(n. pl.) A kind of small pinchers with long jaws, -- used for bending or cutting metal rods or wire, for handling small objects such as the parts of a watch, etc.
Example Sentences:
(1) Bamu also beat him, taking a pair of pliers and wrenching his ear.
(2) A cyclical load of 500 N was applied to the handles of the pliers, while a 0.9 mm (0.036 inch) round, stainless steel wire was held between the tips of the beaks.
(3) Orthodontists sterilized their instruments 66% of the time and pliers 49% of the time.
(4) In addition, transcutaneous adjustments of the spring now can be made without an incision using clasp-adjusting dental pliers.
(5) The major changes represented are greater use of protective barrier wear by doctor and staff members; increased heat sterilization methods for instruments, pliers, and handpieces; and increased disinfection of alginate impressions.
(6) He says they were removed with pliers while he was being questioned about his associates in Pakistan, the July 2005 terrorist attacks in London, and an alleged plot against the United States.
(7) A plier passed within an Amplatz jacket (previously introduced through the anus) assists the laparoscopic ureterosigmoidostomy "in elephant trunk" which is performed by sero-muscle suture using 3-zero reabsorbable single-strand material.
(8) The tractor driver told of regular interrogations, of forced confessions (for crimes he never knew he had committed); he spoke of knives and other people's severed fingers, of pliers and ropes and wires, of boiling water, cigarette burns and finger nails extracted – and worse: electric drills.
(9) A polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) solution is applied to one side of the film forming a flat disc when frozen with a pair of pliers precooled in liquid nitrogen.
(10) In the present study this technique was used to determine the hardening effect of ion implantation on the beaks of stainless steel orthodontic pliers.
(11) There were only three techniques described that do not require drilling a hole, cutting a notch or slot, clamping with claws or jaws, prying with instruments, or grasping with forceps and pliers.
(12) Then, the choice of the instrumentation (needle-holders, pliers and scissors) will be discussed.
(13) The few minutes required to alter one of these instruments will be more than repaid in time saved while attempting to place amalgam with a conventional carrier or cotton pliers.
(14) (2) Bond failure at the bracket-adhesive interface occurred with significantly greater frequency for the Starfire brackets when debonding was performed with the electrothermal instrument and with significantly less frequency when the debonding pliers were used.
(15) Ahmed said one of the ISI interrogators sat on the floor beside him and pushed the jaws of the pliers under the left side of his small fingernail before slowly prising the side of the nail upwards.
(16) Before examination the exterior part of the spring at the orbital edge was cut off with cutting pliers.
(17) The connector failures occurred early in the series before the development of connector pliers; there have been no connector failures in the last 202 consecutive implantations.
(18) Changes observed in the group made by orthodontic pliers lacked in the group bended by the machine.
(19) Removal of ceramic orthodontic brackets, utilizing orthodontic pliers, has resulted in significant patient discomfort, enamel trauma and bracket shattering.
(20) Ten orthodontic pliers (Dentarum 003 094) were divided into two equal groups, designated control and experimental.
Tweezers
Definition:
(n. pl.) Small pinchers used to pluck out hairs, and for other purposes.
Example Sentences:
(1) Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class 1 molecules that were either transmembrane- (H-2Db) or glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored (Qa2) were labeled with antibody-coated gold particles and moved across the cell surface with a laser optical tweezers until they encountered a barrier, the barrier-free path length (BFP).
(2) Fragments of nail keratin removed with tweezers from patients suffering from alopecia areata were examined using light microscopy and electron microscopy.
(3) Optical tweezers are the 'tractor beams' of today's technology.
(4) He dissects Rowland’s testimony with the abstracted interest of a child operating on a fly with a pair of tweezers.
(5) When first bound on the central lamellar surface, Con A-coated particles would diffuse randomly; when such bound particles were brought to the leading edge of the lamella with the optical tweezers, they were often transported rearward.
(6) Open the phone just enough to reveal the metal bracket covering the home button cable, remove it with tweezers, and pry the connector up from its socket.
(7) The interaction of noise and heat entailed superior performance of the tasks of memory and search, two hand coordination and reaction time, at moderate difficulty levels, but no distinct interaction effect was observed on the performance of tweezer dexterity.
(8) The pitfalls of electronic tweezers and the dangers of self-electrolysis are discussed.
(9) Men in professional kitchens all over the world, whether they are cooking big, meaty dishes, or tweezering edible micro flowers on to oysters, salivate over getting a dish just so, and appear to take it far more seriously than most female professional chefs and cooks.
(10) There is exciting speculation that the ban on nail scissors and tweezers in hand baggage will also soon be rescinded.
(11) One-hundred sixty flexofiles and 160 flexoreamers of various size, of which 40 were pre-curved by hand, 40 using hemostatic tweezers, 40 others were curved with an instrument designed for that purpose, and 40 remained unbent as a sample group, were used in the test.
(12) Physical measures to prevent tick bites include avoiding tick-infested areas, wearing light-colored clothing for easy identification of crawling ticks, regularly checking the body and pets for ticks, wearing protective garments and closed-toed shoes, and removing attached ticks promptly by using tweezers or forceps to apply a steady upward pull.
(13) It is recommended that the tick be grasped as close to the skin as possible with curved forceps; if these are not available, use tweezers or protected fingers.
(14) Pearson correlations between speed on the test of tweezer dexterity and quality measures indicated that, on the average, those practitioners who took longer to complete the tweezer test achieved significantly higher scores on restorative quality.
(15) Measurements included duration and frequency of error for hand steadiness, duration and frequency error for following a tracing pattern, and duration of completing a tweezer-pin placement dexterity test.
(16) The three hand function tests used were the Purdue Pegboard, O'Connor Tweezer Dexterity, and Smith Hand Function.
(17) Run your finger along the fillet and remove any bones with tweezers.
(18) A battery of performance tests consisting of 'letter cancellation,' 'hand 'precision,' 'two-hand coordination,' and 'tweezer dexterity' were administered on 12 desk workers in an illumination chamber under six different combinations of noise and illumination made out of two levels of white noise (70 and 100 dB) and three levels of illuminations (50, 150, and 300 lx).
(19) Step six: Time for tweezers Step six: Time for tweezers Photograph: John Carey Finally, take out the pin bones from each fillet using tweezers.
(20) Bowed and drooling and stabbing at his skin with a pair of golden tweezers, he cut a pitiful sight.