(1) Before this move, the emergency coordinator for polio eradication in Pakistan, Elias Durry, explained, Pakistan had “informally been labelled” as an “exporter of polio” when strains of the virus originating from the country were found in China, Syria, Egypt, Israel and Palestine.
(2) Elias Durry, the WHO’s senior coordinator for polio eradication in Pakistan, confirmed the drop in cases, saying intensive vaccination efforts were paying off.
(3) You’ll prise my durry out of my cold, dead, cancerous fingers – and so on and so forth.
(4) Durry said the main reason for the fall in cases was better access to families in previously unvaccinated areas, where troops have been advancing.
(5) For services to the community in Drumoak and Durris, Aberdeenshire.
(6) There needs to be no more import-export of polio virus for at least six months,” Durry said.
Murry
Definition:
(n.) See Muraena.
Example Sentences:
(1) An untiring advocate of the joys and merits of his adopted home county, Bradbury figured Norfolk as a place of writing parsons, farmer-writers and sensitive poets: John Skelton, Rider Haggard, John Middleton Murry, William Cowper, George MacBeth, George Szirtes.
(2) Activity was retained when an oxygen function of the 5'-phosphoryl was replaced by sulfur (Murry & Atkinson, 1968) or by nitrogen (phosphoramidates).
(3) He barks that as well: in fact, he barks everything, speaking out of the side of his mouth, a legacy of the deafness in his right ear that allegedly resulted from the umpteen childhood beatings dealt out by his appalling father, Murry , who, he says, "brutalised and terrorised" his children.
(4) Hyalomma excavatum Koch, Rhipicephalus sanguineus Latreille, Ornithodoros tholozani (Laboulbene and Megnin), and O. moubata (Murry) were fed on rabbits immunized with ovalbumin; Argas persicus (Oken) was fed on chickens immunized with cytochrome 'C.'
(5) Nyima Murry, 19, a first-year history of art student and one of the strikers, says: “I’ve struggled massively with the cost of rent.
(6) After correction for cuticle absorption, the psychophysical spectral sensitivity function was compared with previously reported spectral sensitivity functions obtained either from electrophysiologic (Millecchia, Bradbury, and Mauro, 1966; Nolte and Brown, 1970) or from microspectrophotometric (Murry, 1966) recordings from single, isolated ventral eye photoreceptor cells.