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OSSIFIED MAN

  • Ossified man
  • An ossified man (or, if female, ossified girl or ossified lady) was a common freak show and dime museum exhibit. Some ossified men suffered from myositis

    Ossified man

    Ossified man

    Ossified_man

  • The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
  • 1962 American film directed by John Ford

    existence to the ground. To the day of his death, Doniphon becomes an ossified man — literally a fossil of a being that lived in a previous era." However

    The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

    The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

    The_Man_Who_Shot_Liberty_Valance

  • Tendon
  • Type of tissue that connects muscle to bone

    birds, and ornithischian dinosaurs, portions of the tendon can become ossified. In this process, osteocytes infiltrate the tendon and lay down bone as

    Tendon

    Tendon

    Tendon

  • Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva
  • Disease in which fibrous connective tissue turns into bone

    is identical to "normal" bone, but in improper locations. The rate of ossified bone growth varies by patient. It is the only known medical condition in

    Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva

    Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva

    Fibrodysplasia_ossificans_progressiva

  • Jill Tracy
  • American musician

    "Siamese Twins" Chang and Eng, Einstein's brain, Harry Eastlack "The Ossified Man," books bound in human skin, and The Mermaid Baby. This in-progress project

    Jill Tracy

    Jill Tracy

    Jill_Tracy

  • Harry Raymond Eastlack
  • American medical patient (1933–1973)

    extremely restricted.[citation needed] As the disease progressed and his bones ossified and he became more immobilized, Eastlack struggled more with routine movement

    Harry Raymond Eastlack

    Harry Raymond Eastlack

    Harry_Raymond_Eastlack

  • Hyoid bone
  • Bone situated in the neck between the chin and the thyroid-cartilage

    hyoid is incompletely ossified (for example: lions), it allows the animal to roar, but not purr. If the hyoid is completely ossified (for example: cheetahs)

    Hyoid bone

    Hyoid bone

    Hyoid_bone

  • Transport Layer Security
  • Cryptographic protocols for securing data in transit

    intolerance of the new version of TLS was protocol ossification; middleboxes had ossified the protocol's version parameter. As a result, version 1.3 mimics the wire

    Transport Layer Security

    Transport_Layer_Security

  • Glossary of early twentieth century slang in the United States
  • open up Talk up, speak out orchid Expensive item orphan paper Bad checks ossified Alternate names for intoxicated; see § drunk ostrich Person who is a Know-it-all

    Glossary of early twentieth century slang in the United States

    Glossary_of_early_twentieth_century_slang_in_the_United_States

  • All That Is Solid Melts into Air
  • 1982 philosophy book by Marshall Berman

    environment of constant change where things become obsolete before they can ossify, then how will a permanent Communist Society ever exist? In the Communist

    All That Is Solid Melts into Air

    All That Is Solid Melts into Air

    All_That_Is_Solid_Melts_into_Air

  • Feliformia
  • Suborder of carnivores

    classification of the extinct Nimravidae as feliforms. Nimravid fossils show ossified bullae with no septum, or no trace at all of the entire bulla. It is assumed

    Feliformia

    Feliformia

    Feliformia

  • Atlas (anatomy)
  • First spine bone, supports skull

    transversarium is directed from below, upward and backward. The atlas is usually ossified from three centers. Of these, one appears in each lateral mass about the

    Atlas (anatomy)

    Atlas (anatomy)

    Atlas_(anatomy)

  • Fish
  • Gill-bearing non-tetrapod aquatic vertebrates

    Fishes". Bony fish, distinguished by the presence of swim bladders and later ossified endoskeletons, emerged as the dominant group of fish after the end-Devonian

    Fish

    Fish

    Fish

  • Carol Orzel
  • Disability rights activist

    Philadelphia in 1959 and diagnosed with FOP, a rare disease that causes tissue to ossify. In 1982 at age 23, she moved to Inglis House, a nursing-care facility,

    Carol Orzel

    Carol_Orzel

  • Snow leopard
  • Species of large felid

    less developed posterior process of the lower jaw. Despite its partly ossified hyoid bone, a snow leopard cannot roar, as its 9 mm (0.35 in) short vocal

