calcified in English

verb
1
harden by deposition of or conversion into calcium carbonate or some other insoluble calcium compounds.
calcified cartilage

Use "calcified" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "calcified" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "calcified", or refer to the context using the word "calcified" in the English Dictionary.

1. The rock calcified over the centuries.

2. The pieces of this Black Diamond are basically calcified evil.

3. Avicularia adventitious, suboral, longer than wide, directed proximally, rostrum triangular, tip acute, distal calcified sheld extensive, crossbar calcified, curved; Avicularian chamber slightly raised above the frontal shield (Figures 18E–F).

4. Cementum is a specialized calcified substance covering the root of a tooth

5. Dental Cementum is a specialized calcified structure covering the root of a tooth

6. Other articles where Cuttlebone is discussed: cuttlefish: …internal calcified shell called the Cuttlebone

7. Through some fluke, it remained in your abdominal cavity and just calcified overtime.

8. Ironically, it is these mawkish , calcified heads that have tarnished the sculptor's reputation.

9. Described herein are shock wave devices and methods for the treatment of calcified heart valves.

10. The Cementum is a special calcified substance which covers the root of a tooth

11. Cementum is a hard, calcified layer of tissue that covers the root of the tooth

12. In addition, fire corals have a sharp, calcified external skeleton that can scrape the skin.

13. The Cementum is a special type of calcified substance which covers and protects tooth’s root

14. Cartilaginous or partially calcified biconcave vertebrae are always well developed; they Constrict the notochord intervertebrally

15. Today, only two small phylogeneticallyunrelated groups, the nautilids and the Argonautids ('paper nautilus') possess an external calcified shell

16. The Cuttlebone is comprised of delicate calcified microscopic plates that are easily carved, crushed and powdered when dry

17. A sAlivary gland stone -- also called sAlivary duct stone -- is a calcified structure that may form inside a sAlivary gland or duct

18. Cavities form when there is breakdown of the outer, calcified enamel of the tooth by bacteria commonly found in the human mouth

19. Extraction of proteins from extensively calcified osseous tissue,[Sentence dictionary] such as cortical bone has been particularly challenging for traditional methods of sample preparation.

20. Constrictive pericarditis is a potentially curable condition caused by a variety of situations which result in inflamed, scarred, thickened, or calcified pericardium.

21. Calcify Meaning: "become hardened like bone," 1785 (implied in calcified), from French calcifier, from stem of Latin… See definitions of Calcify.

22. Cementum is the least known calcified tissue in vertebrates (Bosshardt and Schroeder 1996) and several questions about cementogenesis have not yet been answered

23. Results It was shown that calcium globules of various electron density or sheets of calcified osseous tissue blended with titanium at the interface.

24. The reefs are a mass of reef-building corals and dead, calcified organisms with bones or shells—everything from coralline algae and foraminifers to shellfish.

25. Some heavily calcified Bryozoans have been identi-fied as potential bioindicators of OA given their vul-nerability (Smith 2009, Fortunato 2015, Taylor et al

26. Cuttlefish, any of about 100 species of marine cephalopods belonging to the order Sepioidea and characterized by a thick internal calcified shell called the Cuttlebone

27. Cuttlefish, any of about 100 species of marine cephalopods belonging to the order Sepioidea and characterized by a thick internal calcified shell called the cuttlebone

28. Calcify (third-person singular simple present calcifies, present participle Calcifying, simple past and past participle calcified) To make something hard and stony by impregnating with calcium salts

29. Its ancestrula, however, displays — likeOnychocella Jullien — semicircular opesiae and normally formed calcified frontal walls (cryptocysts), revealing its lineage from this genus which belongs to the Coilostega.

30. Clasper and Clasper Spurs In the adult white shark, the Claspers are scroll-shaped heavily calcified appendages that protrude 35–40 cm from the medial margin of the pelvic fin

31. In all of them, billions of calcified insect ootheca testify to past occurrences of Acridian plagues, such as those reaching the western Sahara following heavy rainfall events over the Sahel.

32. Cementum is the thin layer of calcified (tough calcium deposits) tissue covering the dentine of the root and is one of four tissues that support the tooth in the jaw (the periodontium)

33. They were lightly stained with methylene blue and Alizarin Red S, which provided great contrast between the bone and soft tissues, and clearly demonstrated the formation of calcified bone within porous metal and ceramic implants.

34. In these Calcareous (limestone) formations are grand halls and rooms, narrow passages, underground rivers, stalactites and stalagmites where fossils of ancient plants and animals have been preserved among the calcified walls and ceilings, products …

35. Cuttlefish definition is - any of various marine cephalopod mollusks (order Sepioidea, especially genus Sepia) having eight short arms and two usually longer tentacles and differing from the related squid in having a calcified internal shell.

36. Herein is presented another technique for complete endovascular distal plantar vein Arterialization (DPVA) in no-option critical limb ischemia (CLI) patients (Rutherford category 6) with severely calcified occlusion of the poste-rior tibial artery (PTA) and poor plantar artery runoff.

37. Calcify From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Chemistry Calcify cal‧ci‧fy / ˈkælsɪfaɪ / verb ( calcified , Calcifying , calcifies ) [ intransitive, transitive ] HARD technical to become hard , or make something hard, by adding lime → See Verb table Origin Calcify …

38. A calcified Aorta, also known as aortic stenosis, is marked by the following symptoms: chest pain as the heart struggles to pump enough blood through the narrowed passage, fatigue, shortness of breath after extraneous activity, heart palpitations, and a heart murmur, says Healthline.

39. Anorganic Bone Graft Materials: Anorganic bone graft materials are a type of xenograft bone graft substitute made from other than human material, such as cow (i.e., bovine) or coral, and is typically used in combination with other types of bone graft materials, for example with collagen or a calcified matrix.

40. A calcified liver may be indicative of liver lesions or tumors, although liver calification is not commonly associated with a serious disorder or underlying condition.If, during a scan of the liver, the only irregularity seen is the presence of liver Calcification, this is generally not a major cause for concern.

41. Inflections of 'Calcify' (v): (⇒ conjugate) calcifies v 3rd person singular Calcifying v pres p verb, present participle: -ing verb used descriptively or to form progressive verb--for example, "a singing bird," "It is singing." calcified v past verb, past simple: Past tense--for example, "He saw the man."

42. Cremation is the process of burning a dead body at very high temperatures until there are only brittle, calcified bones left, which are then pulverized into "ashes." These ashes can be kept in an urn, buried, scattered or even incorporated into objects as part of the last rites of death.

43. A satisfactory explanation of this phenomenon may be that the neonastic stage characterising the peripheral growing tip of the colony with its incompletely calcified frontal walls of the zooids dominated the whole colony, induced by a stop of the calcification of the cryptocyst, with the exception of the ancestrula, the result of which being a secondary membranimorph stage, characteristic for the Malacostega.

44. Among the initiatives discussed were the branding and marketing of Falkland Islands (Malvinas) natural products (i.e. meat, wool, fish, calcified seaweed fertilizer and kelp) to world markets; fast-tracking the export of organic agriculture; the construction of a new abattoir built to European Union standards to open in July 2001; an open-door licensing policy for hydrocarbon exploration in unlicensed acreage; the development of onshore fisheries activity; the construction of a new deep-water port for use by tourist and commercial vessels; the responsible development of tourism and the development of a new Falklands (Malvinas) Internet portal with linked web sites to promote a welcoming image of the Islands and to facilitate e-commerce.