| James Martin Beattie - 1909 - 648 pages
...in association with c)'stic disease of the kidney. The cysts are usually very minute, but may reach from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in diameter. They always result from the dilatation of small bile-ducts. Small pseudocysts occasionally result from the... | |
| 1916 - 918 pages
...of the righf- ear. One of these ear lesions somewhat resembles a small wart. Eight or ten tubercles, varying in size from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in diameter, with smooth surfaces and one having an umbilicated centre are visible on the back of the neck, as are... | |
| Pennsylvania. Department of Health - Pennsylvania - 1916 - 888 pages
...of the right ear. One of these ear lesions somewhat resembles a small wart. Eight or ten tubercles. varying in size from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in diameter, with smooth surfaces and one having an umbilicated centre are visible on the back of the neck, as are... | |
| Ransom Asa Moore, Charles Parker Halligan - Agriculture - 1919 - 442 pages
...axils of the leaves. The short, hairy pods contain two or three round or slightly flattened seeds, varying in size from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in diameter. The plant has a short, strong taproot with a rather scanty root system. The soy bean is especially... | |
| Medicine - 1891 - 516 pages
...but not anaemic. The whole of the trunk and limbs were covered by a discrete purpuric rash, the spots varying in size from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in diameter. The spleen was enlarged, and felt one inch below the ribs. There was some cedema of the feet and considerable... | |
| Gilbert Waldbauer - Nature - 2008 - 318 pages
.... . . The interesting point was that in every leaf examined there were wrigglers [mosquito larvae] varying in size from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in length. Specimens were sent to the eminent insect taxonomist Daniel Coquillett. He recognized them... | |
| Medicine - 1877 - 408 pages
...arch. The right ear is perfect, but just in front of it there are three small nipple-like eminences, varying in size from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in diameter. The left ear is imperfect : the meatus externus being imperforate, and of the pinna only the tragus... | |
| The Farmer's Magazine - 1860 - 604 pages
...well-known parasites called flukes. In Morton's Cyclopaedia it is said: " These insects, which vary in size from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in diameter, are found floating about the biliary duct, apparently feeding on the bile, and preventing it from fulfilling... | |
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