    Snow leopard

    Snow leopard

    Snow_leopard

  • Friedrich Engels
  • German philosopher and socialist (1820–1895)

    sectarianism. In an 1892 letter to Karl Kautsky, he described the SDF as having "ossified Marxism into a dogma" and failing to connect with the actual workers' movement

    Friedrich Engels

    Friedrich Engels

    Friedrich_Engels

  • Chinese Communist Party
  • Ruling party of the People's Republic of China

    described the Soviet Union's state ideology as "rigid, unimaginative, ossified, and disconnected from reality", believing that this was one of the reasons

    Chinese Communist Party

    Chinese Communist Party

    Chinese_Communist_Party

  • Millennials
  • Cohort born from 1981 to 1996

    and more suitable, modern economies are so complex they are essentially ossified, making them vulnerable to disruptions. From the late 1990s to the late

    Millennials

    Millennials

    Millennials

  • Mandible
  • Lower jaw bone

    disappears, while the portion of it below and behind the incisor teeth becomes ossified and incorporated with this part of the mandible. About the sixth week of

    Mandible

    Mandible

    Mandible

  • Furcula
  • Forked bone found in birds and other dinosaurs; fusion of the two clavicles

    close relatives where the furcula is vestigial, reduced to a thin strap of ossified ligament, seemingly purposeless. Other species have evolved the furcula

    Furcula

    Furcula

    Furcula

  • Edmontosaurus mummy AMNH 5060
  • Exceptionally well-preserved fossil in the American Museum of Natural History

    two complete rows of ossified carpals, as Othniel Charles Marsh had assumed in his reconstruction of 1892, but that only two ossified carpals were present

    Edmontosaurus mummy AMNH 5060

    Edmontosaurus mummy AMNH 5060

    Edmontosaurus_mummy_AMNH_5060

  • China 2185
  • 1989 cyberpunk novel by Liu Cixin

    According to academic Hang Tu, this conservative revolt portrays an "ossified and archaic mentality rooted in arrogance and intransigence." According

    China 2185

    China_2185

  • Deinonychus
  • Genus of theropod dinosaur

    tail. As in other dromaeosaurids, the tail vertebrae have a series of ossified tendons and super-elongated bone processes. These features seemed to make

    Deinonychus

    Deinonychus

    Deinonychus

  • Rhodesia
  • Former unrecognised state in Southern Africa (1965–1979)

    too radical. From 1958 onwards, white settler politics consolidated and ossified around resistance to majority rule, setting the stage for UDI. The 1961

    Rhodesia

    Rhodesia

    Rhodesia

  • Primrose syndrome
  • Genetic disorder

    The common symptoms in all reported cases of Primrose syndrome include ossified pinnae, learning disabilities or intellectual disability, hearing problems

    Primrose syndrome

    Primrose syndrome

    Primrose_syndrome

  • Finger
  • Digit of the forelimb

    joint (DIP) – the joint closest to the fingertip. Sesamoid bones are small ossified nodes embedded in the tendons to provide extra leverage and reduce pressure

    Finger

    Finger

    Finger

  • Communist Party of the Soviet Union
  • Ruling party of the Soviet Union (1912–1991)

    Kosygin and Konstantin Chernenko have been criticized for being "dogmatic, ossified, inflexible, [for having a] bureaucratic ideology and thinking", while

    Communist Party of the Soviet Union

    Communist Party of the Soviet Union

    Communist_Party_of_the_Soviet_Union

  • Doryphoros
  • Sculpture by Polykleitos of a warrior

    The canonic proportions of the male torso established by Polykleitos ossified in Hellenistic and Roman times in the muscle cuirass, exemplified by the

    Doryphoros

    Doryphoros

    Doryphoros

  • Frog
  • Order of amphibians

    of the head is compacted and the connective tissue of the dermis is co-ossified with the bones of the skull (exostosis). Camouflage is a common defensive

    Frog

    Frog

    Frog

  • Battle of France
  • German invasion of France in 1940

    Belgian and Dutch governments. The politico-strategic aspects of the plan ossified French thinking, the Phoney War led to demands for Allied offensives in

