What's the difference between jewess and judaica?

Jewess


Definition:

  • (fem.) A Hebrew woman.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Multiple births were studied in a sample of orthodox Jewesses for whom an estimate could be made of the day of ovulation and the earliest possible day of conception.
  • (2) Because of the known low incidence rate of cervical cancer in Jewish women, less than appropriate attention has been focused on this type of malignancy in Jewesses.
  • (3) It used the hashtag #Hitlerwasright and called her a “communist Jewess”.
  • (4) she would appear to be a rather typical, emotional, introspective and somewhat intellectual Viennese Jewess.” Elsewhere, her file records an MI5 officer’s observation that “like so many leftwing intellectuals of her generation, she displayed an unhealthy interest in psychology and psychiatry”.
  • (5) The subdivision of all women according to their demographic backgrounds afforded a comparison of the findings in Israeli-born Jewesses with those of foreign-born Jewesses and non-Jewish females living in the same geographic area of the Western Galilee district of Israel.

Judaica


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Parietaria judaica (Pellitory-of-the-Wall) is native to the U.K., flowering from June to September, but is not usually considered to be of any clinical importance by U.K. allergists.
  • (2) The relative allergenicities of Parietaria judaica and Parietaria officinalis have been studied by in vivo and in vitro techniques and a strong resemblance has been shown, with common allergenic polypeptides, though they differ in a group of anodic proteins.
  • (3) Cross-reactivity between the different components in Parietaria judaica pollen extract has been investigated by polyclonal as well as monoclonal antibodies before and after chemical deglycosylation obtained by trifluoromethanesulphonic acid (TFMS) treatment of the extract.
  • (4) The protein content was determined to 38% and 23% for P. judaica and P. officinalis respectively, while the carbohydrate content was 25% in both weed preparations.
  • (5) When the reactivity of Parietaria judaica extract was tested before and after sugar removal, against specific IgE from a pool of patient sera, no differences could be demonstrated, thus indicating that carbohydrates are not strongly involved in the binding of Parietaria judaica-specific IgE.
  • (6) Parietaria judaica pollen allergens, fractionated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, were identified using 52 sera collected in Australia and Sicily from P. judaica pollen-allergic patients.
  • (7) Size-exclusion and ion-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography were used to monitor the presence of polymeric aggregates and of families of allergens of similar isoelectric point in Parietaria judaica pollen extracts.
  • (8) Twelve patients with asthma sensitized to Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus and Parietaria judaica were studied.
  • (9) IgE-binding structures, homologous to the P. judaica main allergenic polypeptide (Pj10), were found in the other species by immunodetection.
  • (10) High-performance ion-exchange chromatography and immunoaffinity chromatography suggest that Par jI, the principal allergenic component of Parietaria judaica pollen, is a very unstable molecule, which tends to fragment in solution.
  • (11) Thus, this method can also be used for the estimation of the allergenic activity of P. judaica pollen extracts.
  • (12) Pollinex induced larger increases in P. judaica-specific IgG antibody than did the control product.
  • (13) A preparative-scale enrichment of the allergenic components of the pollen extract of Parietaria judaica, which grow all over the Mediterranean area, has been obtained by high-performance liquid chromatography, operating in the ion-exchange mode at pH 7 with a curvilinear ionic-strength gradient.
  • (14) The aqueous extract of inflorescences of Parietaria judaica contains an allergen homologous to the major pollen allergen Par o I (14 kD), as shown by radio-allergosorbent test (RAST) inhibition and immunoblot analysis.
  • (15) A two-step purification procedure of Par j I from the whole Parietaria judaica pollen extract is described.
  • (16) Par j I showed a specific allergenic activity about 10-fold higher than that of the whole extract and was demonstrated to be the major allergen of Parietaria judaica as assessed in 25 sensitive human sera.
  • (17) The aim of this study was to establish whether allergenic proteins are able to reach the bloodstream by penetrating through the nasal mucosa when aqueous P. judaica extract was administered into the nostrils of normal rabbits.
  • (18) Eleven bakers and 4 pastry cooks with hypersensitivity to wheat flour underwent skin tests to flours (wheat, barley, rye, oats), pollens (wheat, barley, rye, oats, grasses), mites (dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, dermatophagoides farinae), molds (alternaria, aspergillus) and weeds (parietaria judaica).
  • (19) Although patients' IgE reaction patterns to P. judaica allergens were heterogeneous, the degree of heterogeneity was much less than that observed with house dust mite and other pollen extracts studied by electrophoretic transfer analysis.
  • (20) P. judaica-specific IgG levels were significantly higher in patients following treatment with Pollinex.

Words possibly related to "jewess"

Words possibly related to "judaica"