(a.) Of or pertaining to Portugal, or its inhabitants.
(n. sing. & pl.) A native or inhabitant of Portugal; people of Portugal.
Example Sentences:
(1) Perhaps there were some other generations in Portuguese football with more talent, but they didn’t win.
(2) He has won the Belgian title and two Portuguese championships.
(3) The euro elite insists it is representing the interests of Portuguese or Irish taxpayers who have to pick up the bill for bailing out the feckless Greeks – or will be enraged by any debt forgiveness when they have been forced to swallow similar medicine.
(4) Our Pi S frequency was similar to that found in a French group and lower than that of Spanish and Portuguese groups.
(5) Here's the details: • EU COMMISSION FORECASTS FRENCH DEFICIT AT 4.1% OF GDP IN 2013, 3.8% IN 2014, 3.7% IN 2015 • EU COMMISSION FORECASTS ITALIAN DEFICIT AT 3.0% OF GDP IN 2013, 2.7% IN 2014, 2.5% IN 2015 • EU COMMISSION FORECASTS SPANISH DEFICIT AT 6.8% OF GDP IN 2013, 5.9% IN 2014, 6.6% IN 2015 • EU COMMISSION FORECASTS GREEK DEFICIT AT 13.5% OF GDP IN 2013, 2.0% IN 2014, 1.1% IN 2015 • EU COMMISSION FORECASTS PORTUGUESE DEFICIT AT 5.9% OF GDP IN 2013, 4.0% IN 2014, 2.5% IN 2015 • EU COMMISSION FORECASTS CYPRUS DEFICIT AT 8.3% OF GDP IN 2013, 8.4% IN 2014, 6.3% IN 2015 Sony Kapoor of the ReDefine thinktank tweets that the forecasts show that European leaders should not be talking about the crisis being over, even though the risk of the euro breaking up has receded.
(6) In this context, the present article makes an analysis of the main ethical and legal problems posed by HIV infection, in the framework of Portuguese law, with special focus on: a) Conflict between the necessary protection of public health by the State and the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms of the citizens; b) Inadequacy of the existent laws to fight contagious diseases to HIV infection; c) Discrimination; d) Testing and compulsory hospitalization versus informed consent; e) Confidentiality; f) Voluntary contagion.
(7) A worker gestures at one of the entrances of the Lisbon harbour during a strike by Portuguese harbour workers, in Lisbon September 17, 2012.
(8) The amyloid fibril protein seen in patients of Portuguese, Japanese, and Swedish descent in the U.S. mainly consists of a variant form of transthyretin (also called prealbumin) with the substitution of methionine for valine at position 30.
(9) In addition, 319 Portuguese blood donors (46 of whom have lived in Angola or Mozambique) were screened using the same radioimmunoassay.
(10) The girl's mother, aged 45, and her 40-year-old partner, both of Portuguese origin and unemployed, live in a village near the garage.
(11) I thought between 2007 and 2013 [when the Portuguese was at Internazionale and Real Madrid] was enough time for Wenger to forget this.
(12) 14 patients with verified moderate contact allergy to colophony were patch tested with adhesive mass (10%), Portuguese colophony (10%), zinc oxide (10%), purified resin acids (10%), and Portuguese colophony (10%), in combination with zinc oxide.
(13) Their Portuguese manager, Carlos Quiroz spoke of the team’s readiness to do business – despite pundits writing the team off as the competition’s underdogs.
(14) A 9 year old Portuguese boy presented with severe wasting and a disseminated cryptococcal infection that resolved after massive doses of intrathecal and parenteral antifungal agents.
(15) It occurs in patients of Portuguese Azorean extraction.
(16) Chelsea were already down to 10 men, after the sending-off of Thibaut Courtois, Sky Sports released video footage of the moment Mourinho lost his temper with his medical staff which appears to show the Portuguese calling one or both of them “son of a bitch”.