    Battle of France

    Battle of France

    Battle_of_France

  • Halibut
  • Large edible flatfishes

    side of the head. The eyes are permanently set once the skull is fully ossified. At the same time, the stationary-eyed side darkens to match the top side

    Halibut

    Halibut

    Halibut

  • Felinae
  • Subfamily of Felidae

    cutaneous lobe. Their larynx is kept close to the base of the skull by an ossified hyoid. They can purr owing to the vocal folds being shorter than 6 mm (0

    Felinae

    Felinae

    Felinae

  • The Reflecting Skin
  • 1990 British-Canadian dramatic horror film

    two, much to Seth's horror. In a nearby barn, Seth and Kim discover an ossified dead fetus, which Seth takes home with him, believing it to be Eben incarnate

    The Reflecting Skin

    The_Reflecting_Skin

  • Velociraptor
  • Genus of Late Cretaceous dinosaur

    (long bony projections) on the upper surfaces of the vertebrae, as well as ossified tendons underneath. The prezygapophyses began on the tenth tail (caudal)

    Velociraptor

    Velociraptor

    Velociraptor

  • Panthera
  • Genus within Felidae

    convexly rounded chin is sloping. All Panthera species have an incompletely ossified hyoid bone and a specially adapted larynx with large vocal folds covered

    Panthera

    Panthera

    Panthera

  • Communication protocol
  • System for exchanging messages between computing systems

    transport protocols on the Internet, and TCP itself has significantly ossified, making extension or modification of the protocol difficult. Recommended

    Communication protocol

    Communication_protocol

  • Al-Lat
  • Pre-Islamic Arabian goddess

    the Arabians worshiped). The ending "-āt" is explained as the same as an ossified vocative form like أَخَات (ˀaḫāt, 'O sister') for أُخْت (ˀuḫt, 'sister')

    Al-Lat

    Al-Lat

    Al-Lat

  • Nine-banded armadillo
  • Species of armadillo native to South America

    9–9.8 in) tall at the top of the shell. The outer shell is composed of ossified dermal scutes covered by nonoverlapping, keratinized epidermal scales,

    Nine-banded armadillo

    Nine-banded armadillo

    Nine-banded_armadillo

  • Film franchise
  • Expanded film series

    multiple forms of media. While Reboots were initially made to resurrect ossifying franchises. while soft reboots existed for decades such as a new actor

    Film franchise

    Film_franchise

  • Nile crocodile
  • Reptile of Africa

    short, splayed legs, a long, powerful tail, a scaly hide with rows of ossified scutes running down its back and tail, and powerful, elongated jaws. Their

    Nile crocodile

    Nile crocodile

    Nile_crocodile

  • Anatomy
  • Study of the structure of organisms

    reduced in size. Their main bones are hollow and lightweight and are fully ossified and the vertebrae interlock with each other and have articular processes

    Anatomy

    Anatomy

    Anatomy

  • Nasal concha
  • Piece of bone in the breathing passage of humans and other animals

    animals are fully endothermic and in some cases very active. Furthermore, ossified turbinate bones have been identified in the ankylosaurid dinosaur Saichania

    Nasal concha

    Nasal concha

    Nasal_concha

  • List of Greek and Latin roots in English/H–O
  • osseointegration, osseous, ossicle, ossicular, ossiferous, ossification, ossifrage, ossify, ossuary oste- bone Greek ὀστέον, ὀστέου (ostéon, ostéou), ὀστοῦν, ὀστοῦ

    List of Greek and Latin roots in English/H–O

    List_of_Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English/H–O

  • The Communist Manifesto
  • 1848 political pamphlet by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels

    become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned, and man is at last compelled to face with sober

    The Communist Manifesto

    The Communist Manifesto

    The_Communist_Manifesto

  • Papal States
  • Italian state ruled by the pope (756–1870)

    commander-in-chief of the Papal States' armed forces. Similarly to 1797, the ossified Papal army provided very little resistance when the Piedmontese-Sardinians

    Papal States

    Papal States

    Papal_States

  • Hex; Or Printing in the Infernal Method
  • 2005 studio album by Earth

    transformation, Todd DePalma observed in Chronicles of Chaos "a stripped, damn near ossified sound that yields a more conceptual - and by far the heaviest - album of

