Sensory nerve endings in this ligament detect the loading and produce neural signals proportionate to the load. |
|
Unhappy endings linger in your mind, leaving an ache in your heart and a problem to resolve. |
|
Hiragana are used in writing verb endings, adverbs, conjunctions, and various sentence particles and are written in a cursive, smooth style. |
|
Indeed, my dreams usually had happy endings, involving successful intercepts that Saved Civilization. |
|
In other words, clever endings can't conceal that his films are essentially bloodless, forgettable exercises. |
|
Invariably most of these cases have had happy endings, says Superintendent of Police. |
|
It gives us a glimpse of the inner woman, who, although she wrote happy endings for her novels, was destined to be disappointed in love. |
|
Hollywood has a long tradition of mining American history for film plots, but lately it's been harder to find those essential happy endings. |
|
So they swallow this stuff that gets into the bloodstream and goes to those nerve endings that control the central nervous system. |
|
There are certain nerve endings that extend from the spine to the arms, legs, hands, feet, and all over the body. |
|
The epithelium consists of five or six constantly renewing cell layers and nerve endings, which account for corneal sensitivity. |
|
Be very gentle with it, there are a lot of nerve endings in this piece of flesh. |
|
It must be nearly 25 years since I was last force-fed irregular verb endings by overenthusiastic French teachers. |
|
The structure of Old English was more like Latin in that words had various inflectional endings to indicate their grammatical function. |
|
The gender of a noun controls the forms of the article, as well as the endings on adjectives. |
|
It doesn't have separate words for articles, prepositions, or pronouns, which are indicated by altered word endings. |
|
It's easy enough to see how someone who doesn't know Latin could fail to realize that certain plural endings go with certain singular endings. |
|
Japanese words are composed of many syllables, and endings are attached to change tense, form a negative, or otherwise modify meaning. |
|
Unlike Russian, however, modern Macedonian does not change the endings of nouns according to their grammatical case. |
|
In Russian, this sentence is impersonal, without a subject or a predicate, and only Russian case endings indicate the relations between words. |
|
|
The ending is after all where most of the subtle action tends to be, with your verb endings, plurals and suchlike. |
|
Most endings can also be seen as a new beginning so let's keep our fingers crossed. |
|
Or could it be that audiences are hungry again for light-hearted escapism and happy endings? |
|
They are encircled by a pigmented ring called the areola, and surrounded by nerve endings and blood vessels. |
|
I dislike the music, find the plots to be asinine and chauvinistic, and hate the predictable and unrealistically cheerful endings. |
|
They can, however, have happier endings once enough people stand athwart the system, and yell stop. |
|
Fairytales were always a bit of a swindle, bribing us with happy endings to accept their sanctimonious morality. |
|
This is probably something to do with us having two to three thousand nerve endings in our scalp crying out for stimulation. |
|
She suffers from osteoarthritis, tendonitis and has irritable nerve endings around her knees. |
|
The first four conjugations are thematic, ie a thematic vowel precedes the personal endings. |
|
Thematic verbs were distinguished by the presence of a thematic vowel between the verbal stem and the endings. |
|
Since you don't have nerve endings in the brain, the patient can be completely awake as you thread the lead down in the brain. |
|
Tissue congestion and inflammation tend to sensitize nerve endings and lower the threshold for stimuli. |
|
Americans like their wars to have clean endings, with ticker-tape parades and a memorial on the Mall in Washington. |
|
Men also have many sensitive nerve endings in their nipples and can become very excited by nipple kisses, sucks, and twirls. |
|
In neither case are the flawed endings disastrous, but, for discerning viewers, the end-game melodramatics may leave a slightly bitter taste. |
|
The seams and taut binding of the corset brought a sensual awareness to the nerve endings of each long finger. |
|
Here he takes the traditional polyphonic form of church music and gives it a modern twist, with unexpected endings and harmonies. |
|
This protein stimulates nerve endings at an injury site and within the spinal cord, increasing pain messages. |
|
Fish have many nerve endings along their bodies for smell, vibrations, water temperature etc. |
|
|
When the bladder is full, nerve endings in its wall send impulses to the brain. |
|
Nerve endings in our limbs and in the bottoms of our feet indicate current body position. |
|
