释义 |
evulsionenUK
evulsionplucking or pulling out; forcible extraction: The evulsion of her baby tooth was painless. Not to be confused with:avulsion – a tearing away; a part torn off: The storm’s runoff caused an avulsion of the stream’s bank.revulsion – disgust, repulsion, aversion; a strong feeling of repugnance: His filthy language fills me with revulsion.e·vul·sion E0256800 (ĭ-vŭl′shən)n. A forcible extraction. [Latin ēvolsiō, ēvolsiōn-, from ēvulsus, past participle of ēvellere, to pull out : ē-, ex-, ex- + vellere, to pull.]evulsion (ɪˈvʌlʃən) nrare the act of extracting by force[C17: from Latin ēvulsiō, from ēvellere, from vellere to pluck]evulsionenUK
evulsion [e-vul´shun] forcible extraction.e·vul·sion (ē-vŭl'shŭn), A forcible pulling out or extraction. Compare: avulsion. [L. evulsio, fr. e-vello, pp. -vulsus, to pluck out] e·vul·sion (ē-vŭl'shŭn) A forcible pulling out or extraction. Compare: avulsion[L. evulsio, fr. e-vello, pp. -vulsus, to pluck out]evulsion Tearing away by force.EvulsionThe forceful, and usually accidental, removal of a tooth from its socket in the bone.Mentioned in: Dental Traumae·vul·sion (ē-vŭl'shŭn) A forcible pulling out or extraction. Compare: avulsion[L. evulsio, fr. e-vello, pp. -vulsus, to pluck out] |