    Hex; Or Printing in the Infernal Method

    Hex;_Or_Printing_in_the_Infernal_Method

  • List of medical roots and affixes
  • osteoporosis, phagocytosis ossi-, osse- bone, bony Latin os, bone peripheral ossifying fibroma, osseous ost(e)-, oste(o)- bone Greek ὀστέον (ostéon), bone osteoporosis

    List of medical roots and affixes

    List_of_medical_roots_and_affixes

  • Libertarianism
  • Political philosophy based on liberty

    linked up with an earlier generation of activists, largely outside the ossified structures of 'official' anarchism. Anarchist tactics embraced demonstrations

    Libertarianism

    Libertarianism

  • Gar
  • Family of fishes

    shape of the jaw. The premaxilla, dentary, and teeth are almost fully ossified before hatching—the structure of the snout is established early on and

    Gar

    Gar

    Gar

  • Pantherinae
  • Subfamily of felids

    million years ago. Pantherinae species are characterised by an imperfectly ossified hyoid bone with elastic tendons that enable their larynx to be mobile.

    Pantherinae

    Pantherinae

    Pantherinae

  • Woolly rhinoceros
  • Extinct species of rhinoceros of northern Eurasia

    away snow when grazing. The nasal septum of the woolly rhinoceros was ossified, unlike modern rhinos. This was most common in adult males. This adaptation

    Woolly rhinoceros

    Woolly rhinoceros

    Woolly_rhinoceros

  • American crocodile
  • Species of crocodile from the Neotropics

    short, stocky legs; a long, powerful tail; and a scaly hide with rows of ossified scutes running down its back and tail. Individuals can be identified by

    American crocodile

    American crocodile

    American_crocodile

  • Transmission Control Protocol
  • Principal protocol used to stream data across an IP network

    intermediary that modifies TCP metadata, and 6.5% of paths encounter harmful ossifying effects from intermediaries. Avoiding extensibility hazards from intermediaries

    Transmission Control Protocol

    Transmission_Control_Protocol

  • Stephanorhinus
  • Extinct genus of rhinoceros

    two horns, a frontal and a nasal horn. The nasal septum was partially ossified (turned to bone), which connected the nasal bones with the premaxillary

    Stephanorhinus

    Stephanorhinus

    Stephanorhinus

  • Luis Corvalán
  • Chilean politician (1916–2010)

    vision of radical activism that was more vibrant than that offered by the ossified government of the GDR. Leonardo Rodríguez, a Chilean musician residing

    Luis Corvalán

    Luis Corvalán

    Luis_Corvalán

  • Battle of Moscow
  • World War II campaign in Russia

    the Army, supported a direct thrust to Moscow, he was told that "only ossified brains could think of such an idea". Franz Halder, head of the Army General

    Battle of Moscow

    Battle of Moscow

    Battle_of_Moscow

  • Beak
  • Facial structure found in birds and various other animal clades

    inferior maxillary bone—a compound bone composed of two distinct ossified pieces. These ossified plates (or rami), which can be U-shaped or V-shaped, join distally

    Beak

    Beak

  • Lobolo
  • Form of traditional ceremony based in Southern Africa

    conceptualization has not changed, that customary is rigid, static, immutable and ossified. On the contrary African Customary Law, it's a living law because, its

    Lobolo

    Lobolo

    Lobolo

  • European badger
  • Species of mustelid

    loose skin is covered in long hair for protection, and their heavily ossified skulls allow them to shrug off most blunt traumas and shotgun pellets.

    European badger

    European badger

    European_badger

  • Hydrocephalus
  • Abnormal increase in cerebrospinal fluid in the ventricles of the brain

    results in irreversible brain damage. If the skull bones are not completely ossified when the hydrocephalus occurs, the pressure may also severely enlarge the

    Hydrocephalus

    Hydrocephalus

    Hydrocephalus

  • Lystrosaurus
  • Genus of Late Permian and Early Triassic dicynodont therapsids

    gait. The lower rear corner of the scapula (shoulder blade) was strongly ossified (built of strong bone), which suggests that movement of the scapula contributed

    Lystrosaurus

    Lystrosaurus

    Lystrosaurus

  • Marine life
  • Organisms that live in salt water

    from a single limb. Geologically, the value of echinoderms is in their ossified skeletons, which are major contributors to many limestone formations, and

