What's the difference between pluries and writ?

Pluries


Definition:

  • (n.) A writ issued in the third place, after two former writs have been disregarded.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It is a pluri-stratified squamous layer which has some epithelial features (desmosomes and tonofilaments), and lacks connective tissue fibers in the extracellular spaces.
  • (2) The outpatient departments devoted to chronic pain are pluri-disciplinary.
  • (3) Finally, these findings accentuate the importance of a pluri-disciplinary approach (psychiatrist, gynecologist, pediatrician) to prevent the adverse consequences of the mother's psychiatric disorders in the child.
  • (4) These two populations were then submitted to selective breedings in which the phenotypic character was the weighted responses to pluri-antigen immunization.
  • (5) Such an approach is not a novelty: as a matter of fact, the works of the French hygienists in the 19th century paved the way for a pluri-disciplinary perspective in health work.
  • (6) Since in all cases a pluri-chorionic placenta was present, it is possible, that the vanishing twin phenomenon may be held responsible for an eventual blood group incompatibility during subsequent pregnancies.
  • (7) On the basis of these previous studies, 73 clinical observations of children victims of physical maltreatment and negligence from 0 to 3 years, are studied in the light of a comparison of two hospital systems: one is unidimensional, the other is pluri-dimensional.
  • (8) The radiation dose to the lens is less than from pluri-directional tomography.
  • (9) Of 34 pre-treatment isolated strains, 60% were pluri-resistant to other antibiotics (ampicillin, carbenicillin, piperacillin, cefalotin, aztreonam) but only 21.2% to cefotetan.
  • (10) Maybe it's time we asked them, and had our referendum plural in this pluri-national state.
  • (11) The diagnosis of Ewing's malignant tumor in the young still raises major problems, either from a clinical point of view because of its rarity, its pluri-potentiality and various symptoms, or on imaging because of its numerous pitfalls.
  • (12) We have identified an RNA-dependent DNA polymerase activity in the microsomal fraction of human pluri-potential embryonal carcinoma cells NTera2D1, which are known to express the full length coding strand of the genomic Line-1 (L1) elements.
  • (13) Thus other peptide hormones may add to PTH and corticosteroid hormones to modulate urinary acidification, which leads to the concept of a pluri-hormonal control of acid-base balance.
  • (14) A similar increase in the proportion of pluri-innervated muscle fibres was observed in the contralateral muscle, but after a longer period.
  • (15) The ability of purified virus to form pluri-antigenic particles upon heating could be restored by incubation at 37 degrees C with infected cell extract.
  • (16) The AA also state that, in AR, an haemodynamic study is injustifiable, unless Echo is technically incomplete, there is pluri-valvular disease insufficiently clarified, or coronarography is necessary.
  • (17) The systemal method views it in a pluri-dimensional space specific of any living system, permitty to understand its mobility and changes better.
  • (18) The question we asked ourselves was this: how can the architect’s work contribute to this improvement?” Their La Fine Del Mondo in Turin was an industrial container done up with multicoloured plastic seating, movable bars, partitions and towers: the self-styled pluri-disco-teca could be configured in different ways for different events, which ranged from fashion shows to music nights for Turin’s factory workers.
  • (19) The other type of mucin, seen in 69% of the cases, exhibited reactivity for 8-O-acylated NANA or pluri-O-acylated NANA (C8).
  • (20) Granule diameter was significantly larger in the pluri as opposed to monohormonal granules.

Writ


Definition:

  • (obs.) 3d pers. sing. pres. of Write, for writeth.
  • () imp. & p. p. of Write.
  • (n.) That which is written; writing; scripture; -- applied especially to the Scriptures, or the books of the Old and New testaments; as, sacred writ.
  • (n.) An instrument in writing, under seal, in an epistolary form, issued from the proper authority, commanding the performance or nonperformance of some act by the person to whom it is directed; as, a writ of entry, of error, of execution, of injunction, of mandamus, of return, of summons, and the like.
  • (Archaic imp. & p. p.) of Write

Example Sentences:

  • (1) To hear the former chief of staff of the Provisional IRA being depicted as a man whose job as Northern Ireland's deputy first minister is "to administer the Queen of England's writ in Ireland" is, to say the least, ironic.
  • (2) This we can see writ large in the prime minister’s skirmishes with Philip Hammond , the only member of government visibly considering the national interest.
  • (3) Abuses thet do exist should be handled through writs of habeas corpus and malpractice suits, remedies much more available now than in the past.
  • (4) Australia needs urgent legislation which strengthens the rules around government spending once the writs are issued.” As opposition leader in 2007, Kevin Rudd railed against the Howard government’s political advertising, which he called a “cancer on democracy”.
  • (5) In a letter to Infantino accompanying a draft writ that could be lodged in the Swiss courts, lawyers call on Fifa to “acknowledge that it has acted wrongfully by awarding the World Cup 2022 to Qatar without demanding the assurance that Qatar observes fundamental human and labour rights vis-à-vis migrant construction workers whose work is related to the 2022 World Cup”.
  • (6) The prime minister's tactics failed, raising questions about how far his writ runs in the party.
  • (7) In London, the courts ruled his detention unlawful and ordered a writ of habeas corpus to be issued so he could be freed, but this was ignored by the US military authorities.
  • (8) It is a sense of his own god-like importance, as opposed to Holy Writ, that persuades him that his convictions on the moment a new life begins – "it is just my view" – should prevail over women's choices.
  • (9) The challenge faced by the incoming Asda chief executive was writ large today as Waitrose posted sales figures that showed it growing at a far faster rate than its larger rivals.
  • (10) Historically, about 7% of activity occurs each day in the week after the governor-general issues the writs.
  • (11) His job is to administer the Queen of England's writ in Ireland ...
  • (12) Wrapping the existing building with a grungy cocktail of corrugated metal sheeting, raw plywood and chain-link fencing, through which angular glazed structures burst open, it was his maverick manifesto writ large.
  • (13) This was writ large at the outset, when Rose fired a flame thrower without batting an eyelid while Sheeran was handed a glitter canon and very nearly fell backwards with shock at the force of the “explosion”.
  • (14) Notices were pinned to windows of the building saying that a writ of possession was obtained from the high court on 24 November giving Camelot permission to remove the “unlawful occupants” on 1 December.
  • (15) Wednesday's decision by the UK supreme court in the case of Yunus Rahmatullah , a man detained by the British in Iraq, might seem to be about the hallowed writ of habeas corpus .
  • (16) We want it first because we lodged our writ long before the others."
  • (17) July 2012 Two high court judges dismiss Qatada's application for judicial review and a writ of habeas corpus.
  • (18) Does a vague law from 1789 – the so-called All Writs Act – give courts authority to make tech companies remake their products in times of duress?
  • (19) Keogh, whose campaign strategy has been to shelve his lengthy CV and focus on the fact that he, unlike Hastie, was born in Canning, but whose campaign events have been largely centred around the swing voting suburbs of Armadale and Kelmscott, was asked if he had made the trip down to Wagerup, 90km from Armadale, on the southern fringe of the electorate, since the writs were issued.
  • (20) It’s a place where American issues play out writ small, in ways that can affect governance on a grand scale.

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