security for horses, cattle, etc.
  • (v. t.) To surround and inclose; to coop up; to put into an inclosed space; -- primarily used with reference to securing horses and cattle in an inclosure of wagons while traversing the plains, but in the Southwestern United States now colloquially applied to the capturing, securing, or penning of anything.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The packets were removed on the 100th day of gestation, and the females were allowed to give birth in their outdoor corral.
  • (2) Photograph: Barry J Holmes for the Observer At the other end of Tulare County’s 4,800 square miles, Chris Kemper is the principal of the poorest school in California: Stone Corral Elementary.
  • (3) 3.04am BST Spurs 42-28 Heat, 4:39 remaining, 2nd quarter Rashard Lewis throws a terrible, terrible Favrian interception that Tim Duncan corrals.
  • (4) Cathal Yeats, chief inspector of the Royal Gibraltar Police, said the flotilla crossed into Gibraltarian waters before being "corralled" out again.
  • (5) Speaking ahead of a meeting this evening at which the Lib Dem deputy prime minister will seek to corral colleagues behind the proposals, Lady Williams said Lib Dems "have to vote for this policy", though she conceded it had been a "mistake" for Lib Dem MPs, including Clegg, to have signed a pre-election pledge to oppose any increase in fees.
  • (6) Gorbachev gave two examples of Putin's incipient totalitarianism: United Russia , the party he created to corral political support for the Kremlin, a creation which Gorbachev described as a bad copy of the Soviet communist party; and Putin's decision in 2004 to eliminate elections for regional governors and mayors of Moscow and St Petersburg.
  • (7) The conditioned corral preference paradigm was used to assess reinforcing effects of substance P (SP) and its N- and C-terminal fragments injected unilaterally into the region of the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM) in rats.
  • (8) The agency released an animated video depicting how a space rock measuring about 9 meters wide would be captured and corralled for study.
  • (9) Located in San Francisco , the office is the latest effort in the campaign's bid to harness Silicon Valley's talent and to corral the region's billions into its presidential re-election machine.
  • (10) Naomi Woodley (@naomiwoodley) Journos on the Abbott campaign corralled into an empty office in QLD police headquarters.
  • (11) It now seems likely that £2bn of money largely already pledged by the government for green projects will be corralled into a watered-down green fund.
  • (12) But they are not really expanding property rights," says Javier Corrales, a political science professor at Amherst College in the US.
  • (13) The case is being brought by Lois Austin, one of about 3,000 anti-globalisation demonstrators corralled by police at Oxford Circus in May 2001, the first major protest where the tactic was used.
  • (14) Factors that may have accounted for this rapid spread included common water troughs, open corrals, and inability of the dairy operator to isolate cows due to lack of space.
  • (15) If Women Together can be encouraged to break out of the corral of official party and trade union lines then, regardless of the outcome of the referendum, we have a legacy upon which to build a stronger political voice for women in Scotland .
  • (16) On the streets, campaigners were corralled by police into “ first amendment areas ”, while on the internet, a similar divide grew up in a more organic manner.
  • (17) A cure for the ailing church “would require a much deeper ecclesial comprehension than the present leadership currently exhibit … There seems to be no sagacity, serious science or spiritual substance to the curatives being offered.” Rather, he says, the church “is being slowly kettled into becoming a suburban sect, corralling its congregations, controlling its clergy and centralising its communication.
  • (18) He said it was a “surprisingly good” deal but probably the result of a friendly chat rather than “gunfight at the OK Corral”.
  • (19) Conversely, the prevalence of antibodies to C. burneti was highest (40%) among employees working in the corrals and who were exposed to dust and hides.
  • (20) Progeny of wild females collected from corrals or human bait were reared in an insectary.

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