    Marine life

    Marine life

    Marine_life

  • Trepanning
  • Surgically drilling a hole in the skull

    Finally, in the third stage around the 4th week, the callus would be ossified. In some cases, after multiple months, the skull will then be remodeled

    Trepanning

    Trepanning

    Trepanning

  • Cultural ecology
  • Study of human adaptations to social and physical environments

    interdiscourse" (Zapf 2001, 2002). It is a textual form which breaks up ossified social structures and ideologies, symbolically empowers the marginalized

    Cultural ecology

    Cultural_ecology

  • Phrenology
  • Pseudoscientific study of human skull shape

    organ is indicative of the power or strength of that organ Since the skull ossifies over the brain during infant development, external craniological means

    Phrenology

    Phrenology

    Phrenology

  • Counterculture of the 1960s
  • Anti-establishment cultural phenomenon

    linked up with an earlier generation of activists, largely outside the ossified structures of 'official' anarchism. Anarchist tactics embraced demonstrations

    Counterculture of the 1960s

    Counterculture of the 1960s

    Counterculture_of_the_1960s

  • Battle Beasts
  • Line of action figures

    to 76 Battle Beasts beginning with #1, Pirate Lion and ending with #76, Ossified Orangutan. Series 1 & 2 were released in Japan, Europe and North America

    Battle Beasts

    Battle Beasts

    Battle_Beasts

  • Clouded leopard
  • Species of wild cat

    are broad. Females are slightly smaller than males. Its hyoid bone is ossified, making it possible to purr. Its pupils contract into vertical slits. Irises

    Clouded leopard

    Clouded leopard

    Clouded_leopard

  • Petrifaction in mythology and fiction
  • transformed into a pillar of salt Stoneman disease, in which the body becomes ossified Dr. Amos Brown, "The Children of Medusa – Worldwide Distribution of Petrifaction

    Petrifaction in mythology and fiction

    Petrifaction in mythology and fiction

    Petrifaction_in_mythology_and_fiction

  • Edmontosaurus
  • Hadrosaurid dinosaur genus from Late Cretaceous US and Canada

    discovered on the Red Deer River in 1912 by a Sternberg party. Its arms, ossified tendons, and skin impressions were briefly described in 1913 and 1914 by

    Edmontosaurus

    Edmontosaurus

    Edmontosaurus

  • Progress
  • Movement towards a desired state

    become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all which is holy is profaned, and man is at last compelled to face with sober

    Progress

    Progress

    Progress

  • Pelvis
  • Lower torso of the human body

    swinging of hips). Each side of the pelvis is formed as cartilage, which ossifies as three main bones which stay separate through childhood: ilium, ischium

    Pelvis

    Pelvis

    Pelvis

  • Yevgeny Zamyatin
  • Russian author (1884–1937)

    life, art) cools, the fiery magma becomes coated with dogma — a rigid, ossified, motionless crust. Dogmatization in science, religion, social life, or

    Yevgeny Zamyatin

    Yevgeny Zamyatin

    Yevgeny_Zamyatin

  • List of Latin words with English derivatives
  • interosseous, osseous, ossicle, ossicular, ossiferous, ossification, ossifrage, ossify, ossuary †ossiculum ossicul- ōscen ōscin- songbird oscine ostium osti- ostiary

    List of Latin words with English derivatives

    List_of_Latin_words_with_English_derivatives

  • Gostan Zarian
  • Armenian writer (1885–1969)

    German expressionists—they defied the establishment, fighting against ossified traditions and preparing the way for the new. "In distant cities people

    Gostan Zarian

    Gostan Zarian

    Gostan_Zarian

  • Ichthyosauria
  • Extinct order of large marine reptiles

    frontal bone. The lateral wing of the pterygoid is incompletely and variably ossified. The ulna lacks the part behind the original shaft axis. The rear dorsal

    Ichthyosauria

    Ichthyosauria

    Ichthyosauria

  • Historiography
  • Study of the methods used by historians

    and aspirations of people that took the form of ideas, and were often ossified into ideologies. Carlyle's The French Revolution was written in a highly

