Examples
1. So, right here is anatomy.
2. Coursework should include anatomy, patient care, radiation physics, and image evaluation.
3. Coursework includes anatomy, terminology, risk management, legal issues, and English grammar.
4. Remember grade 12 anatomy?
5. - I want Grey's Anatomy!
Examples
1. Stabilization on that 3x optical zoom actually looks pretty good.
2. Even before photography, artists used optical devices as a painter's aid.
3. None of which have optical image stabilization.
4. The underscreen fingerprint scanner is optical.
5. The underscreen fingerprint scanner is optical.
lens
/ˈɫɛnz/
noun(anatomy) the clear elastic part of the eye that concentrates light in order for things to be seen clearly
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Examples
1. The lens focuses the image in front of the retina.
2. The lens used the same principles as Woods’ water experiment.
3. Lens flare is everywhere.
4. The lens discloses a large number of hair-ends, clean cut by the scissors of the barber.
5. So, imagine a lens the size of a football field.
jawbone
/ˈdʒɔˌboʊn/
nouneither of the bones that form the jaw, particularly the lower jaw
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Examples
1. They have to break down your jawbone first.
2. This is Startup Forensics: Jawbone.
3. The IDC firm ranked Jawbone as the fifth largest wearable manufacturer with 4.4% of the market, for the first quarter of 2015.
4. Oh those beautiful cold lips trace a line along your throat, along your jawbone.
5. Gums and jawbones hold our teeth together.
baby tooth
/bˈeɪbi tˈuːθ/
nounany of the temporary teeth in young children that falls out and is later replaced with a permanent one
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Examples
1. They’re your baby teeth!
2. Lots of other animals have baby teeth, too.
3. Check the baby teeth.
4. Look that little baby tooth.
5. Like those are all baby teeth.
limb
/ˈɫɪm/
nounan arm or a leg of a person or any four-legged animal, or a wing of any bird
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Examples
1. - Elongated limbs.
2. Ripping off people's limbs.
3. In 1991, an 11-year-old girl discovered his limbs.
4. The town slipperily stretches her limbs.
5. The gray tree frog prefers limbs to legs.
Examples
1. Near their trembling fingertips lay cyanide capsules.
2. Maybe move the fingertip back.
3. The door opens with fingertip biometrics.
4. Fingertips are squeezing on the ground.
5. Reach your fingertips up and overhead.
gland
/ˈɡɫænd/
nounan organ in the body that produces certain chemical substances to be used in the body or to be discharged into the surroundings
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Examples
1. These glands then release a burst of the neurotransmitter adrenaline.
2. Sweat glands come in primarily two forms: eccrine and apocrine.
3. Depending on the type of stimulus, the glands will produce three different tears.
4. This affects your body’s glands.
5. These glands purify seawater very quickly.
saliva
/səˈɫaɪvə/
nounthe liquid produced in the mouth to make chewing and swallowing easier and to prepare food for digestion
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Examples
1. "Dog saliva can heal wounds."
2. Just saliva?
3. Swallow the saliva.
4. No my mouth has so much saliva in it though.
5. Saliva, which by the way, is not found in every hole.
mucus
/ˈmjukəs/
nouna thick slimy substance produced by mucous membranes, inside the nose or the mouth, to lubricate and protect them
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Examples
1. And that weapon is mucus.
2. Nobody wants mucus beer.
3. Symptoms include mucus, wheezing, and breathing difficulty.
4. The stools may also contain mucus.
5. The spice breaks up the mucus.
adrenaline
/əˈdɹɛnəɫən/
nouna body hormone produced in case of anger, fear, or excitement that makes the heart beat faster and the body react quicker
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Examples
1. The adrenaline also triggers the release of the stress hormone cortisol.
2. Glycaemia or blood sugar decreases, insulin plummets, and three hormones take over, adrenaline, glucagon and the growth hormone.
