orthopædic

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orthopædic
orthopædic, -pedic, a. (ɔːθəʊˈpiːdɪk) [ad. F. orthopédique (Dict. Acad. 1835), f. orthopédie: see orthopædy.] Relating to or concerned with the cure of deformities in children, or of bodily deformities in general. orthopædic bed, a bed in an orthopædic ward; normally one individually designed to rel... Oxford English Dictionary
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orthopædist
ˌorthoˈpædist, -pedist [f. next: see -ist: cf. mod.F. orthopédiste.] One who cures deformities; an orthopædic surgeon.1853 Dunglison Med. Lex., Orthopedist,..one who practises orthopædia. 1869 tr. Hugo's By the King's Command I. ii. 20 Let an orthopedist be imagined in the inverse sense. Oxford English Dictionary
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John Warrington Haward
surgical registrar, in 1873–1875 demonstrator of morbid anatomy (and curator of the associated museum), in 1875–1880 assistant surgeon and surgeon to the orthopædic wikipedia.org
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orthopædy
orthopædy, -pedy (ˈɔːθəpiːdɪ) [ad. F. orthopédie (1741 in Hatz.-Darm.), mod.L. orthopædia, f. Gr. ὀρθό-ς ortho- + παιδίον child, παιδεία rearing of children.] The curing or correcting of deformities in children, or in persons generally; orthopædic surgery.1840 Prospectus of Royal Orthopædic Hospital... Oxford English Dictionary
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Æ
typography (invitations, resolutions, announcements, and some government documents); for example, the Court Circular has continued to use the spelling orthopædic wikipedia.org
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orthopod
orthopod slang. (ˈɔːθəʊpɒd) [Alteration of orthopaedic a.] An orthopædic surgeon.1960 ‘R. Gordon’ Doctor in Clover ix. 76 We were interrupted by the surgeon himself, a big, red-faced, jolly Irishman. Most orthopods are, when you come to think of it. 1966 I. Jefferies House-Surgeon vii. 131 We had tw... Oxford English Dictionary
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Joseph Duveen, 1st Baron Duveen
Francis Cuthbert Garthwaite, DSC 2nd Bt. (1906–1993), on 23 July 1931 (div. 1937), and secondly, in 1938, Bryan Hartop Burns, B.A., B.Ch., F.R.C.S., Orthopædic wikipedia.org
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orthopraxy
orthopraxy rare. (ˈɔːθəʊpræksɪ) [f. ortho- + Gr. πρᾶξις doing, action, performance.] 1. [after orthodoxy.] Rightness of action; right-doing, practical righteousness; correct practice. Also orthopraxis.1852 Lynch Orthodoxy in Lett. to Scattered (1872) 270, I wish there was more orthopraxy in the worl... Oxford English Dictionary
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Makerere University School of Medicine
Department of Psychiatry Department of Family Medicine Department of Anæsthesia Department of Ear Nose Throat Department of Ophthalmology Department of Orthopædics Master of Medicine Anæsthesiology and Critical Care Ear Nose Throat Family Medicine Internal Medicine Obstetrics & Gynæcology Ophthalmology Orthopædic wikipedia.org
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James H. Williams Jr.
aircraft structures; (6) the stress analysis of a high-speed optical pulsing system; (7) the stress analysis of pelvic implants and bone stints for the Orthopædic wikipedia.org
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Zimmer
Zimmer (ˈzɪmə(r)) Also zimmer. [Maker's name.] A proprietary name for orthopædic appliances, used esp. attrib. to designate a kind of walking frame.1951 Trade Marks Jrnl. 11 Apr. 358/1 Zimmer... Orthopaedic appliances and instruments. Zimmer Orthopaedic Limited,..London, W.1..; manufacturers. 1957 O... Oxford English Dictionary
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Abbott (surname)
born 1947), American musician E Edith Abbott (1876–1957), American social worker, educator and author Edville Gerhardt Abbott (1871–1938), American orthopædic wikipedia.org
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Osgood–Schlatter
Osgood–Schlatter Med. (ˈɒzgʊd ˈʃlætə(r)) The names of Robert Bayley Osgood (1873–1956), U.S. surgeon, and Carl Schlatter (1864–1934), Swiss surgeon, used attrib. and in the possessive to denote a disease described independently by them in 1903, viz. epiphysitis of the tibial tubercle.[1909 Edin. Med... Oxford English Dictionary
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screener
screener (ˈskriːnə(r)) [f. screen v. + -er1.] 1. (See quot. 1816.)1816 J. H. H. Holmes Coal Mines Durh. & Northumb. 247 Screeners, men employed to screen the coals, which descend an iron screen into the wagon, and suffer the small coal or culm to pass through. 1892 Daily News 21 Mar. 6/2 The screene... Oxford English Dictionary
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plaster
▪ I. plaster, † plaister, n. (ˈplɑːstə(r), -æ-) Forms: α. 1, 4– plaster, 3–5 plastre, 4 -tir, 5 -tere, -tyr, plaaster, platster. β. 4 plaistre, 5 playstir, -tyr, -tre, 5–7 playster, 5–9 plaister. [The form plaster occurs in sense 1 in OE., ad. pop. L. plastrum (med.L. in Du Cange), shortened from em... Oxford English Dictionary
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