The laser proved to work well with narrow grasping tools and scissors to dissect the gall bladder from the liver bed. |
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The forms should specifically use the term dissect and specify the use of the cadavers for medical education and research purposes. |
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It has hardly been possible to trace out and dissect the various constituents of the Hexateuch. |
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And yet it feels utterly incorrect to dissect separate pieces, which, in effect removes specific instrumentation from its context. |
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Erosion of old lava dome complexes has resulted in deep valleys that dissect pyroclastic and volcanoclastic fans. |
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We were told the story of a student whose grandfather, himself a medical doctor, had specifically asked her to dissect his body after death. |
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I studied the nude, and at the Medical Institute we were made to dissect corpses. |
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People want to analyse and dissect the mind to an incredible level of detail, to understand personality, motivation, influences and intent. |
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Every so often, literary scholars seem to want to dissect an author's body of work, hoping to gain some insight into their personal life. |
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But since we have already started to dissect the list of nominees, we will take a peak at other outrages and oddities. |
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In Scotland and in England royal assent was required in order to dissect the bodies of hanged felons. |
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She'll analyse and dissect everything from 19th century Russian literature to salt and pepper shakers in pubs. |
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Revealingly, Halberstam's book illustrates several of the shortcomings it purports to dissect. |
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Red mud paths dissect the vibrant green of paddy fields, the dense foliage of coconut, jackfruit, cashew, areca nut and bamboo plantations. |
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They want to study it and dissect it, picking away at its component parts like a cat worrying a mouse. |
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I like the songs that lyrically dissect opposing emotions and combine them within one song. |
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They have access to the best sources of information and regularly dissect competitive moves to determine future trends. |
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He then proceeds to dissect Heidegger's model of subjectivity according to three methodological phases. |
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We must guard against the temptation to cloud it with complexity or dissect it to obscurity. |
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He's gone in a whoosh, leaving the trio to dissect his speech. |
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Right now, each staff researcher is able to dissect 160 mosquitoes an hour. |
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Their timing was so superb and they had the ability to dissect a subject like a scalpel. |
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There is no Julian Assange-like messiah complex for cod-psychologists to dissect, and money doesn't appear to matter much to him. |
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Let us dissect it and make sure those things are in place that some Canadians are concerned about. |
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I was putting myself in the shoes particularly of the mayors of our municipalities, who would find themselves with another text to dissect. |
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We dissect the materials they use and try to determine whether Solvay can play a role in developing them. |
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The only way of ensuring that is to put the body on the table and dissect it. |
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The size and power of the rivers has enabled them to erode and dissect the landscape fairly deeply. |
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It helps you to dissect and understand the issue, what can be done about it and what your role in that might be. |
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Below, we dissect that process and some of the structural features of ActNowBC in light of the current literature on horizontal management. |
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To dissect humour, to take it apart to see what makes it tickle, is futile and destructive. |
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Guidelines from the Royal College of Pathologists allow mortuary technicians to dissect bodies and remove organs in the absence of the pathologist. |
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The exhibition goes on to dissect the recognizable aesthetic of paparazzi photos. |
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The purpose of this article is not to dissect the Bush Doctrine. |
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To hear Moore dissect that last scene, she was as much the voyeur of the moment as the participant. |
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At the beginning of the course, the students were divided into small groups to analyze and dissect clinical case studies during breakout group discussions. |
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We dissect the most insane accusations, from a cell phone lost at a crack den to a hint of heroin. |
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Suki and colleagues have taken the more conservative position that physical forces merely dissect the tissue as if it were a hank of rope under tension. |
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Japan claims it needs to harpoon the whales and dissect them to determine migration patterns as well as gain data on their feeding and breeding habits. |
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Furtive glances dissect her at thighs, hips, stomach, chest and face. |
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Wilde fantasised the narrative of his own downfall as a kind of shadow narrative to his comedies all of which dissect the downfall narrowly averted. |
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One of his positions was that of prosector for the London Zoo, which meant that he had to dissect and preserve any zoo animals that died in captivity. |
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This is exciting, because it means that we can dissect the chimpanzee species and ask, where are the ecological influences and what effects are they having? |
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At the time, the knowledge of anatomy was developing rapidly but anatomists were only legally allowed to dissect the corpses of executed criminals. |
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Ahmadinejad, a master of wordplay and double entendre, relishes the fact that we take him seriously and dissect his every word. |
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He has been accused of murdering beggars to dissect their bodies. |
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It begins by looking at literary analysis where it is normal to dissect texts to understand the techniques they use to achieve aesthetic technique. |
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We can dissect it and determine what the cops did wrong, maybe what Garner could have done differently. |
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Let us now analyze, take apart, dissect this motion, which, at first glance, may seem very confusing. |
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We dissect the crisis management and peacebuilding processes into their security, political and development dimensions in order to structure the work and ensure coordination of the different international actors involved. |
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Prothonotary Aronovitch held that it was not practical to attempt to dissect the grounds for validity, and therefore declined to order partial reversal. |
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But we have chosen not to dwell on or dissect them. |
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We had to dissect the issues and conduct our own research and learning. |
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The independent suspension used torsion bars, similar to the layout of a Porsche 356 — no coincidence, as one had been bought for Mr. McCulloch's team to dissect and study. |
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Hodgkin had just returned from his second visit to Paris, where he had learned to prepare and dissect cadaveric specimens. |
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They'll dissect and test, and consult their huge data bank for answers. |
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Summit Declarations have a tremendous political value in communicating Allies' views and intentions to third parties, who scrutinise them avidly and dissect the meaning behind every word and punctuation mark. |
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Fifty years later American students could flip open dozens of doors on a life-size cardboard manikin and pretend to dissect or, if they preferred, to operate. |
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The exercise uses a gradient approach that can be used to dissect associations and habitual behaviors and reduce the influence of the lower realms of will. |
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All of Eugène's friends have agreed to confidently give some lyrics and rough sound to be transformed without knowing how Eugène was going to dissect, fiddle with and mix all this. |
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Before commencing pelvic lymphadenectomy, detachment of the recto-sigmoid opposite the left external iiac vessels will make it easier to dissect the lymph nodes in this area. |
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So, two weeks out from defending his French Open title and just shy of his 29th birthday, it was no surprise to hear him dissect his travails here with typical candour. |
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Academics dissect Tom of Finland, Los Penitentes and ladies in the Marvel Universe. |
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Using more specific assays, we will focus on the role these pleurocidins play in promoting apoptosis for potential applications in cancer therapy and dissect the possible mechanism of action. |
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You're a whiz on the computer but couldn't care less about how to dissect a frog. |
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In the microscopic approach, we thoroughly dissect a passage. |
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That beauty, instead, was born out of long observations and meticulous research that led him to dissect the concept of painting into an alphabet in order to discover its essential letters. |
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The mikvah and other rituals may be easy targets, but Heller uses a deft scalpel to dissect them. |
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In the future, it will be of great interest to further dissect the function of each isoform in hematopoiesis. |
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It would take four years for a public inquiry to dissect the scheme. |
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With the federal election now behind us, I can, through hindsight, dissect the happenings a bit, and analyze the factors that helped shape our new governmental landscape. |
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Glacial erosion is represented in deep valleys which dissect the area. |
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Such obstacles prompted the development of small chemical inhibitors to dissect biological pathways in an approach popularly known as chemical genomics. |
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He also enjoyed fishing and shooting rabbits, and conducting experiments as in cooking a hedgehog or shooting down a jackdaw from the Eton roof to dissect it. |
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