    Historiography

    Historiography

  • Chiropractic controversy and criticism
  • for a sore leg at Chiropractic 1st in August 2017. During treatment, an ossified ligament in Lawler's neck was fractured, causing a disc herniation and

    Chiropractic controversy and criticism

    Chiropractic_controversy_and_criticism

  • Marine invertebrates
  • Marine animals without a vertebral column

    from a single limb. Geologically, the value of echinoderms is in their ossified skeletons, which are major contributors to many limestone formations, and

    Marine invertebrates

    Marine invertebrates

    Marine_invertebrates

  • Mexican long-nosed armadillo
  • Species of armadillo native to the Americas

    Total length may be up to 32 in (81 cm). The outer shell is composed of ossified dermal scutes covered by nonoverlapping, keratinized epidermal scales,

    Mexican long-nosed armadillo

    Mexican long-nosed armadillo

    Mexican_long-nosed_armadillo

  • Orthodox Judaism
  • Traditionalist branches of Judaism

    immigrated to Israel. Orthodoxy is often described as extremely conservative, ossifying a once-dynamic tradition due to the fear of legitimizing change. While

    Orthodox Judaism

    Orthodox Judaism

    Orthodox_Judaism

  • Lacanianism
  • Theoretical system of psychoanalysis

    the various factions, Leclaire arguing that Lacanianism was "becoming ossified, stiffening into a kind of war of religion, into theoretical debates that

    Lacanianism

    Lacanianism

  • Union army
  • Land branch of the army that fought for the Union during the American Civil War

    another old soldier who was characterized by contemporaries as "utterly ossified and useless". Finley was slow to act, failed to reform the AMD to address

    Union army

    Union army

    Union_army

  • Pyre (novel)
  • 2013 novel by Perumal Murugan

    surface(s)" and a "barren, harsh" landscape, the village describes the "ossified impermeable social structure organised around caste lines which does not

    Pyre (novel)

    Pyre_(novel)

  • Pellegrini–Stieda syndrome
  • Medical condition

    patellofemoral ligament. Symptom duration is typically five to six months as the ossified lesion matures. The severity of the pathology will dictate the treatment

    Pellegrini–Stieda syndrome

    Pellegrini–Stieda syndrome

    Pellegrini–Stieda_syndrome

  • Hard Candy (Madonna album)
  • 2008 studio album by Madonna

    said that the album portrayed Madonna as "how a once diverse talent has ossified into simply satisfying the sweet tooth of functional dance-pop." Thomas

    Hard Candy (Madonna album)

    Hard_Candy_(Madonna_album)

  • The Ego and Its Own
  • 1844 book by Max Stirner

    like Moses Hess found it in labor, all of them made a similar error of ossifying an "essence" of the human and deifying it. For Stirner, "human nature"

    The Ego and Its Own

    The Ego and Its Own

    The_Ego_and_Its_Own

  • Sunda clouded leopard
  • Species of carnivore

    vertically from the back on the flanks. It can purr as its hyoid bone is ossified. Its pupils contract to vertical slits. It has a stocky build and weighs

    Sunda clouded leopard

    Sunda clouded leopard

    Sunda_clouded_leopard

  • E. P. Thompson
  • English historian & activist (1924–1993)

    a democratic socialist alternative to what its editors considered the ossified official Marxism of the Communist and Trotskyist parties and the managerialist

    E. P. Thompson

    E. P. Thompson

    E._P._Thompson

  • Allosaurus
  • Genus of theropod dinosaur

    gastralia (belly ribs), but these are not common findings, and they may have ossified poorly. In one published case, the gastralia show evidence of injury during

    Allosaurus

    Allosaurus

    Allosaurus

  • Sonderzug nach Pankow
  • 1983 single by Udo Lindenberg

    Miller song "Chattanooga Choo Choo". Honecker is portrayed as an ossified and hypocritical man who officially endorses the ideology of the Soviet government

    Sonderzug nach Pankow

    Sonderzug nach Pankow

    Sonderzug_nach_Pankow

  • 2024 in paleontology
  • published by Fonseca et al. (2024), who find no evidence of the presence of ossified turbinals in the nasal cavities of the studied cynodonts, but report evidence

