What's the difference between leese and loosen?

Leese


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To lose.
  • (v. t.) To hurt.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Yvette Cooper is the only candidate who looks like a prime minister | Richard Leese Read more Cooper said: “Clearly it is better to have a legal asylum route from the camps so as to prevent people travelling in the first place, but right now, given the scale of the humanitarian crisis, we also have to do our bit to help Europe deal with those who have fled into European democracies.
  • (2) 1.05am BST Jake Peavy Dave Leese (@dl_1009) @Busfield @LengelDavid I especially like watching a pitcher who's been declared legally blind, have a go at hitting a 90mph fastball October 26, 2013 Yes, the Sox starter is legally blind without corrective lenses.
  • (3) Leese's fear that Friday's no victory will further undermine the north unless it receives equal powers to Scotland has quickly become the consensus among experts.
  • (4) While it’s currently a Labour club, Leese points out this wasn’t always the case.
  • (5) Leese and council chief executive Sir Howard Bernstein have led a series of sometimes breathtaking property deals.
  • (6) Leese, the long-serving city council leader who has an uneasy relationship with Lloyd, has not yet officially ruled himself out of a mayoral bid, though he has never expressed particular enthusiasm for the idea.
  • (7) The difference in Manchester is that Richard [Manchester council leader Sir Richard Leese] and Howard [Bernstein] and all the other council leaders have identified rightly that transport is an integral part of creating economic growth.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Work on Crossrail in London is proceeding apace.
  • (8) He has appointed the Manchester city council leader Sir Richard Leese as deputy mayor for business and the economy, and the former immigration minister Beverley Hughes as deputy mayor for policing.
  • (9) 'Leese says he could manage all public services, which is managerialism to the nth degree' Adam Fineberg, analyst Sitting in his gleaming head office, he looks out on a huge building site where the factory once stood.
  • (10) Richard Leese, the leader of Manchester city council, will then publish work by his local government innovation taskforce setting out plans to redistribute power across England and reform public services so that they can be tailored better to meet local needs.
  • (11) Hence a sudden surge of interest in city mayors and super-powered council leaders such as Manchester’s Sir Richard Leese – or Sadiq Khan, if he can succeed Boris Johnson in London – now struggling for creative answers to an era of ever deeper cuts.
  • (12) As in any politics, you have to present people with solutions, not problems,” says Sir Richard Leese, when I ask after the meeting how he, leader of England’s most strongly Labour city, convinced the chancellor to sign up.
  • (13) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Sir Richard Leese, leader of Manchester council.
  • (14) Later, in a more relaxed age, commercial reprints and introductions to his thought appeared, but no new editions of his works: "This has been a very sensitive topic," said Daniel Leese, author of Mao Cult and an expert on the era at the University of Freiburg.
  • (15) Richard Leese will publish his Local Government Innovation Task Force report and set out plans for the radical redistribution of power across England and reform of our public services around local place and communities.
  • (16) Leese noted that unlike other collections of Mao's thought, the Little Red Book covered his later years in power – which saw the purges of the Anti-Rightist Campaign , the Great Famine and Cultural Revolution.
  • (17) The group claims 15 years of history on its website, but Leese says the original group of eight first met in 1995, making this year their 20th birthday.
  • (18) But we lack that voice at the moment to say that we also have legitimate demands and legitimate needs.” Lloyd is the narrow favourite to win the mayoralty, with betting odds at 3-1, just ahead of the leader of Manchester city council, Sir Richard Leese, who is 4-1.
  • (19) Sir Richard Leese, Labour leader of Manchester city council, complained about Balls's remarks.
  • (20) Sir Richard Leese, leader of Manchester city council, also said pulling out of the EU would be a “hammer blow for the public sector” and cause “chronic staff shortages, damaging the services that British people depend on”.

Loosen


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To make loose; to free from tightness, tension, firmness, or fixedness; to make less dense or compact; as, to loosen a string, or a knot; to loosen a rock in the earth.
  • (v. t.) To free from restraint; to set at liberty..
  • (v. t.) To remove costiveness from; to facilitate or increase the alvine discharges of.
  • (v. i.) To become loose; to become less tight, firm, or compact.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There is a gradual loosening of the adolescent's emotional dependence on her parents and a transfer of dependency ties to peers.
  • (2) The torques, although not large enough to dislodge the socket immediately, are repetitive and so may contribute to loosening.
  • (3) Femoral endosteal bone loss has been shown to be part of the natural aging process and may be a factor in femoral component loosening following total hip arthroplasty (THA).
  • (4) Seventeen of these were due to infection or loosening of the prosthesis.
  • (5) Loosening of the sutures and keratitis were the main complications in the postoperative course.
  • (6) Electric birefringence studies suggest that methylation may result in both interparticle cross-linking and some localised loosening of the DNA-protein complex complex.
  • (7) Two tibial components (2%) were believed to be mechanically loose, but no revisions for mechanical loosening were done.
  • (8) An artificial joint that articulates with full fluid film lubrication could greatly reduce wear and frictional torque and hence reduce the incidence of loosening and inflammatory tissue reaction.
  • (9) Aseptic loosening is the most common mode of failure for total knee replacements.
  • (10) The criteria of failure of pedicular instrumentation or "death" of an implant were defined as 1) screw bending, 2) screw breakage, 3) infection, 4) loosening of implants, 5) any rod or plate hardware problems, or 6) removal of hardware due to a neurologic complication.
  • (11) In the areas of disorganized collagen fibres cervical fibroblasts seemed to be activated characterized by fine granular loosening of the cytoplasma, dilated cisternae of rough endoplasmatic reticulum, vacuolized enlarged mitochondria and an increased number of cytoplasmatic vesicles close to the cell surface.
  • (12) Loosening of the tightly folded "native" structure of the two proteins following their synthesis in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate was assayed by the acquisition of protease sensitivity (pODHFR and pOCAT) or by the loss of enzyme activity (pOCAT).
  • (13) We concluded that the acetabular component of the Wagner prosthesis is prone to early loosening and that the early loosening is potentiated by a foreign-body response to debris resulting from arthroplastic wear.
  • (14) I think that is where we will see the most immediate loosening up of restrictions,” Handjani said.
  • (15) The reduction in the rate of aseptic loosening of the socket in our series, compared with the higher rates reported in similar long-term studies in which other acetabular components were used, supports the conclusion that there is enhanced longevity of acetabular fixation when a metal-backed acetabular component is used in cemented total hip arthroplasty.
  • (16) The loosening of such interactions is believed to induce conformational changes, which will alter ion transport systems necessary to the propagation of neural impulses.
  • (17) Main changes of upper compartments were showed on the bilaminar zone, including disc perforation and anterior displacement and capsular loosening.
  • (18) Significant problems included abnormal posture in the wrist, roentgenographic evidence of loosening in the finger metacarpophalangeals, extensor lag in the metacarpophalangeal of the thumb, and lack of motion in the proximal interphalangeal joint of the finger.
  • (19) China's government and media have launched a broadside against Japan's move to loosen the bonds on its powerful military, casting it as a threat to Asian security.
  • (20) However, because loosening and sinking of the prosthesis were significant, a ceramic total prosthesis was designed in 1980 to be used without cement.

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