(1) The considerably enlarged adrenals were gyral, goffered and their cortex consisted of cells of the fetal zone.
(2) The £43,000 ReWalk suit, designed by the Israeli entrepreneur Amit Goffer, enables people with lower-limb paralysis to stand, walk and climb stairs through motion sensors and an onboard computer system.
Golfer
Definition:
(n.) One who plays golf.
Example Sentences:
(1) The fitting element to a Cabrera victory would have been thus: the final round of the 77th Masters fell on the 90th birthday of Roberto De Vicenzo, the great Argentine golfer who missed out on an Augusta play-off by virtue of signing for the wrong score.
(2) Bauer Media Total average circulation per issue: 2,814,745, down 5.8% year on year Star performers: Classic Cars up 5.2%, Kerrang up 1.8% (both year on year) Disappointments: Zoo down 27.9%, FHM down 18.1%, Today's Golfer down 12.4% (all year on year) They say: "Bauer Media's portfolio of influential brands continue to deliver compelling content that connects and engages with audiences wherever they are," said the Bauer Media chief executive, Paul Keenan.
(3) The more severely affected golfers also did not differ significantly from the mildly affected ones, except on the subjective report of anxiety.
(4) When compared with unaffected golfers, afflicted golfers were significantly older and had more cumulative years of golfing.
(5) He has transformed the image of Burberry from a fusty, aging brand worn by middle-aged golfers or ripped off for the football terraces into a modern global empire.
(6) SamCam: He's not the plebby, curly-haired golfer, is he?
(7) Golfers, in comparison, peak at about 31 years of age, although recent data suggest movement toward younger ages.
(8) Barry McGuigan, the former world featherweight champion who got to know him well on the golf courses of Kent, described him as "a very fine golfer and a very, very lovely human being".
(9) It’s bizarre to associate golf with being overweight or lazy, because golf is a form of exercise, and good golfers are incredibly skilled.
(10) These data support the argument that golfers' cramp is not an anxiety disorder or a neurosis.
(11) Most golfers will see their handicaps increase after total joint arthroplasty, although this does not appear to be a function of drive length.
(12) A concomitant conclusion is that it should be difficult for the golfer to actually identify shaft flexibility.
(13) In 1999, the pilots of a Learjet carrying professional golfer Payne Stewart from Orlando, Florida, to Texas became unresponsive.
(14) MANOVA (count and duration), with univariate follow-up, revealed significant differences in gaze between five low (LH, 0-8) and seven higher handicap golfers (HH, 10-16).
(15) The other four – the aerobics class, warehouse workers in De Piero's constituency, a bingo club of mostly former miners in Derbyshire, and golfers in Yorkshire – were "iconic" groups.
(16) By contrast, keen golfer Prince Andrew spent £14,692 on a charter flight from Farnborough to Scotland, to visit the Royal Highland Fusiliers, and also take in the Open Championship at Muirfield.
(17) The chief operating officer of the international liquor division, Satoru "Tiger" Abe – senior executives in Japan tend to be named after golfers – insisted that the increasing consumption of highballs made anti-social drinking less likely, because the whisky was heavily diluted and usually accompanied by food.
(18) This study compares the electromyographic firing patterns of normal shoulder musculature in men and women professional golfers.
(19) Golfers call it "taking the gas"; tennis players call it "the elbow".
(20) What a terrible indictment of a golfer who was once judged unbeatable on a Sunday afternoon.