(1) As colleges are forced to drop subjects sich as Latin and modern languages, that situation is only going to get worse.
(2) Working in Korea, Dorothea Sich and her colleagues have described the folk etiology of naeng and some subtle transformations of the concept in cosmopolitan medical settings.
(3) The invasion of the infective agent into the body of sich pigs neither causes an outbreak of the disease nor brings about changes in the immunologic indices under investigation, which shows that no infection process develops in these animals.
(4) Her comments were, in part, a response to a publishing sensation: Deutschland Schafft Sich Ab (Germany Is Doing Away With Itself) by Bundesbank board member Thilo Sarrazin.
(5) The epiphenomena that seem to cause deterioration and death after spontaneous interacerebral hematoma (SICH) might best be studied in an animal model.
(6) All subjects having developed severe intracranial hypertension (SICH), those having also sustained systemic hypoxia presented with signs of neurological deterioration, significantly different from the hypoxic-free cases.
(7) We feel that great caution should be exercised in the use of immunosuppressive drugs in patients with chronic, nonfatal disorders sich as rheumatoid arthritis and Sjögren's syndrome.
(8) There were revealed no cultural or biochemical differences between the strains isolated from the sich and healthy persons.
(9) Thilo Sarrazin provoked outrage with Germany Is Making Itself Redundant (Deutschland Schafft Sich Ab) , which claimed the country was facing collapse because of the growing number of undereducated Muslims who were increasingly resistant to being integrated into German society.
Sinch
Definition:
(n.) A saddle girth made of leather, canvas, woven horsehair, or woven grass.
(v. t.) To gird with a sinch; to tighten the sinch or girth of (a saddle); as, to sinch up a sadle.