What's the difference between funic and runic?

Funic


Definition:

  • (a.) Funicular.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Altogether 720 placental sera and 522 funic sera have been checked for the presence of antibodies to diphtheria and tetanus toxoids in the passive hemagglutination test.
  • (2) These alterations, observed in the enzymatic activity and in the rate of lipid peroxidation, which were detected in funic blood erythrocytes under conditions of hypoxia, may be responsible for some diseases during postnatal period of children ontogenesis.
  • (3) Peripheral blood neutrophil function and the content of circulating immune complexes in funic blood were examined in 35 premature neonates with low body weight, 27 neonates with grade I prematurity and in 24 normal full-term neonates (a control group) by days 1-2 and days 7-8 of life.
  • (4) In the funic blood of allergic children, antibodies against ovalbumin of the chicken egg were mostly demonstrable.
  • (5) Five patients were more remote from delivery and had successful funic reduction (manual replacement of the prolapsed cord).
  • (6) Their immune status was assessed by the level of IgA, IgG, IgM, circulating immune complexes (CIC) and specific antibodies in the serum obtained from peripheral and funic veins, as determined by enzyme immunoassay (ELISA).
  • (7) The placentas revealed villous edema, deciduitis, and funicitis.
  • (8) In the group of the radiated persons' progeny, the number of small-weight children appeared greater; a larger physiological reduction of the body weight was recorded as were later times of funic residue falling off.
  • (9) The effect of epidural anesthesia on neonatal acid-base status, before, during, and after labor, was determined by review of funic blood-gas values from 142 women with normal term pregnancies and normal fetal heart rate patterns.
  • (10) Low activity of catalase, superoxide dismutase, alterations in metabolism of glutathione as well as activation of lipid peroxidation and increase in Na+, K+-ATPase activity were found in erythrocytes of newborns funic blood under conditions of chronic hypoxia and simultaneous effects of acute and chronic hypoxia.
  • (11) Studies of the levels of serum IgA, IgG, and IgM, of B and T lymphocyte function in 20 neonates of days 7-8 of life (funic blood) and their mothers, in children aged 1,3,6,9 and 12 months made it possible to define the characteristic features of the establishment of humoral and cellular immunity during the first year of the child's life.
  • (12) It has been disclosed that the pattern of purine metabolism abnormality in funic red blood cells makes it possible to predict the course of the early period of adaptation.
  • (13) Patients who had elective cesarean section with epidural anesthesia had funic acid-base values similar to women who had general anesthesia.
  • (14) Altogether 98 premature children of different gestation age were examined for the content of T3, T4 and TTH in serum of funic and venous blood on days 3, 5-7 and 30 and part of the children on day 60 of life.
  • (15) Funic acid-base parameters were compared by type of anesthesia when stratified by mode of delivery (vaginal, cesarean section in the active phase of labor, or elective cesarean section).
  • (16) Funic reduction is proposed as a potentially beneficial initial step in the management of umbilical cord prolapse.
  • (17) Early diagnosis of the deficiency of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase was made in examining 428 samples of funic blood from 230 boys and 198 girls.

Runic


Definition:

  • (a.) Of or pertaining to a rune, to runes, or to the Norsemen; as, runic verses; runic letters; runic names; runic rhyme.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Each runic inscription we interpret raises our hopes of soon being able to read more.
  • (2) He studied them, not the way Elvis absorbed T-Bone Walker, but the way a degree candidate might research a thesis or a British art school student might pore over the runic texts of Chicago R&B records.
  • (3) The site of Harald Bluetooth’s 10th-century stronghold, it marks the foundation point of Denmark, quite literally, with two giant runic stones.
  • (4) "The thing that solved it for me was seeing these two old Norse names, Sigurd and Lavrans, and after each of them was this combination of runes which made no sense," said Nordby, who is writing his doctorate on cryptography in runic inscriptions from the Viking Age and the Scandinavian Middle Ages.

Words possibly related to "funic"

Words possibly related to "runic"