inoculation|inoculations in English
noun
[in·oc·u·la·tion || ɪ‚nɑkjə'leɪʃn /-nɒkjʊ'l-]
immunization, vaccination, introduction of a virus or microorganism into the body of a human or animal; introduction of microorganisms into a culture medium
Use "inoculation|inoculations" in a sentence
1. Has the puppy had all its inoculations yet?
2. A route of inoculation into the abdominal cavity. Inoculation into a vein.
3. from bad weather to emergencies or inoculations for the cattle.
4. Inoculation with activated sludge
5. The inoculation did not take.
6. An inoculation against cholera is recommended.
7. The disease can now be prevented by inoculation.
8. Have the baby have a diphtheria inoculation?
9. These larger inoculations of vaccine and heavier auto-inoculations pro- duce after that very fleeting positive phase a negative phase or--for these are better terms-an Apophylactic or de-immu- nising effect
10. This may eventually lead to routine inoculation of children.
11. Objective To improve the inoculation technique of Penicillin fermenter.
12. After inoculation of pregnant women does not affect fetal development.
13. Inoculation area: the main equipment here is bio safety cabinet.
14. The proteolytic activity of culture filtrates was maximum 12–14 days after inoculation.
15. Different inoculation routes could result in different immunologic potency and persistent time.
16. The melting velocity of inoculant in molten iron directly influences effect of inoculation treatment.
17. From inoculation experiments and morphological examinations, the aecial state of Pucciniastrum sparsum (Wint.)
18. Inoculation, however, increased the amount of adenosine triphosphate in the peripheral trunk zones.
19. Rhizobia inoculation significantly increased Basipetal auxin transport in both Medicago truncatula and Lotus japonicus
20. Inoculation with large amount of inoculant can increase properties of castings and process yield.
21. Inoculation near the periosteum after injury of the condylus medialis femoris was considered most succesful.
22. Abstract: Smallpox inoculation or variolation is a great invention of medicine in ancient China.
23. [On the zones of the inoculation surface simulating the phenomenon of Bacteriophagia] Lab Delo
24. Shedding of the Aflagellar and intimin-Aflagellar mutants ceased 99 and 113 days after inoculation, respectively
25. Smallpox, polio, tetanus, cholera, rabies, typhoid fever and yellow fever are some of the diseases for which vaccines or inoculations have been prepared.