释义 |
Definition of anatomist in English: anatomistnounəˈnatəmɪstəˈnædəməst An expert in anatomy. 解剖学家 Example sentencesExamples - Anatomy brought life and liberty to the art of healing, and for three centuries the great names in medicine were those of the great anatomists.
- Galen, Vesalius, other anatomists, and the Church did not have the powerful perspective of historical data on anatomy, embryology, or genetics.
- This was a remarkable claim since Andreas Vesalius and modern anatomists had drawn human skeletons from observation and dissection since the sixteenth century.
- But the uniqueness of this muscle is that as it goes out, it blends in with two other muscles, so that when dissecting from the top, the anatomists may not have had a good idea as to which muscle is which.
- This volume, a specialized collection of essays on the impact of Marcello Malpighi, the seventeenth-century anatomist and physician, grew out of a conference held at Cambridge in 1994.
- This is the result of a tremendous amount of work done by highly skilled mathematicians, computer engineers, programmers, anatomists and medical illustrators.
- It was, after all, the Italian anatomists and other anatomists working in Italy that originally taught us anatomy.
- It seems that there is no contradiction: the anatomist is interested in the direction of the muscle's pull (down and out, and some torsion).
- Despite deliberately straddling the boundaries of taste and decency, the exhibition claims honourable descent from the traditions of public dissection and illustration by da Vinci, Vesalius, and the great anatomists.
- The following famous anatomists identified and described pancreatic anatomy and physiology.
- Stressing what the naked eye could see helped him lay the foundations of pathological anatomy, following the initiatives of the preeminent anatomist, Giovanni Morgagni.
- Four such panels (fourth year medical students, anatomists, clinicians, and recent graduates) were used to determine pass-fail scores for an anatomy test that was given to medical students in the fourth year of a six year programme.
- It doesn't have a name, which is a strange thing for an anatomical feature because anatomists have named every feature of the body.
- Many of the slides that were photographed have been handed down through several generations of microscopic anatomists.
- The first anatomical description of these variations was by the Dutch anatomist Anton Albinus in 1753.
- Top neurologists, pharmacologists, anatomists, ethicists and theologians are to examine the scientific basis of religious belief and whether it is anything more than a placebo.
- Specific details for the wide range of techniques developed by anatomists can be found in the cited references (Appendix V).
- Nevertheless, some Western anatomists actively promote viewing cadavers as patients to encourage respectful treatment.
- It is important to distinguish autopsies, where legal officials sought the cause of death, from anatomical dissections, where anatomists and, much later, medical students, learned normal anatomy.
- In this series, the surgeons, barbers, physicians, and artists of the past come alive in fascinating, if at times rather gory, scenes of the barbarities and other activities of anatomists seeking to further their knowledge.
OriginMid 16th century: from French anatomiste, from a medieval Latin derivative of anatomizare (see anatomize). Definition of anatomist in US English: anatomistnounəˈnadəməstəˈnædəməst An expert in anatomy; a dissector. 解剖学家 Example sentencesExamples - In this series, the surgeons, barbers, physicians, and artists of the past come alive in fascinating, if at times rather gory, scenes of the barbarities and other activities of anatomists seeking to further their knowledge.
- This is the result of a tremendous amount of work done by highly skilled mathematicians, computer engineers, programmers, anatomists and medical illustrators.
- Despite deliberately straddling the boundaries of taste and decency, the exhibition claims honourable descent from the traditions of public dissection and illustration by da Vinci, Vesalius, and the great anatomists.
- It was, after all, the Italian anatomists and other anatomists working in Italy that originally taught us anatomy.
- This was a remarkable claim since Andreas Vesalius and modern anatomists had drawn human skeletons from observation and dissection since the sixteenth century.
- Stressing what the naked eye could see helped him lay the foundations of pathological anatomy, following the initiatives of the preeminent anatomist, Giovanni Morgagni.
- This volume, a specialized collection of essays on the impact of Marcello Malpighi, the seventeenth-century anatomist and physician, grew out of a conference held at Cambridge in 1994.
- It doesn't have a name, which is a strange thing for an anatomical feature because anatomists have named every feature of the body.
- Galen, Vesalius, other anatomists, and the Church did not have the powerful perspective of historical data on anatomy, embryology, or genetics.
- It seems that there is no contradiction: the anatomist is interested in the direction of the muscle's pull (down and out, and some torsion).
- Four such panels (fourth year medical students, anatomists, clinicians, and recent graduates) were used to determine pass-fail scores for an anatomy test that was given to medical students in the fourth year of a six year programme.
- But the uniqueness of this muscle is that as it goes out, it blends in with two other muscles, so that when dissecting from the top, the anatomists may not have had a good idea as to which muscle is which.
- Many of the slides that were photographed have been handed down through several generations of microscopic anatomists.
- The following famous anatomists identified and described pancreatic anatomy and physiology.
- The first anatomical description of these variations was by the Dutch anatomist Anton Albinus in 1753.
- Specific details for the wide range of techniques developed by anatomists can be found in the cited references (Appendix V).
- Anatomy brought life and liberty to the art of healing, and for three centuries the great names in medicine were those of the great anatomists.
- It is important to distinguish autopsies, where legal officials sought the cause of death, from anatomical dissections, where anatomists and, much later, medical students, learned normal anatomy.
- Nevertheless, some Western anatomists actively promote viewing cadavers as patients to encourage respectful treatment.
- Top neurologists, pharmacologists, anatomists, ethicists and theologians are to examine the scientific basis of religious belief and whether it is anything more than a placebo.
OriginMid 16th century: from French anatomiste, from a medieval Latin derivative of anatomizare (see anatomize). |