What's the difference between projector and prosector?

Projector


Definition:

  • (n.) One who projects a scheme or design; hence, one who forms fanciful or chimerical schemes.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The use of lightweight darts and a blowgun was found to be useful as a supplement to longer range dart projector systems since many animals could be approached at short range.
  • (2) Gap distances between the casting and the die were measured at specified marginal sites with a profile projector.
  • (3) Hence with a computer, a projector and a big white screen a whole community learn how to prevent this parasite and infection.
  • (4) The severity of stenosis using DSCAG with a 512 x 512 x 8 bit matrix was semiautomatically measured on the cathode ray tube (CRT) based on enlarged images on the screen of a Vanguard cine projector which were of the same size as those of or 10 times larger than images of Cine-CAG.
  • (5) Wettability was evaluated by measuring the contact angle with a profile projector.
  • (6) Using projectors in the Commons chamber Q: When you gave evidence to the environmental audit committee, you said that one of the reasons why you did not make a statement in the Commons about the climate change risk assessment you published earlier this year was because in the Commons you cannot present data well.
  • (7) The report concludes that the blaze began when a projector ignited gases from the expanding foam and took hold quickly as gaps in the walls.
  • (8) It started with two film projectors in an old hotel along the seafront."
  • (9) The fire service has yet to confirm the cause of the blaze, which some students have suggested could have started in the basement when a spark from a projector ignited a piece of foam.
  • (10) It now has 16,000, plus servers, overhead projectors and televisions.
  • (11) Maps of transversely sectioned crypts were prepared with the use of a microscope eye-piece projector.
  • (12) This transparency film allows the pretreatment fluorescein angiogram and the posttreatment black-and-white or color transparency images to be enlarged and compared without the use of additional photographic enlargers or projectors.
  • (13) The empty cinema has ripped seats and holes where the projector used to be.
  • (14) Hemianopsy was produced by using a combination of a projector, an erasing device and DC ENG.
  • (15) Light from a projector without film was found to be as effective a reinforcer as film reinforcement.
  • (16) The full-face and profile photographic transparencies of 60 subjects (30 male, 30 female) divided equally among Angles Class I, Class II Division 1, and Class III malocclusions, taken before and after orthodontic treatment, were randomly distributed in projector carousels and shown to four panels consisting of orthodontists, dental students, art students, and the parents of children undergoing orthodontic treatment.
  • (17) A little stiffly, he stood at a lectern with a large projector screen beside him.
  • (18) The student work in question was made up of foam panels fastened to three walls, with one wall left blank to receive images from a projector.
  • (19) It's like hearing Dirty Projectors' awesome Stillness Is the Move through the wall as Tricky mumbles his way through Maxinquaye in the foreground.
  • (20) The projector of Iridium 192 wires was conceived in order to reduce this irradiation hazard.

Prosector


Definition:

  • (n.) One who makes dissections for anatomical illustration; usually, the assistant of a professional anatomist.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Froriep did extremely well in firmly establishing the Prosector's Department by enhancement of its scope and enlargement of its collection of pathologic-anatomic specimens.
  • (2) The prosector's diagnosis of brain atrophy is not supported by the brain weight of 1,336 g, which is near the average brain weight for men of the corresponding age, nor by the volume of the cranium.
  • (3) Various terms, including prosector's wart and the anatomical tubercle, have been used to describe these lesions, which were often acquired in the autopsy room.
  • (4) He worked in all compulsory clinical departments and, subsequently, took up service in the Prosector's Department then headed by Robert F. Froriep who guided and supported Virchow towards independent scientific activity.
  • (5) Further, a short history of the prosector and his position in anatomical institutions is shown for 5 German anatomical departments and universities respectively, which are situated at the territory of the today's GDR.
  • (6) Variation in the percentage of occlusions found was noted between different prosectors and when coronary artery calcification was present.
  • (7) Since the ending of 19th century there were called 1st and 2nd prosectors as a result of the differentiation of medical science and of the partition of anatomy into macroscopic and microscopic-embryologic subfields.
  • (8) The authors stress the exceptional importance of collaborative work both of clinicians and prosectors in order to improve the health organization and treatment of patients.
  • (9) AIDS, etc., presenting a wide field for the prosector's activity.
  • (10) The investigation into the killing by a police officer of an unarmed Missouri teenager has been thrown into uncertainty with a tussle between the state governor and the local prosector, hours before a grand jury was due to begin hearing evidence and on the eve of a visit on Wednesday by US attorney general Eric Holder.
  • (11) Methods of both fixation and staining are intended for scientific purposes and for use by prosectors.
  • (12) When the position of a "Provisional Prosector" of Charité became vacant, after withdrawal of Philipp Phoebus, autumn 1832, the officials of the Hospital Affairs Curatory decided to continue the provisional arrangement, and five candidates applied for the office.
  • (13) The charges are still sealed, but US prosectors are expected to announce some of the results at a press conference midday in New York.
  • (14) A detailed case history and macroscopical description is given of a destructive tumour of the lower jaw, treated by the Utecht prosector Petrus Koning in the years 1811-1813.
  • (15) In the course of history of anatomy the prosector (dissector, incisor, secant, sculptor, procurator) held total different positions: at first he acted as a manual craftsman (barber surgeon) and as teacher's assistant lacking any academic education (organized in fraternities or guilds).
  • (16) Rudolf Ludwig Carl Virchow (1821-1902) had been prosector at the Charité of Berlin, from 1846 to 1849.
  • (17) From the middle of the 20th century the position of the prosector were abolished.
  • (18) Two sons and one grandson of Homburg are known to have worked as prosectors, as well, in Moscow, Kharkov, and Kazan.
  • (19) The interest of the medical historian is not necessarily confined to great scholars but can be devoted, as well, to assistant like Homburg who had been not only the prosector of J. C. Loder, anatomist in Jena but had, at the same time, worked for J. W. v. Goethe, Cabinet Minister in Weimar and in charge of Jena University.
  • (20) When the condition occurs in medical or laboratory personnel after contact with tuberculous material the term "prosector's wart" is often used.