What's the difference between gue and guze?

Gue


Definition:

  • (n.) A sharper; a rogue.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) To identify possible secretory determinants of impaired hyperadherence and stimulated migration of neonatal granulocytes (NGs), we performed correlative studies of: (a) specific granule content and exocytosis, (b) secretago-gue-mediated upregulation of f-met-leu-phe (fMLP) receptors, (c) the chemotactic induction of the adhesive glycoproteins Mac-1 alpha (complement receptor 3) and beta, and (d) morphometric assessments of specific (peroxidase negative) granule depletion following chemotactic stimulation.
  • (2) DMPP-elicited positive chronotropy was reduced by beta-receptor antagonists, hexamethonium, guanethidine (GuE), and tetrodotoxin.
  • (3) In preparations of the embryonic thorax in which the innervated heart was separated from brain and adrenal influences, DMPP elicited a GuE-sensitive cardioacceleration.

Guze


Definition:

  • (n.) A roundlet of tincture sanguine, which is blazoned without mention of the tincture.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) All groups completed a version of the Perley and Guze diagnostic criteria for Briquet's syndrome.
  • (2) In women, the diagnosis of somatization disorder based on DSM-III criteria was highly concordant with the diagnosis of Briquet's syndrome based on Guze's original criteria.
  • (3) We also hypothesize that the impressionistic responses are indicative of primitive dissociative processes and hysteria in psychopathic subjects, and that their presence provides construct validity for the work of Guze (1976) and others who suggested an underlying histrionic dimension to psychopathy.
  • (4) 1973; van Praag 1982a) and completed (Guze and Robins 1970; Miles 1977) suicide.
  • (5) This conclusion is strongly supported by the demonstration of an increased prevalence of mental disorders in the spouses' first-degree relatives (Slater and Woodside 1951; Guze et al.
  • (6) The authors have reviewed research conducted since then and discuss it in terms of the Robins & Guze (1970) criteria.
  • (7) The authors compare the syndrome of hysteria, defined as or indicated by a specified response to a 55-item symptom checklist previously used by Guze and other researchers, with the definition of hysterical personality in the second edition of APA's Diagnostic and statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-II).
  • (8) Sixty-three non-agitated depressed out-patients were selected according to the Feighner-Robins-Guze criteria for primary depressions for a double-blind, between-patient randomized study for an 8 week duration.
  • (9) It represents an attempt to describe a syndrome of 'hysteria', the term initially applied to this polysymptomatic disorder by Guze and his colleagues.
  • (10) When 20 control subjects and 10 hysterical personalities (DSM-II) were given the Perley-Guze test, the results showed a close correlation between positive scores on the symptom checklist and the DMS-II diagnosis.
  • (11) This paper reviews the evidence that surrounds this controversy and employs the guidelines for validating a diagnosis established by Robins and Guze (1970) as the framework for the review.

Words possibly related to "gue"

Words possibly related to "guze"