Lexicographical Neighbors of Plexors
Literary usage of Plexors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. All the Year Round by Charles Dickens (1885)
""Do you never long for the old i among your own people, for the plexors you have
given up 1 " " I think of it as little as I can. ..."
2. The Retrospect of Medicine by James Braithwaite, William Braithwaite (1864)
"plexors and extensors may fail in their proper antagonism ; the neck may be
permanently twisted; the forearm firmly and immovably bent; the hand closed, ..."
3. Transactions (1902)
"The loss of power is usually greatest in the extensors, although in some cases
both plexors and extensors become powerless. The affected muscles are flabby ..."
4. All the Year Round by Charles Dickens (1885)
""Do you never long for the old i among your own people, for the plexors you have
given up 1 " " I think of it as little as I can. ..."
5. The Retrospect of Medicine by James Braithwaite, William Braithwaite (1864)
"plexors and extensors may fail in their proper antagonism ; the neck may be
permanently twisted; the forearm firmly and immovably bent; the hand closed, ..."
6. Transactions (1902)
"The loss of power is usually greatest in the extensors, although in some cases
both plexors and extensors become powerless. The affected muscles are flabby ..."