c ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci ck cl cm cn co cp cr cs ct cu cw cy cz

Перевод: cerebral speek cerebral


[прилагательное]
черепно-мозговой; церебральный; головномозговой; мозговой; рассудочный;
[существительное]
церебральный звук


Тезаурус:

  1. Then he launched into an involved discussion about how cerebral men like Berlin were becoming an endangered species in a world increasingly downgrading erudition.
  2. He showed that injury to connections within the cerebral cortex could cause the dissociation of hand movements guided by vision from those guided by touch.
  3. At once cerebral and aware of the business at hand, The Shamen turn Techno into positivist (ignore the connotations) poetry and the soon-come single "Love, Sex, Intelligence" is set to be an anthem, pitched as it is exactly at the right level, ie not over our heads.
  4. The cause of death at the time was diagnosed as "cerebral disease" and there was no inquiry.
  5. There are several forms of cerebral palsy, including athetosis, ataxia and the best known, spasticity.
  6. We may now represent the mental capacities of the cerebral hemispheres of an advanced organism in a simple model that gets us far closer to the condition of our own species (Fig. 2. i).
  7. A delay in breathing after birth can damage the brain cells, causing cerebral palsy (spasticity) and brain damage.
  8. She starts out smug, married and cerebral; but hearing, via an air vent, snippets from the psychotherapist's next door, begins her own self-analysis.
  9. No one had expected him to survive a massive cerebral haemorrhage
  10. Likewise, in Alejo Carpentier's The Kingdom of This World , an account of slave revolts in Haiti at the end of the eighteenth century, the Negroes' struggle for liberty opposes their magical world of voodoo to the rational, cerebral world of their French masters.
  11. In the human brain, the most conspicuous structure, overlying the rest, is the cerebral cortex, a folded sheet of tissue, some one and a half square feet in area if spread flat, containing layers of neurones and their processes.
  12. By the turn of the century it was accepted that certain parts of the brain were specialized for either sensation or movement but, as Brodmann (in Kolb and Whishaw 1985) demonstrated, there are large areas of the human cerebral cortex that are neither obviously motor nor sensory.
  13. "Anyone with his all-round abilities, plus his cerebral content, has got to go close.

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