Lexicographical Neighbors of Tenaculums
Literary usage of Tenaculums
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Montaigne by Tetel, Marcel (1903)
"3) at the sides of the cervix are marked by tenaculums or tissue forceps.
The point C, the highest point in the anterior wall which is still entirely intact ..."
2. A Text-book on the Practice of Gynecology: For Practitioners and Students by William Easterly Ashton (1906)
"The resulting wounds are then drawn apart with tenaculums and closed by approximating
their angles with catgut sutures. ..."
3. A Text-book on the Practice of Gynecology: For Practitioners and Students by William Easterly Ashton (1905)
"The resulting wounds are then drawn apart with tenaculums and closed by approximating
their angles with catgut sutures. The after-treatment consists in ..."
4. A Text-book on the Practice of Gynecology: For Practitioners and Students by William Easterly Ashton (1907)
"The resulting wounds are then drawn apart with tenaculums and closed by approximating
their angles with catgut sutures. ..."
5. A Text-book on the practice of gynecology: For Practitioners and Students by William Easterly Ashton (1916)
"The resulting wounds are then drawn apart with tenaculums and closed by approximating
their angles with catgut sutures. The after-treatment consists in ..."
6. The ... Year Book of Obstetrics and Gynecology by Jacob Pearl Greenhil (1903)
"3 ) at the sides of the cervix are marked by tenaculums or tissue forceps.
The point C, the highest point in the anterior wall which is still entirely ..."
7. Monthly Journal of Medical Science (1853)
"... tenaculums, needles, and the cautery trident. " The seventh and concluding
chapter relates to those discovered instruments which are made of iron. ..."