(n.) A kind of script in which the heavy strokes are nearly upright, giving the characters when taken together a round look.
Example Sentences:
(1) Report of three cases of porokeratosis Mibelli with emphasis on the ultrastructural changes of the entire epidermis underlying the cornoid lamella: autophagocytosis, filamentous degeneration, formation of "corps ronds".
(2) With a biopsy examination, histopathologic findings were acanthosis, hyperkeratosis, lacunae, acantholysis, corps ronds, and grains.
(3) A dearth of corps ronds and grains in these anatomical regions was observed histologically.
(4) Using electron microscopy the same specific abnormalities of the keratinization process as known from classical cases of PM could be demonstrated: autophagocytic cells that revealed perinuclear edematization and vacuolization, accumulation of autophagic vacuoles and heterolysosomes, and dyskeratotic corps ronds-like cells that become transformed to fibrillar or Civatte bodies.
(5) Among many others, Daniel Bernoulli, Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Leonhard Euler, and Joseph-Louis Lagrange realised that there was a similarity in the maths of how to describe waves in strings, across surfaces and through solids and fluids.
(6) Corps ronds were formed individually in the regions lateral to that of grains, where hypergranulosis was prominent in contrast to a mild dyskeratosis.
(7) Some of these epidermal cells underwent dyskeratosis and appeared as corps ronds-like bodies in the granular layer.
(8) In early stages of dyskeratotic cells, keratinosomes were increased in number and some of them persisted inside the plasma membrane without a release into the intercellular spaces, and thus they were present in grains and corps ronds.
(9) Some decades later, mathematician Jean Le Rond d'Alembert generalised the string problem to write down the wave equation, in which he found that the acceleration of any segment of the string was proportional to the tension acting on it.
(10) Therefore, the formation of grains and corps ronds seem to be independent of each other.
(11) Scanning electron microscopy revealed varied surface morphological appearances of corps ronds and of the epidermal cells covering the elongated dermal villi.
(12) Histological signs of Darier's disease, including 'corps ronds', 'grains', and acantholytic clefts are demonstrated in the wall of an epidermoid cyst in a patient with Darier's disease of the skin.
(13) The cornified lesions were distinguished by the presence of numerous corps ronds in the basal portion of the greatly hyperkeratotic stratum corneum, hypertrophic dermal villi containing enlarged capillaries, vacuolar dilatation of rough endoplasmic reticulum in sublacunar basal cells, unusually numerous Odland bodies in spinous cells adjacent to lacunae, and persistent attachment of tonofilaments to disrupted desmosomes.
(14) Open daily 8am-6pm Ronde, Stockbridge, Edinburgh Ronde A classy cafe-cum-shop stocked with fashionable cycling accessories, Ronde is a place that will definitely appeal to the style-conscious road cyclist.
(15) Light microscopy revealed suprabasal lacunae, corps ronds and grains.
(16) These three isotopes were incorporated in cells constituting the basis and wall of the lacuna, while they did not accumulate in isolated acantholytic and dyskeratotic cells in the lacuna, corps ronds and grains.
(17) The Stade Vélodrome crackled with nervous energy, the highly tuned expectancy of the French coursing in one direction, euphoric delight brimming out of the Albanians, who even before the game had been dancing and tooting car horns near the Rond-Point du Prado , just outside the super-structure of Marseille’s modernised amphitheatre.
(18) Grains and corps ronds are consistent histopathological findings in Darier's disease: the ultrastructure of these cells is described.
Rondel
Definition:
(n.) A small round tower erected at the foot of a bastion.
(n.) Same as Rondeau.
(n.) Specifically, a particular form of rondeau containing fourteen lines in two rhymes, the refrain being a repetition of the first and second lines as the seventh and eighth, and again as the thirteenth and fourteenth.