There are many nerve endings or ganglia near the body surface which can be stimulated to influence some physiological functions. |
|
The foot has many thousands of nerve endings which are stimulated during a massage. |
|
Signals from nerve endings in the mouth evoke salivation by exciting the salivatory centres in the brainstem. |
|
She had lost feeling in her legs due to an infection that damaged her nerve endings. |
|
Sweat glands are activated by nerve endings in the dermal layer of the skin that respond to chemical messages from the brain. |
|
The misspelt sign grates on your nerve endings every single time you walk past it, doesn't it? |
|
This song sucks so hard I feel my soul being torn from the mass of nerve endings at the base of my spine. |
|
I brought the few happy endings, not the ninefold majority where the endings were not so happy. |
|
The end result of this vasomotor instability is compression of the capillaries and the nociceptive and pain-transmitting nerve endings. |
|
Gone are the pompous, moralistic tomes full of Victorian values and happy endings. |
|
The virus then enters the nerve endings and travels to the spinal cord and brain. |
|
Few things draw us out of the revolving squirrel cages of our minds and out into the nerve endings of our skin better than that. |
|
What was known was that certain types of nerve endings responded to capsaicin by allowing calcium ions to flow into the cell. |
|
Other critics cite stock characterization, weak plots, and contrived endings. |
|
Let's face it, spaghetti toes with meatball endings are a little goofy looking to most of us, as are short, stubby piggies. |
|
Every square inch of skin contains thousands of cells and hundreds of sweat glands, oil glands, nerve endings, and blood vessels. |
|
Jackson's versions of happy endings often entail a paradisal communion of human and animal. |
|
Death also symbolises endings, so the passing of relationships, jobs and periods of life are reflected upon. |
|
|
The retinaculum and patellar tendon are richly innervated with free nerve endings. |
|
The unique format and the cliffhanger endings kept me in my seat from start to finish. |
|
The truth is that fairy-tale endings are probably very few and far between. |
|
Because how can the real thing possibly compete with a million fantasy endings, constructed in a million minds? |
|
If death is just life upside down, as these lines suggest, then there are certainly no tragic endings to human life, no consummating finalities. |
|
She hasn't read any of Shaun's books but was intrigued by his story and the possible endings. |
|
Youngsters nowadays prefer watching love stories with convoluted endings that stretch for more than three hours. |
|
Beginnings and endings, the dual portals of narrative, are often charged with portent and revelation. |
|
It acts as a counterirritant that stimulates nerve endings, helping to reduce the number of pain messages that reach the brain. |
|
It's a deadening of the nerve cells of the nerve endings in the lower extremities. |
|
The second mechanism of TCA cardiotoxicity involves the blockade of norepinephrine uptake at the adrenergic presynaptic endings. |
|
According to Birkeland, this is a new development, reflecting a tendency to drop the declensional endings. |
|
The thicker or inner layer of the dermis contains blood vessels, hair follicles, nerve endings, sweat and sebaceous glands. |
|
But then she spoke again, in this pleading, grating voice that rubbed his nerve endings raw. |
|
In West Africa, didactic tales and tales of magic with moral endings are very popular. |
|
These works commemorated the lives of early dynasts, marking rituals they performed on the occasion of calendrical period endings. |
|
The nerve endings on his fingers had become ultra sensitive and he explored his hair as if it were the deep jungle of Viet Nam. |
|
But with the entry of the King we are launched upon a subscene in verse which, on the one hand, has a higher percentage of double endings. |
|
That ought to have overloaded their olfactory nerve endings. |
|
It's got one of the most dauntingly bleak and unhappy endings imaginable. |
|
|
The sensory distribution of nerve endings in the tongue tip is especially rich while there are few receptors in the dorsum or blade of the tongue. |
|
I am not averse to an unhappy ending, far from it, but, as you will gather, I feel endings should arise naturally out of the plot and not be grafted on to it. |
|
The tetrameters are made to halt, by placing the strongest syntactical and rhetorical pauses within the short lines, while the strong rhymes chime out the line endings. |
|
Because there are hundreds of nerve endings and close to 30 major pressure points in our feet, sometimes people need a little more than a bath to ease pain and relieve stress. |
|
They share many nerve endings and chemical transmitters and, throughout life, the gut remains linked to the brain through a network of nerves and hormonal substances. |
|
