(1) The etiologic factor in 44% of cases was oranges and in 56% persimmons (Kakis).
(2) The leaves of the persimmon Diospyros kaki, have been traditionally used for treatment of hypertensive diseases in Japan.
(3) A pulp homogenate and also pulp slices prepared from developing kaki (Diospyros kaki) fruit could catalyze these hitherto unknown isomerizations.
(4) Japanese workers have described the antihaemorrhagic effect of persimmon tannin from Diospyros kaki.
(5) The odd man out was Rudisha's great rival Abubaker Kaki, who has to settle for a season's best.
Saki
Definition:
(n.) Any one of several species of South American monkeys of the genus Pithecia. They have large ears, and a long hairy tail which is not prehensile.
(n.) The alcoholic drink of Japan. It is made from rice.
Example Sentences:
(1) Saki's mother was killed by a cow when he was a child.
(2) It's the gift of an exceptional writer to make the reader feel the way I feel about Saki: that maybe only I really understand him.
(3) Greece Aligned to Eurovision's Balkan Bloc Not only is Saki Rouvas's This is Our Night marvellously, teeth-grindingly, competition-winningly vapid, but more importantly, Greece is the epicentre of the many-tentacled Balkan Bloc.
(4) Hiroyuki Saotome Executive chef of Saki, London "The [Michelin] selection is skewed toward more contemporary and creative Japanese restaurants [more appealing to non-Japanese customers] with a wide selection of wine.
(5) Outside Byzantium Café, Saki, who is 72 and remembers the declaration of Cypriot independence ("You British knew what was going to happen"), is relatively sanguine.
(6) Saki (Hector Hugh Munro, 1870-1916) was raised by his strict, dour aunts and grandmother, and was gay but closeted all his life – for good reason, since homosexual acts between men were still illegal.
(7) A multichromosomal distribution of rDNA was demonstrated in the tree shrew, lemur, saki, and marmoset.
(8) The smaller-bodied atelids (Callicebus, Aotus) may use insects or leaves opportunistically, but pitheciins (saki-uakaris) specialize on seeds as their major protein source.
(9) Saki, a big-hearted raconteur who runs Byzantium café, told me that you could nuke the whole of Europe and the two things that would survive would be Greeks and cockroaches.
(10) In vitro precipitation of haemoglobin Saki upon heat or in the presence of chemicals is compared to the stability of haemoglobin A and haemoglobin S.
(11) It has the advantage over a recently published PCR technique (R. Higuchi, B. Krummel, and R. Saki (1988) Nucleic Acids Res.
(12) Conservative therapy included electrophoresis of residues of the Saki Lake therapeutic mud, followed by ultrasonic therapy.
(13) What's changed, though, is the level of hardship for Greek people, which ricochets back to their family in London, despite the fact that, as Saki says, "the Greeks are very proud, if they're hungry, they won't tell you about it".
(14) Evolutionary stages in sexual dichromatism in sakis and other primates are noted.
(15) He grew up, a homosexual with paedophile instincts, in the hot-house cultural climate that nurtured many late-Victorian literary men, notably Oscar Wilde and the Aubrey Beardsley of The Yellow Book , as well as Edwardians such as HH Munro ("Saki") and Max Beerbohm .
(16) Hybridization in stiu was used to identify the chromosomes that carry rDNA in representative lower primates, including the baboons, Papio cynocephalus and Papio hamadryas; the colobus monkey, Colobus polykomos; the tree shrew, Tupaia glis; the lemur, Lemur fulvis; the saki, Pithecia pithecia; the marmoset, Saguinus nigricollis, and the spider monkey, Ateles geoffroyi.
(17) Recognized species of sakis, South American monkeys of genus Pithecia (Cebidae), are P. hirsuta Spix, P. monachus E. Geoffroy, P. albicans Gray, P. pithecia Linnaeus.
(18) "President Bush said he understood us," said her mother, Sakie Yokota.
(19) Saki says things are also hard for the middle-aged – his nephews who run a frozen food business "are suffering because people are just buying what they need to stay alive."
(20) Two methods were used to determine fruit hardness during a field study of two sympatric primates, the black spider monkey (Ateles paniscus) and the bearded saki monkey (Chiropotes satanas) in Surinam.