3. Exercise releases adrenaline.
4. I hate adrenaline.
5. Adrenaline produces mental changes as well.
enzyme
/ˈɛnˌzaɪm/
nouna substance that all living organisms produce that brings about a chemical reaction without being altered itself
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Examples
1. Chiefly the enzyme lactase tended to drop dramatically as infants are weaned.
2. This adaptation has to do with a specialized enzyme: lactase.
3. They use enzymes to digest their food, and what they leave behind are byproducts of that process.
4. Does the body naturally have enzymes?
5. Those changes usually involve enzymes.
torso
/ˈtɔɹˌsoʊ/
nounthe upper part of the human body, excluding the arms and the head
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Examples
1. The torso kinda keeps the whole thing together.
2. Because the torso has so much more surface area and weight than the legs.
3. Now stretch your torso.
4. See this torso?
5. Drop your torso over the right leg.
nipple
/ˈnɪpəɫ/
nounthe round dark area on a person's chest, which from female ones babies can drink milk
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Examples
1. Dogs, cats, pigs and whales all have nipples too.
2. The Hooters logo has nipples.
3. - Nipples suck!
4. Nipples absolutely suck!
5. "The password is nipple."
navel
/ˈneɪvəɫ/
nounthe elevated or empty part in the middle of the stomach, made by cutting the umbilical cord just after birth
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Examples
1. Tickle its navel.
2. Jake: We use navel for pastrami.
3. Navel infection happens so easily.
4. The pipe navel-- Pipe navel.
5. Feel that pipe in the navel?
hipbone
/ˈhɪpˈboʊn/
nouneither of the two bones, on each side of the body, forming a large portion of the pelvis
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Examples
1. Finds her hipbones to balance her perfectly.
2. There's a little hipbone here.
3. Basically run the part of the knife facing me on the hipbone.
4. and I realized that I have developed a lot of pressure ulcers on my back, on my hipbone.
5. and I realized that I have developed a lot of pressure ulcers on my back, on my hipbone.
lap
/ˈɫæp/
nounthe upper part of the legs that form a flat surface when one is seated
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Examples
1. And the doll greedily laps up your blood.
2. Could do laps.
3. First up, some familiarization laps on wet tyres and a slightly damp track.
4. He loves laps.
5. And now lap number five.
groin
/ˈɡɹɔɪn/
nounthe place where the legs join the front part of the body, including the region of the sex organs
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Examples
1. - Keep your groin to yourself.
2. My groins is sore.
3. Just aiming the groin.
4. Gouge their eyes, stomp on their feet, knee their groin.
5. Your groin is here.
ovary
/ˈoʊˌvɝi/
nouneither of the two organs in women or female animals that produce eggs for reproduction
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Examples
1. Just prior to ovulation, the ovaries naturally produce progesterone.
2. They still have normal ovaries.
3. - I lost an ovary?
4. The ovaries are the female reproductive glands.
5. Maybe one ovary never washed dishes.
womb
/ˈwum/
nounthe part of the body of a woman or female mammal where the baby develops before birth
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Examples
1. Whose womb contained my heir ♪
2. All mind wombs have a bath womb.
3. His wife's womb was as good as dead.
4. - Popped out the womb first.
5. we observe our wombs.
Examples
1. First of all, fruit has fiber.
2. Chestnuts offer plenty of protein, vitamin E and dietary fiber.
3. Fiber feeds the good bacteria of your gut.
4. In this way, fiber promotes the growth of good bacteria.
5. Plants have fiber.
to inhale
/ˌɪnˈheɪɫ/
verbto breath air or smoke in through the mouth or nose
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Examples
1. - inhaling the fresh nature.
2. "Inhale the aroma of the coffee before sipping."
3. One such class of drugs is inhaled beta-2 adrenergic agonists.
4. I inhaled the powder.
5. Then, inhale the steam.
to secrete
/sɪˈkɹit/
verb(of a cell, gland, or organ) to produce and release a liquid substance in the body
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Examples
1. Enamel-building cells secrete a mixture of chemicals that hardens into mineral crystals.
2. They secrete insulin.
3. Around Day 12, the follicle secretes a surge of estrogen into the blood stream.
4. So luteinized granulosa cells secrete more progesterone than estrogen during the luteal phase.
5. It also secretes some hormones that aid in red blood cell production.
