An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . nerve. Both the roof-cs and the floor-cs are hair-cs.[F.] 2. A c. forming a hair. [B.]—Hares c. The element of aHares battery (q. v.). [B.] —Head-c. Syn.: capitulum. Arounded c. found m the antheridium of the Choracece, upon eachof the manubria. [B, 279.]—Heckle c. See Prickle-c.—Henles supporting cs. See Prop-cs ofHensen.— c. See Z/i-uer-c—Hills c, Hills graTity


An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . nerve. Both the roof-cs and the floor-cs are hair-cs.[F.] 2. A c. forming a hair. [B.]—Hares c. The element of aHares battery (q. v.). [B.] —Head-c. Syn.: capitulum. Arounded c. found m the antheridium of the Choracece, upon eachof the manubria. [B, 279.]—Heckle c. See Prickle-c.—Henles supporting cs. See Prop-cs ofHensen.— c. See Z/i-uer-c—Hills c, Hills graTity element of a Hills battery (g. v.). [B.]~Histogenetic c. SeeSomatic c.—Homogeneous c. See Sinvple c—Horn-c, Horny , cellule cornee. Ger., Homzelle, Bornpldttchen, Hoi-nschiipp-chen. It., cellula cornea. Syn.: coimeous c. One of the cs of thefree surface of the skin ; or strictly of the stratum corneum of theepidermis. These cs contain keratin, and may be greatly modifiedor condensed, so as to form hairs, nails, hoofs, etc. The cs aremostly flattened or ridged, and homogeneous throughout, and oftenno vestige of a nucleus can be demonstrated. [J, 30,67,83.]—Imbri-. GRANULATION CELLS. (AFTER BILLROTE.) O. no; 03, not; O^, whole; Th, thin; Th, the; U, like oo in too; U, blue; U^, lull; U*, full; U^, urn; U^, like u (German). CELL 894 cated cs- Cs overlapping each other like the tiles of a roof. [C-l—Immature c. See Young c. and Embryonic c.—Indifterentc. Ger., indifferente Zelle. A e. without any characteristic struct-ural features, especially a c. contained in a tissue but forming noessential part in the structure of the latter and not concerned inthe special functions of the tissue; such as white blood-corpuscles orwandering cs. [J, 55, 108.]—Indirect See and Caryocinesis.—Initial c. Fr., celhile initiale. One ofthe mass of cs which by their multiplication produce the variouslayers of nascent tissue (periblem, plerom


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear189