What is the name meaning of TETA. Phrases containing TETA
See name meanings and uses of TETA!TETA
TETA
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Sindhi
Innocent Beauty
TETA
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TETA
a.
Of or pertaining to tetanus; having the character of tetanus; as, a tetanic state; tetanic contraction.
n.
A morbid condition resembling tetanus, but distinguished from it by being less severe and having intermittent spasms.
a.
Having one fourth the number of planes which are requisite to complete symmetry.
n.
See Tautog.
a.
Produced by wounds; as, traumatic tetanus.
v. t.
To throw, as a muscle, into a state of permanent contraction; to cause tetanus in. See Tetanus, n., 2.
a.
Resembling tetanus.
n.
A painful and usually fatal disease, resulting generally from a wound, and having as its principal symptom persistent spasm of the voluntary muscles. When the muscles of the lower jaw are affected, it is called locked-jaw, or lickjaw, and it takes various names from the various incurvations of the body resulting from the spasm.
n.
An instrument from tetanizing a muscle by irritating its nerve by successive mechanical shocks.
n.
A tetartohedral solid of the hexagonal system, bounded by six trapezoidal planes. The faces of this form are common on quartz crystals.
a.
Of or pertaining to spasm; spasmodic; especially, pertaining to tonic spasm; tetanic.
n.
A poisonous base (ptomaine) formed in meat broth through the agency of a peculiar microbe from the wound of a person who has died of tetanus; -- so called because it produces tetanus as one of its prominent effects.
n.
A tetanic spasm in which the body is bent backwards and stiffened.
n.
A gobioid fish (Eleotris gyrinus) of the Southern United States; -- called also sleeper.
n.
The production or condition of tetanus.
n.
That condition of a muscle in which it is in a state of continued vibratory contraction, as when stimulated by a series of induction shocks.
n.
The property of being tetartohedral.
a.
Producing, or tending to produce, tetanus, or tonic contraction of the muscles; as, a tetanic remedy. See Tetanic, n.
n.
A poisonous alkaloid, C19H21NO3, found in opium in small quantities, having a sharp, astringent taste, and a tetanic action resembling that of strychnine.
n.
A substance (notably nux vomica, strychnine, and brucine) which, either as a remedy or a poison, acts primarily on the spinal cord, and which, when taken in comparatively large quantity, produces tetanic spasms or convulsions.