Similar words: circumscribe, circumscription, circumspect, circumstance, circumstances, circumspection, circumstantial, described. Meaning: ['sɜːkəmskraɪb] adj. 1. subject to limits or subjected to limits 2. showing or determining a boundary.
Random good picture Not show
31. Circumscribed lesions may be treated by complete excision.
32. Gross photo showing a well circumscribed multilocular cystic neoplasm.
33. The prisoner's activity is circumscribed.
34. Peptic ulcer is a sharply circumscribed loss of tissue.
35. The square is circumscribed by the circle.
36. Obama is a keen-eyed traveller, and even a visit as circumscribed as a Presidential trip will reveal to him nuances of a country that never looks as monolithic as it does from Washington.
37. RCC are well circumscribed sellar masses (anterior pituitary) that may extend into suprasellar region.
38. Secondly, we studied the market barriers systematically which are now circumscribed to greenfield entry and closedown exit.
39. But their circumscribed souls think: "Blamable is all great existence."
40. This circumscribed reddish - yellow firm neoplasm beneath the dura next to the falx is a meningioma.
41. Each case must normally begin with an investigation by government agencies whose authority is tightly circumscribed.
42. Growth of the diffuse swelling in the neck is painless, not circumscribed, and no skin discoloration.
43. The Lilly Ledbetter Act more or less restores (though partly strengthens) the rights of aggrieved workers that a Supreme Court ruling circumscribed in 2007.
44. The clinicopathological features are compatible with acquired circumscribed hypertrichosis, and the possible etiologic factor is repeated irritation.
45. A bomb could be dropped in the middle of a battlefield which would produce microwaves, incapacitating the minds of soldiers within a circumscribed area.
46. Chondroma of soft parts also affects the hands, but it is usually well circumscribed and has more well developed chondroid differentiation.
47. Whereas the fungibility of nearly all other economic goods is more or less circumscribed and is often only a fiction based on an artificial commercial terminology, that of money is almost unlimited.
48. However, it is still well - differentiated and circumscribed, without invasion of the stalk, and is benign.
49. Sessile infiltrative TCC showed circumscribed or diffused thickening of the renal pelvis and calyces morose .
50. Grossly, the tumors are poorly circumscribed, gray-white, and may have flecks of calcification.
51. This circumscribed reddish-yellow firm neoplasm beneath the dura next to the falx is a meningioma. The superior parasagittal location is quite common.
52. Results The tumor was well circumscribed and contained spindle cells, adipose cell and epithelial cell nests.
53. The more circumscribed became her state, the more entrancing seemed this other.
53. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
54. This schwannoma was resected from a nerve. Note the circumscribed nature of this benign neoplasm.
55. Some examples are given by inscribed and circumscribed circles of polygons, lines intersecting and tangent to conic sections, the Pappus and Menelaus configurations of points and lines.
56. A painful, circumscribed pus - filled inflammation of the subcutaneous tissue usually caused by a local staphylococcal infection.
57. Since this involved restricting the rights of surplus nations, his plans were circumscribed by Washington, a nice irony now that America is a debtor nation.
58. They are usually well circumscribed, gray-white and cystic, with a medullary location, and are often surrounded by a rim of compressed fibrous tissue.
59. But his longer-term strategy is to ensure that a future Palestinian state, which Mr Netanyahu half-heartedly says he would tolerate, is tightly circumscribed.
60. She hungered for some contact outside her own circumscribed world.
More similar words: circumscribe, circumscription, circumspect, circumstance, circumstances, circumspection, circumstantial, described, inscribed, subscribed, prescribed, proscribed, under the circumstances, oversubscribed, circumstantial evidence, circumvent, circumflex, circumcise, circumcision, scribe, circumference, ascribe, circumlocution, circumnavigate, inscribe, describe, subscribe, prescribe, subscriber, proscribe.