All of them meander through multiple surprises to satisfying and unexpected endings. |
|
As with any good theatre production, endings are rarely sugar-coated. |
|
But the wrap is as light as tissue paper and it binds nerve endings together, helping them grow back naturally so patients can move their fingers again. |
|
You know, books don't always have to end well, and have happy endings. |
|
The lachrymatory factor from an onion activates the nerve endings of pain fibres in the top layer of the cornea, leading to increased production and release of tears. |
|
By this phase, the children usually spell inflectional endings correctly. |
|
Films with happy endings are usually favoured by the audience. |
|
The trouble with films is that we've come to expect them to follow a basic formula, usually involving all loose endings being tied up and a happy ending. |
|
Snakes have simple nerve endings for vibration perception and Herbst corpuscles in birds and Pacinian corpuscles in Eutherian mammals allow for perception of vibrations. |
|
I'm sure some of these may have had more realistic endings and the happier ones were tacked on by the demands of the studio, who always avoid offending the public. |
|
The primary mechanoreceptors in the chest are the muscle spindle endings and tendon organs of the respiratory muscles and the joint proprioceptor. |
|
A cynic might say that the report is like the movie clue, perfectly set up for a multiplicity of endings. |
|
Community has always been a sitcom about sitcoms, and thus it seems natural for it to tackle the subject of endings. |
|
Yes, Mehta might be Indian but there's not a gulab jamun in sight as he concocts unusual endings, which become the talk of diners and food critics. |
|
The nerve endings present are discussed under headings of compact unencapsulated endings, diffuse unencapsulated endings and end-nets, all of which are derived from myelinated axons. |
|
|
It shows that the lower a person's social status, the more likely he or she is to use a higher percentage of alveolar rather than velar nasal endings. |
|
If nerve endings in Downing Street were that raw during two elections that were a bit of a cruise, consider how frazzled they are getting about this much bumpier contest. |
|
There is an inherent darkness to the Nordic Noir shows, and a sense that the scales are never balanced or endings neatly tied up. |
|
The free nerve endings of cranial nerve V are located diffusely throughout the nasal respiratory epithelium, including regions of the olfactory neuroepithelium. |
|
Sound from a microphone placed near the ear is converted to weak electrical currents that activate auditory nerve endings inside the cochlea in the inner ear. |
|
He flags his surprise endings far too far in advance, for one thing. |
|
Procaine and steroids can inhibit the excitement of nerve endings. |
|
While the graduation might mark the end of the program for this year, he said, there are no endings in art and the students were just at a new beginning. |
|
This suggests that the responsible nerve endings are mechanoreceptive. |
|
The labrum may also participate in nociceptive and proprioceptive mechanisms as free nerve endings and sensory end organs have been identified in its superficial layers. |
|
Bogart and Bergman's heart-rending airstrip farewell is enshrined as one of the all-time great endings, and was pastiched to great effect in Woody Allen's Play It Again Sam. |
|
The open-ended nature of the story is in keeping with the character who has been presented to us but is a little on the frustrating side for anyone seeking tidy endings. |
|
Nonetheless they showed Andersen a way to write stories with unhappy endings while avoiding the sentimentality and melodrama that plague his novels. |
|
In the future, additional functions will be incorporated so that kanji and kana can be used properly and declensional kana endings can be checked. |
|
The more nerve endings in the area, the more painful it might be. |
|
Many sufferers complain the daily pricking of their fingers is more painful than having an injection due to the mass of nerve endings at their fingertips. |
|
The neuter nouns of all classes differed from the masculines and feminines in their nominative and accusative endings, which were alike. |
|
Stories of war, death, fear and desperation do not have happy endings. |
|
Play together rhythmically from the very beginning of a piece, managing rubatos, ritardandos and endings. |
|
Abundant tables list suffixes and endings, the structured formulae of ligands, and the names of homoatomic and binary compounds. |
|
|
Furthermore, in Semitic the loss of case endings could be a result of phonological changes, rather than a structural change as Gzella suggests. |
|
The Electronic Foot Massager and Circulator uses electromagnetic impluses to stimulate the nerve endings in the soles of your feet. |
|
And as if all this were not enough to deal with, at the end of the series of suffixes there sprouted bunches of case endings. |
