What's the difference between danish and vanish?

Danish


Definition:

  • (a.) Belonging to the Danes, or to their language or country.
  • (n.) The language of the Danes.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In the experiments to be reported here, computer-averaged EMG data were obtained from PCA of native speakers of American English, Japanese, and Danish who uttered test words embedded in frame sentences.
  • (2) These high Danish rates seem to reflect the true prevalence and incidence in the less serious types of progressive muscular dystrophy, probably because the Danish health system with free medical care and easy access to specialized hospital departments makes it possible to identify all cases of progressive muscular dystrophy.
  • (3) But when in mid-October two of the artists received death threats, the menaces were widely reported and rekindled debate, prompting vicious, anti-Muslim comments on Danish talk shows.
  • (4) The authors have carried out an analysis of the mortality among Danish patients with tuberculosis whose condition was diagnosed between 1925 and 1954 in order to obtain a picture of the trend of tuberculosis mortality over a period during which a dramatic improvement in the prognosis of the disease has taken place.
  • (5) A parent who took his anti-Page 3 campaign to Legoland and Wapping is claiming victory after the Danish toymaker announced the end of its two-year partnership with the Sun.
  • (6) Although approximately 24,000 adolescents were questioned, the investigations together provide an uncertain picture of the habits as these are not representative for Danish adolescents.
  • (7) Therefore, this study evaluates the validity of zygosity diagnosis based on examination of placental membranes, and at the same time evaluates Weinberg's differential rule in a Danish consecutive twin series.
  • (8) Russia has stepped up its battle against parmesan cheese, Danish bacon and other European delicacies, announcing it plans to incinerate contraband shipments on the border as soon as they are discovered.
  • (9) The data were combined with the profiles previously observed in the Danish population, in order to study the variation in RFLP haplotype distribution among European populations.
  • (10) For both children and adults, the arsenic values were similar to those in a limited Danish reference population.
  • (11) The occurrence of blindness was evaluated in a population-based group of Danish patients with insulin-treated diabetes diagnosed before the age of 30 years (N = 727), identified by means of insulin prescriptions.
  • (12) The American DRG system (diagnosis-related group system) is compared in this study with a Danish clinical economical analysis instrument which has been developed for assessment of quality at hospital departmental level.
  • (13) The Guardian recently revealed that the Danish government had been forced, on the eve of the Copenhagen summit , to rush through an emergency law making it impossible for criminal gangs to reclaim huge amounts of VAT on fraudulent trades they were making on Europe's various carbon exchanges.
  • (14) Vestager, a member of the Social Liberal party, was appointed competition commissioner in 2014 after a stellar career in Danish politics, a world of minority governments, fragile coalitions, consensus and compromise.
  • (15) An age-stratified control group (n = 614) was drawn at random from the female population in the study area by means of the Danish Central Population Register.
  • (16) Adner was speaking of the boutique, Danish, high-end maker of audio and video products .
  • (17) The attacks were in different continents and on people of different faiths and of none, but in the North Carolina university town of Chapel Hill and the Danish capital, Copenhagen, it was freedom itself that was the intended target.
  • (18) Biological monitoring of workers exposed to trichloroethylene as current health supervision has been employed in Danish factories since 1947 as the metabolite trichloroacetic acid in the urine provides an indication of the degree of exposure during the preceding week.
  • (19) However, at the time, he was furious that the Danish text which the US had received advance information about, had been leaked to the Guardian .
  • (20) All 331 individuals were unrelated Caucasians of Danish ancestry.

Vanish


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To pass from a visible to an invisible state; to go out of sight; to disappear; to fade; as, vapor vanishes from the sight by being dissipated; a ship vanishes from the sight of spectators on land.
  • (v. i.) To be annihilated or lost; to pass away.
  • (n.) The brief terminal part of vowel or vocal element, differing more or less in quality from the main part; as, a as in ale ordinarily ends with a vanish of i as in ill, o as in old with a vanish of oo as in foot.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In goldfish intestine (perfused unstripped segments and mucosal strips) the serosal addition of ouabain (10(-4) M) resulted in a vanishment of the transepithelial potential difference and in a continuous increase in transepithelial resistance.
  • (2) Nevertheless, Richard Bacon MP, a member of the Public Accounts Committee, who has tirelessly tracked failings in NHS IT, said last night: "I think the chances that Lorenzo will be turned into a credible and popular product are vanishingly small.
  • (3) During the latest phase the periequatorial material is vanishing, the hyaloid capillaries disappear, the density of the posterior granular substance decreases.
  • (4) Peak pressures measured with the RP probe decreased to congruent with50 mm Hg and radial pressure asymmetry vanished.
  • (5) My scepticism has not vanished overnight and I cannot help but still be haunted by certain fears.
  • (6) In the case of 5-iminodaunomycin, a less cardiotoxic analogue, three-exponential decay is never observed and a fast-decaying component, pi approximately 0.2 ns, is already present at low r and vanishes for r greater than 0.5.
  • (7) Only 4 women had side-effects during the first weeks of treatment, and these vanished despite continued cabergoline administration at the same or reduced, but still effective, doses.
  • (8) The concept of the vanishing optotype chart offers alternative test targets, while utilizing the technique of preferential looking.
  • (9) And this isn’t a thrill confined to some mythical vanished golden age.
  • (10) He also thought autism was “vanishingly rare”, and affected only children – “he didn’t even consider the existence of autistic adults”.
  • (11) Does this count as campaigning?” “When was the last time you flipped a steak?” “What does it feel like to be in Iowa?” “Can you bring the reporters some meat?” “Are you running, Hillary,” one reporter shouted, finally, “from us?” Then Bill and Hillary disappeared around the corner; three quarters of the media scrum vanished, deflated.
  • (12) Intermediate-sized filaments which had been clearly shown in aged transparent normal cortices, virtually vanished in the opacified nuclei in contrast to microfilaments.
  • (13) The cuts affect a wide spectrum of projects: youth offending teams will shrink, probation staff numbers will dwindle, refugee advice centres will halve in size, Sure Start services will disappear, domestic violence centres will have to restrict the number of people they can help, HIV-prevention schemes will end, lollipop wardens will no longer be funded, help for women with postnatal depression will vanish, a work scheme for people who are registered blind will be wound down, day centres for street drinkers will close their doors, theatres will get less money, debt advice services will have fewer people available to help, fire stations will shut.
  • (14) A total vanishing of cargilage and a partial vanishing of bone, resulting from the lysis of their own fundamental substance.
  • (15) Leyland’s account had a mere 182 followers by the time it suddenly vanished.
  • (16) From the injection level to the other levels, the proximity effect rapidly vanishes while the modulus effect does not disappear until grounded level is reached.
  • (17) Intracellular lipids and cell alterations vanish more readily than extracellular lipids and alterations of connective and matrical tissues.
  • (18) We report 17 cases of a vanishing fetus in a multiple gestation of greater than twins.
  • (19) Reduction in the amount of carbohydrate material in the epithelial cells of the mid-gut is associated with change in intracellular localization (by vanishing from definite sites, not by migration).
  • (20) They are Edwardian reconstructions of earlier (mainly goldsmiths’) signs, reappropriated by early 20th-century banks, though the signs of the black eagle and the black horse, which became the logos for Barclays and Lloyd’s, have vanished.