    2024 in paleontology

    2024_in_paleontology

  • Flaming Creatures
  • 1963 experimental film by Jack Smith

    print and re-edit it over the years, not wanting his creative works to ossify. By the late 1960s, his print had degraded to the point that it was difficult

    Flaming Creatures

    Flaming Creatures

    Flaming_Creatures

  • Anarchism in the United States
  • linked up with an earlier generation of activists, largely outside the ossified structures of 'official' anarchism. Anarchist tactics embraced demonstrations

    Anarchism in the United States

    Anarchism in the United States

    Anarchism_in_the_United_States

  • New Wave (science fiction)
  • Movement in science fiction

    Britain." In particular, he noted: The young turks within SF also had an ossified "ancien régime" to topple: John Campbell's intolerant right-wing editorials

    New Wave (science fiction)

    New_Wave_(science_fiction)

  • Narrow-nosed rhinoceros
  • Extinct species of rhinoceros

    narrow-nosed rhinoceros had a long nasal region of the skull supported by a bony (ossified) nasal septum. Like other species of Stephanorhinus, S. hemitoechus is

    Narrow-nosed rhinoceros

    Narrow-nosed rhinoceros

    Narrow-nosed_rhinoceros

  • Women in Hinduism
  • Position of women in the religious texts of Hinduism

    is tightly locked up now, because patriarchy is neither monolithic nor ossified in Hindu culture. The Shakti concept and associated extensive philosophy

    Women in Hinduism

    Women_in_Hinduism

  • Dromaeosauridae
  • Family of theropod dinosaurs

    lacking transverse process and neural spines after the 14th caudal vertebra. Ossified uncinate processes of ribs have been identified in several dromaeosaurids

    Dromaeosauridae

    Dromaeosauridae

    Dromaeosauridae

  • Child abuse
  • Maltreatment or neglect of a child

    distribution, idiopathic in infants and traumatic in adults, while unexplained ossifying periostitis of the long bones was similar to that occurring after breech

    Child abuse

    Child_abuse

  • Jules Michelet
  • French writer and historian (1798–1874)

    attempted to clarify how a lively Renaissance could originate from an ossified medieval culture. Michelet had several themes running throughout his works

    Jules Michelet

    Jules Michelet

    Jules_Michelet

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing OSSIFIED MAN

OSSIFIED MAN

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OSSIFIED MAN

  • Mansell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (chiefly West Midlands)

    Mansell

    English (chiefly West Midlands) : (of Norman origin): habitational or regional name from Old French mansel ‘inhabitant of Le Mans or the surrounding area of Maine’. The place was originally named in Latin (ad) Ceromannos, from the name of the Gaulish tribe living there, the Ceromanni. The name was reduced to Celmans and then became Le Mans as a result of the mistaken identification of the first syllable with the Old French demonstrative adjective.English (chiefly West Midlands) : status name for a particular type of feudal tenant, Anglo-Norman French mansel, one who occupied a manse (Late Latin mansa ‘dwelling’), a measure of land sufficient to support one family.English (chiefly West Midlands) : some early examples, such as Thomas filius Manselli (Northumbria 1256), point to derivation from a personal name, perhaps the Germanic derivative of Mann 2 Latinized as Manzellinus.

    Mansell

  • Mannion
  • Surname or Lastname

    Irish

    Mannion

    Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Mainnín (see Manning).English and Irish : variant of Mangan.

    Mannion

  • Mantell
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Jewish (Ashkenazic)

    Mantell

    English and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant spelling of Mantel.

    Mantell

  • Manter
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manter

    English : probably a variant of Mander.Belcher Manter is recorded in Plymouth, MA, in 1657. John Manter (1658–1744), possibly a son of Belcher, was the founder of a family associated with Martha’s Vineyard.

    Manter

  • Manship
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manship

    English : habitational name from Minskip in West Yorkshire, Manships Shaw in Surrey, or Manchips Field in Bishop’s Stortford, Hertfordshire, all named with the same Old English word, gemǣnscipe ‘community’, ‘fellowship’, also ‘land held in common’.

