Definition of Rotators

1. Noun. (plural of rotator) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Rotators

1. rotator [n] - See also: rotator

Lexicographical Neighbors of Rotators

rotationally
rotations
rotative
rotatively
rotator
rotator cuff
rotator cuff tendinitis
rotator cuffs
rotator muscles
rotatores
rotatores cervicis muscles
rotatores lumborum muscles
rotatores muscles
rotatores thoracis muscles
rotatoria
rotators (current term)
rotatory
rotatory joint
rotatory nystagmus
rotatory spasm
rotatory tic
rotavap
rotavaps
rotavate
rotavated
rotavates
rotavating
rotavator
rotavators
rotaviral

Literary usage of Rotators

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Selections from the Clinical Works of Dr. Duchenne (de Boulogne). by Guillaume Benjamin Amand Duchenne, George Vivian Poore (1883)
"But if the internal rotators be palsied, this balance of power is upset and the humérus is ... This shows how serious is the loss of the internal rotators, ..."

2. The Art of Weaving, by Hand and by Power: With an Introductory Account of by Clinton G. Gilroy (1844)
"KK are two circular pieces of wood. called rotators, which revolve on iron axles, that run through to the opposite side of the frame E, where other rotators ..."

3. Thoughts on Animalcules: Or, A Glimpse of the Invisible World Revealed by by Gideon Algernon Mantell (1846)
"... possess a definite form, and rotators formed of cilia; many species have a false foot, ... rotators ..."

4. Baltimore Lectures on Molecular Dynamics and the Wave Theory of Light by William Thomson Kelvin (1904)
"different rotators were considered, one of them consisting of two equal balls, fixed at the ends of a rigid massless rod, and each ball reflected on ..."

5. The Dublin Quarterly Journal of Medical Science: Consisting of Original (1850)
"Thus, in the present case, the neck of the bone being absorbed, the several rotators outwards, above named, whilst they lost the principal part of their ..."

6. The Art of Weaving: By Hand and by Power, with an Introductory Account of by Clinton G. Gilroy (1845)
"KK are two circular pieces of wood, called rotators, which revolve on iron axles, that run through to the opposite side of the frame E, where other rotators ..."

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