|
Tormented dualities and unblessed beginnings, and endings, are still nourishment for the spirit. |
|
A separate table of endings included cherry and apple strudels, palascintas, plum dumplings and several pastries and Hungarian seven-layer cake. |
|
Akin to a stroke, the bends are particularly brutal on nerve endings, which can only survive a short time without air. |
|
Noradrenaline Also known as norepinephrine, this is a hormone secreted by certain nerve endings and by the adrenal glands. |
|
Bhayani explained that when noise is too loud, it begins to kill the hair cells and nerve endings in the inner ear. |
|
A single case may contain many different endings, some of which may even be derived from different roots. |
|
The antidating movement produced happy endings for some and disillusionment for others. |
|
Nouns, adjectives, pronouns, and verbs had many more inflectional endings and forms, and word order was much freer than in Modern English. |
|
The body of the word was so nearly the same in the two languages that only the endings would put obstacles in the way of mutual understanding. |
|
In Old English, however, nouns and their modifying words take appropriate endings depending on their case. |
|
Adjectives had both strong and weak sets of endings, the weak ones being used when a definite or possessive determiner was also present. |
|
Each tense has a set of endings corresponding to the person and number referred to. |
|
The table below displays the common inflected endings for the indicative mood in the active voice in all six tenses. |
|
Welsh has a variety of different endings and other methods to indicate the plural, and two endings to indicate the singular of some nouns. |
|
These names were based on the appearance of the two sets of endings in modern German. |
|
In English, both two sets of adjective endings were lost entirely in the late Middle English period. |
|
It is also argued that Norse immigrants to England had a great impact on the loss of inflectional endings in Middle English. |
|
|
Cornish has a variety of different endings to indicate the plural, and some nouns have a third collective form. |
|
Woolf admired Chekhov for his stories of ordinary people living their lives, doing banal things and plots that had no neat endings. |
|
The Vulgar Latin vowel shifts caused the merger of several case endings in the nominal and adjectival declensions. |
|
Which endings survived was different for each language, although most tended to favour second conjugation endings over the third conjugation. |
|
Romanian also maintained the distinction between the second and third conjugation endings. |
|
To a certain degree, the gender difference is indicated by specific word endings. |
|
Differences between the two systems are particularly noticeable in word endings. |
|
Graham's claim that two endings had been filmed was later revealed to be a ruse. |
|
Many waders have sensitive nerve endings at the end of their bills which enable them to detect prey items hidden in mud or soft soil. |
|
However, its adjectives still do have endings, whereas English adjectives do not. |
|
Ever since the ancient times, various authors have sought to imagine new endings for The Odyssey. |
|
In Latin, the endings of nouns, verbs, adjectives, and pronouns allow for extremely flexible order in most situations. |
|
Most forms are produced by inflecting the verb stem, with endings that also depend on the person and number of the subject. |
|
In general, masculine and neuter words share their endings, while feminine words have their own subset of endings. |
|
In German, grammatical case is largely preserved in the articles and adjectives, but nouns have lost many of their original endings. |
|
Esperanto words are mostly derived by stringing together roots, grammatical endings, and at times prefixes and suffixes. |
|
Later, with the gradual loss of unstressed endings, many such syllables ceased to be open, but the vowel remained long. |
|
Rudy acknowledges there are no easy answers nor perfect endings. |
|
Despite all the unhappy endings chronicled above, some litigants have expressed their frustration antipodally and walked away unscathed. |
|
This area is rich with nerve endings that, when stroked, reduce blood pressure, lower the heart rate and induce a sense of calm. |
|
|
Origin, course, and endings of abnormal enteric nerve fibres in Hirschsprung's disease defined by whole-mount immunohistochemistry. |
|
The space between cells that is occupied by axonal and dendrite endings is called neuropile. |
|
The specific ligamentous sensory receptors found at the ankle joint are Ruffini endings and Pacinian corpuscles. |
|
These drugs have a weak vasoconstricting effect and deactivate the hypersensitized trigeminal nerve endings. |
|
The cushions also cover exposed nerve endings to relieve pain instantly and keep natural moisture in and germs out, allowing the skin to breathe and move. |
