¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Synostoses
1. synostosis [n] - See also: synostosis
Lexicographical Neighbors of Synostoses
Literary usage of Synostoses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review, Or, Quarterly Journal of (1866)
"... that the deformations resulting from synostoses do not necessarily and invariably
follow the premature ossification of those sutures to which they have ..."
2. Pedagogical Anthropology by Maria Montessori (1913)
"The synostoses which occurred in the early periods had an evolutive ... These later
synostoses, on the contrary, have an involutive significance and are ..."
3. Pedagogical Anthropology by Maria Montessori (1913)
"The synostoses which occurred in the early periods had an evolutive ... These later
synostoses, on the contrary, have an involutive significance and are ..."
4. The Dublin Journal of Medical Science (1894)
"... are there any synostoses, and consequently the operation has no anatomical
indication; it is useless, and the results so much vaunted are non-existent. ..."
5. Text-book of general and special pathology for students and practitioners by Henry Turner Brooks (1915)
"(2) senile synostosis, synostosis tarda, through which the skull is rendered
immovable and very rigid, but otherwise uninfluenced; (3) synostoses which ..."
6. The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review, Or, Quarterly Journal of (1866)
"... that the deformations resulting from synostoses do not necessarily and invariably
follow the premature ossification of those sutures to which they have ..."
7. Pedagogical Anthropology by Maria Montessori (1913)
"The synostoses which occurred in the early periods had an evolutive ... These later
synostoses, on the contrary, have an involutive significance and are ..."
8. Pedagogical Anthropology by Maria Montessori (1913)
"The synostoses which occurred in the early periods had an evolutive ... These later
synostoses, on the contrary, have an involutive significance and are ..."
9. The Dublin Journal of Medical Science (1894)
"... are there any synostoses, and consequently the operation has no anatomical
indication; it is useless, and the results so much vaunted are non-existent. ..."
10. Text-book of general and special pathology for students and practitioners by Henry Turner Brooks (1915)
"(2) senile synostosis, synostosis tarda, through which the skull is rendered
immovable and very rigid, but otherwise uninfluenced; (3) synostoses which ..."