| Thomas Hawkes Tanner - 1869 - 684 pages
...or more children 25 . . 22 First pregnancy while under treatment . . i . . o 113 46 Fibroid tumours vary in size from that of a small nut, to that of a foetus at the full term of gestation : indeed, their bulk is sometimes much greater than that of... | |
| 1898 - 518 pages
...divided into three classes : (1) Cystic follicles ; and (2) cysts of the corpus luteuni. These cysts vary in size from that of a small nut to that of a walnut ; their contents are serum or blood. The ovary may be so invaded by such cystic degeneration... | |
| Charles Henry May - 1885 - 374 pages
...Number, Size, and Situation.—They may be single or very numerous—fifty or more may be present. They vary in size from that of a small nut to that of a man's head or even larger. They are usually situated in the body of the uterus, rarely in the cervix;... | |
| 1885 - 1044 pages
...hemorrhagic effusions, to which the name infarctus has been very properly given by Virchow. These infarctions vary in size from that of a small nut to that of a pullet's egg, just as they implicate one or more pulmonary lobules. They are situated at the periphery... | |
| Great Britain and Ireland. Foreign office - 1896 - 36 pages
...jalap trade. Jalap occurs in commerce in dry pear-shaped masses usually called tubers, and varying in size from that of a small nut to that of an orange. The so-called tubers are, however, simply enlarged divisions of the root known botanically... | |
| Henry Alfred Alford Nicholls - 1906 - 348 pages
...occurs in commerce in dry pear-shaped masses usually of the drug. Description called tubers, and varying in size from that of a small nut to that of an orange. The so-called tubers are, however, simply enlarged divisions of the root known botanically... | |
| James Herbert McKee - 1914 - 676 pages
...over the abdomen and inner side of the thighs, the dorsal surfaces of hands and feet, and the axillas. It may be accompanied by redness of the pharynx. In...yellow, simulating bruises. When the nodes are at then' height they look as though thej contained fluid, and they may be hemorrhagic. They never suppurate.... | |
| John Walter Gregory - 1921 - 1018 pages
...fragmentary volcanic materials, which are known as volcanic ash if fine-grained, as tuff if the fragments vary in size from that of a small nut to that of a coconut, and as agglomerate if many of the pieces are larger than coconuts. A volcanic cone, especially... | |
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