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TEAR |
Rupture |
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HERNIA |
Rupture |
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BURST |
Rupture |
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RIFT |
Rupture |
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BREACH |
Rupture |
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RUPTURED |
Of Rupture |
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RUPTURING |
Of Rupture |
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CRACK |
Rupture; flaw; breach, in a moral sense. |
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RUPTION |
A breaking or bursting open; breach; rupture. |
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SHEATEAR |
After building hut, a rupture makes you weep |
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SNAP |
A sudden breaking or rupture of any substance. |
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LAPAROCELE |
A rupture or hernia in the lumbar regions. |
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SPLIT |
To burst; to rupture; to rend; to tear asunder. |
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FRACTURE |
The act of breaking or snapping asunder; rupture; breach. |
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SCROTOCELE |
A rupture or hernia in the scrotum; scrotal hernia. |
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RUPTURE |
To part by violence; to break; to burst; as, to rupture
a blood vessel. |
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RENT |
Figuratively, a schism; a rupture of harmony; a separation;
as, a rent in the church. |
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BURSTWORT |
A plant (Herniaria glabra) supposed to be valuable for
the cure of hernia or rupture. |
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RETARD |
To put off; to postpone; as, to retard the attacks of
old age; to retard a rupture between nations. |
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ANEURISM |
A soft, pulsating, hollow tumor, containing blood,
arising from the preternatural dilation or rupture of the coats of an
artery. |
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DIAPEDESIS |
The passage of the corpuscular elements of the blood
from the blood vessels into the surrounding tissues, without rupture of
the walls of the blood vessels. |
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TRAUMATISM |
A wound or injury directly produced by causes external
to the body; also, violence producing a wound or injury; as, rupture of
the stomach caused by traumatism. |
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FILANDERS |
A disease in hawks, characterized by the presence of
small threadlike worms, also of filaments of coagulated blood, from the
rupture of a vein; -- called also backworm. |
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EXTRAVASATION |
The act of forcing or letting out of its proper
vessels or ducts, as a fluid; effusion; as, an extravasation of blood
after a rupture of the vessels. |
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DISRUPTION |
The act or rending asunder, or the state of being rent
asunder or broken in pieces; breach; rent; dilaceration; rupture; as,
the disruption of rocks in an earthquake; disruption of a state. |