- Blood fluid
- Blood part
- Clear fluid in the blood
- Clear liquid part of blood
- Fluid part of blood
- Fluid portion of blood
- In a dream, Sal Paradise returns a TV screen
- Antitoxin
- Blood fluid
- Blood plasma
- Case rumoured to contain blood fluid
- Expose rumour involving vaccine
- Fluid part of blood
- Liquid part of blood
- A thick, viscid fluid; a clot, as of blood.
- Abnormality
- Unusual occurrence
- The act of wandering; deviation, especially from truth
or moral rectitude, from the natural state, or from a type.
- A partial alienation of reason.
- A small periodical change of position in the stars and
other heavenly bodies, due to the combined effect of the motion of
light and the motion of the observer; called annual aberration, when
the observer's motion is that of the earth in its orbit, and daily or
diurnal aberration, when of the earth on its axis; amounting when
greatest, in the former case, to 20.4'', and in the latter, to 0.3''.
Planetary aberration is that due to the motion of light and the motion
of the planet relative to the earth.
- The convergence to different foci, by a lens or mirror,
of rays of light emanating from one and the same point, or the
deviation of such rays from a single focus; called spherical
aberration, when due to the spherical form of the lens or mirror, such
form giving different foci for central and marginal rays; and chromatic
aberration, when due to different refrangibilities of the colored rays
of the spectrum, those of each color having a distinct focus.
- The passage of blood or other fluid into parts not
appropriate for it.
- The act of flowing.
- The matter that flows.
- Fusion; the running of metals into a fluid state.
- An unnatural or excessive flow of blood or fluid toward
any organ; a determination.
- A constantly varying indication.
- The infinitely small increase or decrease of a variable or
flowing quantity in a certain infinitely small and constant period of
time; the rate of variation of a fluent; an incerement; a differential.
- A method of analysis developed by Newton, and based on the
conception of all magnitudes as generated by motion, and involving in
their changes the notion of velocity or rate of change. Its results are
the same as those of the differential and integral calculus, from which
it differs little except in notation and logical method.
- Discharge from wounds
- mythical liquid
- An ethereal fluid that supplied the place of blood in the
veins of the gods.
- A thin, acrid, watery discharge from an ulcer, wound, etc.