(n.) A person infected with a filthy or pestilential disease; a leper.
Example Sentences:
(1) The method used was the Lazare-Klerman-Armor personality test.
(2) Two personnages have to be considered: Lazare-Zola and Pauline-Zola.
(3) Prof. Dr. Lazar-Laza Nenadović specialist in obstetrics and gynaecology (Modos, 1870--Beograd, 1939), the founder of advanced physical medicine and balneo-climatology in Serbia.
(4) In the second study, 64 undergraduate subjects (30 males and 34 females) completed the DMI and the Lazare-Klerman Trait Scale (Lazare, Klerman & Armor, 1966, 1970).
(5) If the bill goes through it will be forbidden to use symbols of totalitarian regimes such as national socialism or communism,” said Janos Lazar, Orban’s chief of staff.
(6) The instruments used were the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ), the Lazare-Klerman-Armor Trait Scale (LKAS), the Narcissistic Personality Inventory (NPI) and the Own Memories of Child-Rearing Experiences (EMBU).
(7) Liverpool have announced the signing of the Serbia winger Lazar Markovic from Benfica, who released a statement confirming they had sold their 50% stake in the player for €12.5m (£10m).
(8) I’m excited about working with Adam and helping him to progress even further.” Rodgers is also pursuing Benfica’s £25m-rated Lazar Markovic and Lille’s Belgium international striker Divock Origi as he looks to bolster Liverpool’s options ahead of their return to the Champions League next season.
(9) This paper critically examines the healthy dimension of Lazare's continuum of personality pathologies exhibiting hysterical traits.
(10) Previous research (Bailey, Lazar, & Edinger, 1977) has indicated the presence of Breadth and Depth factors on the Similarities subscale of the WAIS.
(11) Our strategy is to work with the community,” says Lazare Eloundou Assomo, chief of Unesco’s Africa section, in Bamako.
(12) For Lazare we must analyse the thymic alternances: the expansivity and the phobic and obsessionnel symptoms.
(13) The epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor-associated protein tyrosine kinase activity has been suggested to play important roles in the EGF-enhanced, clathrin-coated pit-mediated receptor internalization (W. S. Chen, C. S. Lazar, M. Peonie, R. Y. Tsien, G. N. Gill, and M. G. Rosenfeld, 1987, Nature 328, 820-823) but the kinase substrate important for this process has not been identified.
(14) Lazar Markovic to join Fenerbahce on loan – but Liverpool want him back Read more Chelsea have had three offers for the 21-year-old turned down so far and are expected to return with a bid totalling £40m before Tuesday’s transfer deadline.
(15) Rodgers is keen to strengthen his attacking options with the Belgium international Divock Origi and Benfica’s £25m-rated Serbian Lazar Markovic and reinforce his defence with the Southampton centre-half Dejan Lovren and the Chelsea left-back Ryan Bertrand.
(16) Rodgers is also pursuing Benfica’s £25m-rated Lazar Markovic and Lille’s Belgium striker Divock Origi as he looks to bolster Liverpool’s options for their return to the Champions League next season.
(17) The £400m museum will feature paintings and sculptures from 13 French cultural institutions, including Leonardo da Vinci’s Portrait of an Unknown Woman, Claude Monet’s Saint Lazare Station and Andy Warhol’s Big Electric Chair as well as ancient statues, vases and masks from across Asia and Africa.
(18) He is so gifted and his ability to get out of tight situations, his view of the game, is magical.” Angry Coutinho and the maturing Raheem Sterling were in devastating form ahead of the Premier League opener against Southampton and Liverpool’s creative threat will be supplemented this season by Lazar Markovic and Adam Lallana, the two new signings missing here through injury.
(19) The Lazar Ultra-M chloride-specific microelectrode was evaluated in a series of experiments designed to assess its suitability for the routine determination of human sweat chloride concentrations.
(20) In 2011, Google increased its workforce in France by half and invested heavily in a new Paris head office near the Saint-Lazare train station amid public anger about its tax payments.
Leprosy
Definition:
(n.) A cutaneous disease which first appears as blebs or as reddish, shining, slightly prominent spots, with spreading edges. These are often followed by an eruption of dark or yellowish prominent nodules, frequently producing great deformity. In one variety of the disease, anaesthesia of the skin is a prominent symptom. In addition there may be wasting of the muscles, falling out of the hair and nails, and distortion of the hands and feet with destruction of the bones and joints. It is incurable, and is probably contagious.
Example Sentences:
(1) The differential diagnosis is more complex in Hawaii due to the presence of granulomatous diseases such as tuberculosis and leprosy.
(2) Leprosy is an uncommon disease in Saudi population.
(3) Mononuclear phagocytic cells from patients with either principal form of leprosy functioned similarly to normal monocytes in phagocytosis while their fungicidal activity for C. pseudotropicalis was statistically significantly altered and was more evident in the lepromatous than in the tuberculoid type.
(4) Serum levels of vitamins A and E, zinc and iron were determined in healthy control subjects and lepromatous leprosy patients belonging to an eastern state of India.
(5) A rare coincidence of cutaneous Rhinosporidiosis and Lepromatous leprosy is reported.
(6) In order to study the polyspecificities of human autoantibodies expressed during infection with Mycobacterium leprae we prepared human monoclonal antibodies derived from the fusion of peripheral blood lymphocytes of a patient with lepromatous leprosy to the human lymphoblastoid line GM 4672.
(7) The present report is a continuation of our earlier studies on the complex interaction between undernutrition and leprosy.
(8) It is known that the impairment of cell-mediated immunity (CM) exists in lepromatous leprosy patients.
(9) Age specific prevalence rates of leprosy after examining more than 80% of population from these colonies are compared with data derived from normal slums situated elsewhere in the city.
(10) The possible epidemiological significance of these findings for the transmission of leprosy in man is discussed.
(11) Consistently higher antigen positivity rates for the 35-, 12-, and 30- to 40-kDa components of M. leprae were observed in lepromatous leprosy patients than in tuberculoid leprosy patients.
(12) The results suggest that macrophages from patients with either tuberculoid or lepromatous leprosy are not by themselves capable of lysing live M. leprae.
(13) In 83 per cent of cases the nephrotic syndrome was due to minimal change disease, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis, membranous usually secondary to tuberculosis or leprosy, was present in only 34 patients.
(14) Histopathologically, the lesions display caseating and noncaseating dermal granulomas that mimic those seen in tuberculosis, tuberculoid leprosy, sarcoidosis, and other diseases.
(15) Leprosy is one of the leading causes of corneal hyposensitivity.
(16) The presence of high anti-EBV antibody titers in lepromatous leprosy suggests that cell-mediated immunity is a significant factor in host response to EBV infection.
(17) Overall in the contacts, 71.7% were Mitsuda positive and 93.6% showed seropositivity, without regard to their age, sex, or leprosy type of their index case.
(18) In the nine index leprosy cases the pattern of responsiveness to the purified antigens paralleled that to whole sonicates from M. leprae and BCG.
(19) When incidence and prevalence of leprosy are low, testing with these antigens would not be cost effective, unless applied to high risk individuals.
(20) The protocol was devised by first evaluating a range of kits in London using a battery of African and non-African sera and then field testing 1455 sera in Malaŵi, which included 184 sera from leprosy patients and 60 sera from syphilis patients to check for cross-reactivity.