|
This operation, to shave the nerve endings in his wrist, will hopefully enable the 59-times capped scrum-half to take up that opportunity at the Arms Park. |
|
As it is evident from the below given table that the per capita SDP in different above mentioned states are varying with a large amount in all the three triennium endings. |
|
A number of enjoyable endings, most of which are freshly baked in Emle's productive kitchen, include warm apple pie, a frothy tiramisu and a creamy, tart key lime pie. |
|
Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns or adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. |
|
Note that this does not affect the endings for other persons and numbers. |
|
Note also that the inflectional endings mean it is not necessary to include the subject pronoun, except for emphasis, or to avoid ambiguity in complex sentences. |
|
The possibility to turn adjectives and even nouns into verbs also exists, although this is mostly done by means of an affix, on top of the verbal endings. |
|
Postsynaptic activation in median eminence nerve endings shortly after superior cervical ganglionectomy was accompanied by a decrease in TSH release. |
|
A normal reader cannot take in the instances of the do auxiliary and other unobtrusive function words, or feminine endings, or even certain spellings. |
|
In young neuromuscular synapses, nerve endings match up with their receptors on muscle fibers, enabling efficient transmission of brain signals to the muscle. |
|
Nerve endings in skin signal your brain so you can feel things. |
|
At the end of the Old Saxon period, distinctions between noun classes began to disappear, and endings from one were often transferred to the other declension, and vice versa. |
|
In some languages, particularly Slavic languages, a case may contain different groups of endings depending on whether the word is a noun or an adjective. |
|
The numbers from 4 to 100 often do not change their endings. |
|
In the mixed population which existed in the Danelaw these endings must have led to much confusion, tending gradually to become obscured and finally lost. |
|
|
A cadaveric study showed a small number of free nerve endings in the fibro-cartilage tissue of the peripheral half of the labrum, with no evidence for mechanoreceptors. |
|
Note that the endings of the past passive participle show a special distribution in this table because participle endings divide four conjugations into three parts. |
|
While Metroid introduced multiple endings to a linear game, other more recent designs have presented free-roaming worlds incorporating multiple gameplay paths. |
|
End-to-side anastomoses of transected nerves to prevent neuroma formation include coaptations of the nerve endings to the adjacent nerve or back upon itself. |
|
However, they have several types of sensitive nerve endings in their epidermis, and are able to sense chemicals in the water, touch, and even the presence or absence of light. |
|
As for endings, the baba au rhum is a nostalgic surprise, and sweet offerings of creme caramel, lemon tart and a typically English rice pudding receive positive nods. |
|
In late phases of OA, a decreased amount of joint fluid and destruction of the osteochondral junction may induce injury to the nerve endings in this area. |
|
An important factor to consider about Odysseus' homecoming is the hint at potential endings to the epic by using other characters as parallels for his journey. |
|
I sleep fine, Frankie. Sometimes a little lettuce opium just to get me into it, but I don't feel like that you have to give me no happy endings here. |
|
Since these vowels were part of the grammatical endings in the nouns and verbs, their loss led to radical simplification of the inflectional grammar of German. |
|
In time, however, these endings fell out of use and the participle came to be seen no longer as an adjective but as part of the verb, as in Modern German. |
|
Each of the three daughters independently standardized on one of the two endings and, by chance, Gothic and Old Norse ended up with the same ending. |
|
In addition, in some Slavic languages, such as Polish, word stems are frequently modified by the addition or absence of endings, resulting in consonant and vowel alternation. |
|
The Singular and Plural categories are fused with the article, and these endings are used when the noun phrase is not closed by any other determiner. |
|
Local case endings are not normally added to animate Proper Nouns. |
|
All this blood rushing to the infected area makes the blood vessels in your throat swell, and the swelling puts pressure on the nerve endings in your throat. |
|
The Drag Race host is set to sashay to the ABC comedy Happy Endings for a guest arc. |
|
Soon after he was cast in the critically beloved ABC sitcom Happy Endings, on which he played Max Blum. |
|
Brown captures the isolating netherworld of loss and grief, but Happier Endings is anything but maudlin. |
|