What's the difference between dalmatian and dalmatic?
Dalmatian
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to Dalmatia.
Example Sentences:
(1) The mean concentration of urate in the serum of 80 Dalmatian Coach Hounds was approximately double that in the serum of 99 dogs of other breeds.
(2) A serological survey of the Dalmatian island of Brac (Croatia), based on a total sample of 747 subjects, shows considerable local genetic variation.
(3) An adrenal cortical carcinoma, verminous pneumonia and hepatic parasitic granulomas were found at necropsy in a 10-year-old castrated male Dalmatian.
(4) Urine uric acid values for Dalmatians reported in the literature are not likely to be comparable, because uric acid appears to be more likely to precipitate in Dalmatian urine than in the urine of other dogs and man.
(5) He had enviably thick hair and, as he opened the door to let me in, I noticed an orange kitten positioned on the floor beside a Dalmatian puppy.
(6) In respective spontaneous animal conditions of NCL, in English setters, Dalmatian dogs, and New Zealand sheep, retinal involvement is not commensurate although the retina does not seem to be completely unaffected.
(7) At that time, Dalmatians mostly studied medicine in Padua, where Ph.
(8) Bhanja virus was isolated on the Dalmatian island of Brac in 1977, the antibody rate there, determined by the HI method, being about 31%.
(9) We spent the early afternoon and evening in Hvar Town, the "St Tropez of the Dalmatian coast", first taking in Hula Hula Bar, built among rock pools, and later to noisy port venue Bar Nautica, where we were greeted with the longest line of Jagerbombs I've ever seen.
(10) These findings show that the retinal involvement in NCL of our Dalmatian dogs is identical to that of NCL-affected English setters.
(11) While discussion of Croatia as a travel destination usually focuses on the beachy delights of the Dalmatian coast, the country is also home to some of the most spectacular – and, crucially, well-protected – natural environments in Europe, with seemingly limitless opportunities for hiking, camping, climbing, caving, animal-spotting, birdwatching and generally "doing nature" without doing it in.
(12) The temporal bones from 18 deaf Dalmatian dogs were examined with the light microscope, and the cochleo-saccular degeneration process studied.
(13) "It's a biodiversity hotspot," says Marina Radic of the environmental lobby group Sunce in Split, the Dalmatian capital on the mainland and the gateway to the Adriatic islands.
(14) In eight Dalmatian dogs exogenous effects (dietary purine, xylit infusion) on plasma uric acid were examined and relationships between purine intake and excretion were established.
(15) These include griffon vultures, dalmatian pelicans, Bonelli’s eagles and the common crane.
(16) The diseases urate-urolithiasis and "bronze syndrome" associated with dalmatian urate metabolism are characterized in view of the typical pattern of the diseases and of the therapeutical and prophylactical measures to be taken.
(17) Mice from the Dalmatian region were homozygous for translocations Rb(5.15), Rb(6.12), Rb(8.17), Rb(9.13), and Rb(10.14); they were homo- or heterozygous for the translocation Rb(1.11).
(18) The fate of radioactively labelled purines was examined in the Dalmatian Coach Hound after oral and intravenous administration.
(19) Nevertheless, both in men and the Dalmatian dog, when the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is decreased, excreted ascorbic acid in relation to the amount filtered is exaggerated so that C ascorbic acid:GFR approaches unity.
(20) Histopathological studies were done in 22 deaf dogs consisting of 10 Dalmatians, 5 English setters, 2 Great Danes, 2 foxhounds, 1 shepherd, 1 bulldog and 1 Australian sheep dog.
Dalmatic
Definition:
(n.) A vestment with wide sleeves, and with two stripes, worn at Mass by deacons, and by bishops at pontifical Mass; -- imitated from a dress originally worn in Dalmatia.
(n.) A robe worn on state ocasions, as by English kings at their coronation.
Example Sentences:
(1) In Dalmation dogs urate fluxes across walls of proximal convoluted tubules resulted in either net reabsorption or net secretion, with no mean change.