What's the difference between moldable and mouldable?
Moldable
Definition:
(a.) Alt. of Mouldable
Example Sentences:
(1) On Thursday, conservative analyst Ross Douthat wrote: “A party whose leading factions often seemed incapable of budging from 1980s-era dogma suddenly caved completely.” On Friday, former top Barack Obama strategist David Axelrod tweeted : “The Day After: seems as if @GOP establishment is measuring @realDonaldTrump as a moldable vessel.
(2) This study was done to determine the relative effects of HA and DBM implanted as moldable phospholipid composites in bone defects that result in non-unions.
(3) Most of the plugs tested would meet everyday requirements for protection, but the polymeric foam plugs, treated with petroleum jelly, and moldable plastic materials were most effective in protecting both the middle ear and the ear canal skin.
(4) A new formulation is described, which offers speed and ease of forming a moldable composite stent especially for intraoral use.
(5) The organizational requirements for evolutionary moldability and for efficient information processing function are completely consistent.
(6) In the production of the moldable implants a fibrin mixture containing 1 i.u.
(7) The composite implant was moldable, easily contoured, and technically easier to use than demineralized bone alone.
(8) Shoe modification is possible using moldable plastics and metatarsal bars.
(9) We are developing a synthetic material consisting of proteins which stimulate bone repair encased within a moldable, biodegradable delivery system.
(10) Although the method of application is not critical, new products such as moldable frozen gel packs make on-the-field use simple.
(11) Sutures were placed percutaneously around the sternum and through predrilled holes in a piece of moldable splint material that had been contoured to fit a normal-shaped thorax.
(12) In the infant, this results in typical radiologic findings related to an epiphyseal ossification center which is cartilagenous and moldable and results in progressive medial wedging.
(13) Other factors considered were: amount and rate of permanent deformation offset by considerations of enhanced moldability when comparing the neoprene and urethane materials with the polyethylene foams.
(14) This material is a moldable putty which, upon polymerization, forms a rigid elastomeric material, providing a half-value layer of approximately 2.5 to 2.8 cm for a gamma-ray beam from a 60Co source.
(15) It is nonirritating to the skin, light, durable, easily moldable, relatively inexpensive, retains suspension mechanisms adequately, and allows the production of a cosmetically acceptable training limb.
(16) The ideal insert represents a combination of material to achieve both durability and moldability.
(17) The Magnum system, initially designed for coronary angioplasty (PTCA) of chronic total occlusion, consists of a balloon catheter and a solid steel 0.021 inch (0.53 mm) steerable and removable wire with a soft and moldable distal portion, tipped with a 1 mm olive.
(18) The Chondroplast prove quite moldable, easy to use, did not cause allergies or rejection.
(19) Finally, the technique described uses a moldable bone graft.
(20) For this purpose, moldable silicone rubber is used to add volume to a ready-made nostril splint.
Mouldable
Definition:
(a.) Capable of being molded or formed.
Example Sentences:
(1) The acrylic plastics polymerize at relatively low temperature, feature good mouldability, are readily sterilizable and result in no inflammatory lesions in the surrounding tissues.
(2) Amongst the various plates used, A0 3.5 plates (strong and mouldable) provided satisfactory fixation with the possibility of early physical rehabilitation (between 3 and 21 days).
(3) Three years of clinical experience have shown that, mouldable fibrin-bound HA has so far proved suitable as a bone substitute in preprosthetic as well as in plastic and reconstructive surgery.
(4) The wider use of thermoplastic structural components in modular artificial limbs would enable their general properties of low density, corrosion resistance and mouldability and more specific properties of certain thermoplastics such as shock absorption, fatigue and wear resistance to be used to the advantage of patients and manufacturers.
(5) The variety of materials used for replacement of the ossicles is proof enough that no single material can satisfy all criteria: availability, mouldability, stability and biocompatibility.
(6) Prosthesis should be clinically inert and inalterable with time, easy to sterilize, intraoperatively mouldable, and, from the aesthetic point of view, unrecognizable at touch.
(7) It seems attractive to assume that the presence of a separated annular pad, a cavum lenticuli filled with globular elements, the extreme flatness of the superficial central fibers and the studding of these central fibers with anchoring devices up to the embryonal nucleus are morphological expressions of the mouldability of the bird's eye lenses and consequently would explain their efficient accommodative mechanism including formation of a lenticonus.
(8) The trouble-free availability as well as the excellent mouldability enable the development of a principle of preparation of ossicular replacement prosthesis from homologous dentine.
(9) Histological studies in animals have shown that fibrin sealant can be employed as a resorbable, biological binding agent for fixation of initially mouldable hydroxylapatite (HA) implants.
(10) Just over a decade later, those lab explorations have led to Sugru , a mouldable, setting silicone rubber that has been compared with Blu-Tack and Sellotape in terms of its significance.
(11) The bolus material should have the same attenuation characteristics as tissue, should be easily mouldable and sufficiently solid for multiple applications.