What's the difference between elimate and elixate?
Elimate
Definition:
(v. t.) To render smooth; to polish.
Example Sentences:
(1) This procedure elimates artifacts due to incomplete solubilization of ribosomal proteins, which is common for the transfer from the first- to second-dimension gel.
(2) They have come following media reports of a police training exercise, before the operation to remove Amona, at the Tzeāelim army base in the Negev desert.
(3) The two most effective steps to reduce the prevalence of blindness in the Elim district further are to provide aphakia glasses to all aphakic patients and to improve the accessibility of the Eye Department's surgical services.
(4) The relative growth inhibition caused by 12 tetracyclines in a susceptible strain of Staphylococcus aureus (111-elim) and in the same strain carrying a resistance-plasmid (111) showed entirely different patterns.
(5) The pH below 6.2 seemed to lose the ability to elute the enterotoxin from ion exchanger but enough to elimate non-specific extra proteins.
(6) It seems that prevalence differences are less dependent upon the telluric elimate than upon other factors, which remain to find.
(7) application, absorption and elimation were delayed.
(8) The liver mitochondria from rats injected with oil and MC showed inhibition of the metabolic state 3 respiratory rate after Chance, Preincubation with carnitine elimated this inhibition.
(9) In view of the progress of modern medicine, it is concluded that in principle TB and successful pregnancy are compatible, and abortion is advisable only in exceptional cases, when TB actually is a complication of another disease, for the following reasons: serious cases of TB develop and worsen irrespective of abortion; actually in several cases a worsening was observed after abortion; with proper treatment, it is possible to bring the pregnancy to term without harm to the mother; when the fetus is sufficiently developed, pregnancy can be interrupted before its physiological term, if necessary; generally, abortion may present an even greater risk than continued pregnancy; and the risk of reactivation of stabilized TB during pregnancy may be elimated by appropriate preventive treatment.
(10) Dependence upon depuration of clams to elimate health hazards of virus etiology involved a risk factor not measureable in the study.
(11) The indocyanine green elimation was longer at the end of the 6th cycle without any pathological worth from the clinical point of view being proved.
(12) The decrease in the contraction capacity of the tensor must result in loosening of the drum membrane tension, impairement of the muscle activity coordination, decreased ability for elimation of the auditory ossicle fluctuation.
(13) This study used chemical-based temperature indicators to monitor the cold-chain constantly in the Elim Hospital health ward of Gazankulu.
(14) However, there was no significant difference in AUC, Cmax or K(elim) between fasting and nonfasting conditions.
(15) The indocyanine green elimation was longer at the end of the 6th cycle without any pathological worth from clinical point of view being proved.
(16) At a fixed external drug concentration, 111 accumulated less tetracycline and oxytetracycline than 111-elim, whereas comparison at their respective K(i) values showed accumulation to be significantly higher for 111 than for 111-elim.
(17) Canals were graded on the criteria of shape, smoothness, elimation of morphologic aberrations, and apical preparations.
(18) These findings suggest that immunoregulatory T cells may have a biologically significant effect in a narrow zone in which the normal host immune response is insufficient but still potentially capable of providing some additional degree of protection if suppressor cells are elimated.
(19) A resistant mutant of strain 111-elim showed a third pattern of relative growth inhibition, and another distinct pattern was observed in a veterinary wild strain of S. aureus.
(20) Seroprevalence was used to evaluate the vaccination programme in the Elim health ward of Gazankulu.
Elixate
Definition:
(v. t.) To boil; to seethe; hence, to extract by boiling or seething.
Example Sentences:
(1) In SDS-treated thylakoids, both trypsin and V8 degraded cytochrome f. The inferred topography of cytochrome f., with the COOH-terminus on the stromal (n) side, one membrane-spanning alpha-elix near the COOH-terminus, and most of the Cyt f mass on the lumen (p) side, is consistent with that previously inferred by others.
(2) A randomized blinded study of drug vs nondrug capsule or nondrug elixer (designated placebo) was performed at the end of 4 weeks to eliminate possible effects of investigator bias or spontaneous regression of the disease.