(17) While it was always possible to wash down the superb Rhodesian beef with fine Portuguese and South African wines at several hotels, Salisbury had difficulty living up to its nickname of Surbiton in the Bush.
(18) Mike van Dulken (@Accendo_Mike) Portuguese GDP upside suprise adds to FR and DE this morning.
(19) In a Portuguese-American family with hereditary amyloid neuropathy (familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy), onset was in the seventh decade in all affected relatives.
(20) The data excludes widespread sympatho-neural failure as a cause for postural hypotension in familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy of the Portuguese type.
Rei
Definition:
(n.) A portuguese money of account, in value about one tenth of a cent.
Example Sentences:
(1) Sequence homologies among YsT9.1 and the Fv regions of McPC603, J539 and human Bence--Jones protein REI, all of which have solved crystal structures, provided the basis for the modeling.
(2) The authors infer from the REI literature five assumptions regarding the roles and responsibilities of elementary regular classroom teachers, concluding that these teachers and specialists form a partnership, but the classroom teachers are ultimately in charge of the instruction of all children in their classrooms, including those who are not succeeding in the mainstream.
(3) A 46-year-old white woman had Reis-Bücklers corneal dystrophy; the disease had recurred in a corneal transplant within ten years of transplantation.
(4) For one region in the first domain of CD4 there was an ambiguity in the alignment with REI and two alternate models are presented.
(5) Perhaps due to the misnomer, annular or honeycomblike subepithelial opacities have come to be regarded as Reis-Bücklers' dystrophy.
(6) Ninety-four regular classroom teachers in northwest Iowa were asked to agree or disagree with a series of statements on the REI position.
(7) Their impact on the entomological parameters is remarkable with a reduction of more than 98% of ma and the rate of entomological inoculation (REI) in the houses.
(8) Most publicly, when Manchester United bought the Portuguese player Bébé in 2010, Gestifute had just days earlier bought 30% of the player's "economic rights" and begun representing him, Bébé having sacked his former agent Gonçalo Reis just before the United deal.
(9) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Luiz Henrique Reis What makes me happy about Brazil is ... the typical happiness and hospitality found in people.
(10) Bébé's agent, Gonçalo Reis, has said he was cut off mid-contract, before Mendes suddenly began to represent Bébé then within days agreed a €9m (£7.5m) deal with United.
(11) But with the last kick, or header, of the game, Tim Cahill provided a late equalizer for the second successive game as his attempt looped over Matt Reis to give New York the point they needed to clinch a playoff spot.
(12) The specimens consisted of 8 keratoplasty specimens obtained from 2 cases of granular dystrophy and 4 cases of lattice dystrophy and one case each of primary droplet dystrophy and Reis-Bücklers dystrophy.
(13) The dystrophy originally described by Reis and Bücklers shows electron-microscopically 'rod-shaped bodies' in the region of Bowman's membrane that cannot be distinguished from the 'rod-shaped bodies' in the granular dystrophy.
(14) In Reis-Bücklers' dystrophy an unknown pathomechanism in Bowman's layer and the basal cells of the corneal epithelium results in recurrent epithelial erosions.
(15) Thiel-Behnke's corneal dystrophy resembles Reis-Bücklers' dystrophy clinically, but differs from it in its honeycomb-shaped opacity pattern, the fibrous tissue in histology, and the curly dense filaments found in electron microscopy.
(16) Electroroentgenography with multiple magnification by means of the apparatuses REIS-D and ERGA-02 reveals lymph nodes in the mediastinum of small laboratory animals.
(17) One of the criticisms is that regular classroom teachers' views regarding many of the beliefs or assumptions of the REI are unknown.
(18) Rei Kawakubo, the founder of Comme des Garçons: Weird pink kaleidoscope prints!
(19) The structure of the variable portions of a K-type Bence-Jones protein REI forming a dimer has been determined by X-ray diffraction to a resolution of 2.0 A.
(20) A lovely little dink over the top is clutched by Reis.