lancet in English

noun
1
a small, broad, two-edged surgical knife or blade with a sharp point.
Medical wastes are defined as discarded sharps (needles, scalpel blades, lancets , and broken glass) and potentially infectious wastes.
2
a lancet arch or window.
Closer to home, the family remained engaged in local affairs, making large donations to St Andrews Martyr's Church, where a beautiful lancet known as Forgan's Window is still preserved.

Use "lancet" in a sentence

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

1. It's a lancet fluke.

2. Lancet flukes aren't smart.

3. The Lancet Amaas, OR KAFFIR MILK-POX

4. The Lancet ORIGINAL ARTICLES TOO FEW Appendicectomies ? J.G.R

5. “Potentially the most important medical advance this century.” —Lancet

6. Afterwords Francesco Talenti planned some combined double lancet windows and one triple lancet window in order to give the building impetus and lightness.

7. The Agonising negative trend in monitoring of clinical trials Lancet

8. Ambulacra: Lined by brachioles Ambulacral grooves covered by lancet plates

9. The Lancet THE Anticoagulating ACTION OF THE ARSENOBENZOLS ON BLOOD

10. 12 The findings, from Uganda, are in the medical journal, Lancet.

11. 11 The nurse pierced the skin of the boy with a lancet.

12. In the lancet Crosspieces located over streloobraznymi windows, the openwork stone ornament (fig

13. The Lancet ORIGINAL ARTICLES Antiscorbutic VALUES OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Mamie Olliver M.Sc

14. No risk 10 years after stopping Oral Contraceptive; Lancet (1996) 347:1713-27 [PubMed]

15. Flandin and Tzanck have described in THE LANCET 1 the Anticoagulating action of the …

16. The Lancet PARALYSIS Agitans; WITH AN ACCOUNT OF A NEW SYMPTOM Purves Stewart M.A., M.D

17. Blood sample collection kits comprising spot cards, gauze, adhesive bandage, sterile prep pad and lancet

18. The Bagnio men (bath attendants), who routinely bled the bathers in public baths, preferred the spring lancet

19. For an infant , the blood may be obtained by puncturing the heel with a small needle ( lancet ) .

20. Skin scratch test: a deep dermic scratch is performed with help of the blunt bottom of a lancet.

21. Lancet, a leading British medical journal, hailed the discovery as “potentially the most important medical advance this century.”

22. Regorafenib monotherapy for previously treated metastatic colorectal cancer (Correct): an international, multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial Lancet

23. The review — published in the medical journal The Lancet — found that 21 common Antidepressants beat placebos in strictly controlled tests.

24. 40 rows  · A scalpel, or lancet, or Bistoury, is a small and extremely sharp bladed instrument used for …

25. Still, “there is broad agreement that this illness is a product of the affluence, technology, and convenience of modern Japanese life,” states The Lancet.

26. A report by the EFSA ( European Food Safety Authority ) in this week 's edition of the Lancet reiterates this not so well known fact .

27. Professor Peter Butler at the Royal Free Hospital first suggested this approach in treating people with facial disfigurement in a Lancet article in 2002.

28. The main fecade in brick at sight is characterized from a double lancet windows. On the north side with angle s. Francesco's way the existing double lancet windows, comprised the two feinds, are instead an attempt of reorder of the same facade happened in the half of the 800 edited by Toscanelli became as the owner.

29. Prevalence of clinically significant liver disease within the general population, as defined by non-invasive markers of liver fibrosis: a systematic review Lancet Gastroenterol Hepatol

30. It was actually retracted from the journal Lancet, in which it was published, and that author, a physician, had his medical license taken away from him.

31. People who have a carotid bruit are at a significantly greater risk of cardiovascular death and heart attack, according to an article published in The Lancet.

32. Note the crenulations (uniform notches in the top of walls for shooting imaginary arrows), lancet windows (narrow and arched) and Bartizans (small protruding turrets supported by corbelling

33. “Perhaps the time has come to revise upwards the traditional definition of what constitutes old age, at least in developed countries,” recommends the British medical journal The Lancet.

34. The Ulugh Beg Madrasah, built by Ulugh Beg during the Timurid Empire era of Timur—Tamerlane, has an imposing iwan with a lancet-arch pishtaq or portal facing the square.

35. Present participle of bangle··Contention; squabbling 1870, The Lancet: Sir, cannot all this Bangling be easily rectified? Cannot the fee be taken with the schedule? Cannot an hour be …

36. (Note: See Amphioxuses for more definitions.) Quick definitions from WordNet (amphioxus) noun: small translucent lancet-shaped burrowing marine animal; primitive forerunner of the vertebrates Also see Amphioxuses Words similar to amphioxus Usage examples for amphioxus

37. 23 If you have a chronic health problem, the Lancet authors suggest a preflight medical assessment to determine whether it is safe for you to fly and what precautions you should take if you do fly.

38. Before Joseph Lister's landmark Lancet publications on the use of Carbolic acid wound dressings in 1867, surgeons Jules Lemaire in France and Enrico Bottini in Italy had already used Carbolic acid on hundreds of patients to control suppurative wounds

39. The editor-in-chief, Richard Horton, went on the record to say the paper had "fatal conflicts of interest" because the study's lead author, Andrew Wakefield, had a serious conflict of interest that he had not declared to The Lancet.

40. (3) The Pocket Case contained: 1 scalpel, 3 Bistouries, 1 tenotome, 1 gum lancet, 2 thumb lancets, 1 razor (small), 1 artery forceps, 1 dressing forceps, 1 artery needle, 6 surgeon's needles, 1 exploring needle, 1 tenaculum, 1 scissors, 1 director, 3 probes, 1 caustic holder, 1 silver catheter (compound), 6 yards suture wire (iron), ¼ oz

41. Alcoholism, also known as Alcohol Use Disorder or AUD, is among the leading causes of preventable deaths worldwide.A recent study published in The Lancet concluded that Alcoholism among men and women aged 15-49 was the single biggest cause of premature death, and that “alcohol use is a leading risk factor for global disease burden and causes substantial health loss.”