(v. t.) To decompose, or resolve into parts; to destroy the form of; to unmake.
Example Sentences:
(1) In Patient 2 they were at first paroxysmal and unformed, with more prolonged metamorphopsia; later there appeared to be palinoptic formed images, possibly postictal in nature.
(2) "There's been a continuum to my career, of looking for a new exciting opportunity to take something that's still quite unformed, and help piece it together."
(3) Fifty per cent of the U.S. students with diarrhea had "severe" illness (greater than or equal to 10 unformed stools in first 48 hours) compared to 23% of the Latin Americans.
(4) In the case of an unformed dream the duration of the dream was shown to be adequately estimated, the EEF and ESCoG patterns to be rather variable, and correlation between the bioelectric activities of different structures to be nearly absent.
(5) Hallucinations were either unformed (for example, bright lights, straight lines) or highly formed (for example, faces), in which case they were invariably recognized by the patient as inappropriate.
(6) No significant differences in the average number of unformed stools passed during the seven days after vaccination were noted in vaccinees versus controls.
(7) To identify unformed disulfide bonds, nonreduced folding intermediates were treated with trypsin to liberate non-disulfide-bound, [35S]cysteine-containing peptides from the disulfide-linked peptides.
(8) Mild to moderately ill persons (three to six unformed stools in 24 hours) can be treated with a drug that acts nonspecifically, such as bismuth subsalicylate or loperamide.
(9) Fallon was also unclear about the identity of the ground troops that would occupy territory currently occupied by Islamic State in Syria if airstrikes drove the militants from their base, referring simply to local troops or an as-yet-unformed new Syrian government.
(10) While the party’s leading presidential contender completed the second day of her New Hampshire campaign swing, lawmakers back in Washington were seeking to shape her largely unformed policy agenda by pushing it to go beyond a focus on subsidising community colleges that has already been adopted by Barack Obama.
(11) At this stage the sporocyst wall was still unformed.
(12) Giardia trophozoites, Trichomonas hominis, Chilomastix mesnili, Entamoeba histolytica, Blastocystis hominis and Hymenolepis nana were all significantly associated with unformed stools and reports of diarrhoea.
(13) Diarrhea was significantly observed more in the watery or watery-whitish unformed ones than in other diarrhea.
(14) The proportion of unformed stools was also decreased, but to a lesser extent (p less than 0.05) in those taking olsalazine (78% v 55%; p less than 0.001) compared with those taking sulphasalazine (72% v 28%; p less than 0.001).
(15) One patient reported only simple unformed hallucinations, which are a well-documented phenomenon occurring in lesions compressing the optic nerves and chiasm.
(16) These observations suggest that the different segments of Physarum DNA from which foldback structures are derived contain nucleotide sequences that share a highly ordered and unform pattern of structural organisation.
(17) Loperamide significantly reduced stool frequency compared with attapulgite, particularly within the first 12-hour period following the start of therapy, and significantly shortened the mean time to last unformed stool (loperamide, 14.2 hours, versus attapulgite, 19.5 hours).
(18) Diarrhea is defined as the passage of three or more unformed stools per day plus--in all patients except infants--one or more signs or symptoms of enteric infection.
(19) Problems of the correction of indices of protein and water-electrolyte metabolism in unformed fistulas of the small intestine were studied in 44 patients.
(20) In acute diarrhoea, loperamide provides more rapid control of symptoms than diphenoxylate when given in a flexible dosage according to unformed bowel movements, and in single dose studies 4mg loperamide has a much longer duration of effect than 5mg diphenoxylate.
Unmake
Definition:
(v. t.) To destroy the form and qualities of; to deprive of being; to uncreate.
Example Sentences:
(1) But here in dismal prospect, if he gets it wrong, is the unmaking of the Obama presidency, the betrayal of all those who believed his election heralded a shift away from the confrontational behaviours of the past.
(2) Now parliament must save us | Polly Toynbee Read more The judgment ruled: “The most fundamental rule of the UK constitution is that parliament is sovereign and can make and unmake any law it chooses ... By making and unmaking treaties the crown [ie the government] creates legal effects on the plane of international law, but in doing so it does not and cannot change domestic law.
(3) It's been a weird couple of weeks and I have followed most of it from a dark corner of a Cardiff radio studio, where my play If Only – about the making and possible unmaking of the coalition – was being recorded.
(4) He says he will inevitably forget to tell his office of all interactions with these friends, adding: You can't unmake the friendships that you have; some of them I've known for 20 to 30 years.