    Manship

  • Mansfield
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Mansfield

    English : habitational name from a place in Nottinghamshire. The early forms, from Domesday Book to the early 13th century, show the first element uniformly as Mam-, and it is therefore likely that this was a British hill-name meaning ‘breast’ (compare Manchester), with the later addition of Old English feld ‘pasture’, ‘open country’ (see Field) as the second element. The surname is now widespread throughout Midland and southern England and is also common in Ireland.Irish : when not an importation of 1, this is an altered form of the Norman name Manville (see Mandeville).Americanized form of German and Jewish (Ashkenazic) Mansfeld, a habitational name for someone from a place so called in Saxony.

    Mansfield

  • Mansel
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Mansel

    English : variant spelling of Mansell.

    Mansel

  • Manser
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manser

    English : from the male personal name Manasseh, Hebrew Menashe ‘one who causes to forget’ (see Manasse), borne in the Middle Ages by Christians as well as by Jews. Hebrew Menashe and its reflexes in other Jewish languages have always been popular among Jews.English : occupational name for someone who made handles for agricultural and domestic implements, from an agent derivative of Anglo-Norman French mance ‘handle’ (Old French manche, Late Latin manicus, a derivative of manus ‘hand’).

    Manser

  • Mann
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, German, Dutch (De Mann), and Jewish (Ashkenazic)

    Mann

    English, German, Dutch (De Mann), and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : nickname for a fierce or strong man, or for a man contrasted with a boy, from Middle English, Middle High German, Middle Dutch man. In some cases it may have arisen as an occupational name for a servant, from the medieval use of the term to describe a person of inferior social status. The Jewish surname can be ornamental.English and German : from a Germanic personal name, found in Old English as Manna. This originated either as a byname or else as a short form of a compound name containing this element, such as Hermann.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from the Yiddish male personal name Man (cognate with 1).Indian (Panjab) : Hindu (Jat) and Sikh name of unknown meaning.

    Mann

  • Manson
  • Surname or Lastname

    Scottish (common in the Northern Isles)

    Manson

    Scottish (common in the Northern Isles) : patronymic from the personal name Magnus.English : patronymic from the Middle English nickname or byname Mann.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : patronymic from Man 8.

    Manson

  • Manton
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manton

    English : habitational name from any of the various places so called, for example in Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, and Wiltshire. For the most part the first element is either Old English (ge)mǣne ‘common’, ‘shared’ (see Manley, Manship), or the Old English byname Mann(a) (see Mann). However, in the case of Manton in Lincolnshire the early forms show clearly that it was Old English m(e)alm ‘sand’, ‘chalk’, with reference to the poor soil of the region. The second element is in each case Old English tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.Irish (Cork) : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Manntáin ‘descendant of Manntán’, a personal name derived from a diminutive of manntach ‘toothless’.

    Manton

  • Manring
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Irish

    Manring

    English and Irish : reduced form of Mannering.

    Manring

  • Manners
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (of Norman origin)

    Manners

    English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Mesnières in Seine-Maritime, recorded in the 13th century as Maneria, a derivative of Latin manere ‘to remain, abide, reside’. See also Menzies.

    Manners

  • Manly
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manly

    English : variant spelling of Manley.

    Manly

  • Mantle
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Mantle

    English : variant spelling of Mantel 1.Americanized spelling of German Mantel.

    Mantle

  • Manning
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manning

    English : patronymic from Mann 1 and 2.Irish : adopted as an English equivalent of Gaelic Ó Mainnín ‘descendant of Mainnín’, probably an assimilated form of Mainchín, a diminutive of manach ‘monk’. This is the name of a chieftain family in Connacht. It is sometimes pronounced Ó Maingín and Anglicized as Mangan.Anstice Manning, widow of Richard Manning of Dartmouth, England, came to MA with her children in 1679. Her great-great-grandson Robert, born at Salem, MA, in 1784, was the uncle and protector of author Nathaniel Hawthorne. Another early bearer of the relatively common British name was Jeffrey Manning, one of the earliest settlers in Piscataway township, Middlesex Co., NJ. His great-grandson James Manning (1738–91) was a founder and the first president of Rhode Island College (Brown University).

    Manning

  • Mannering
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Kent)

    Mannering

    English (Kent) : variant of Manwaring.Irish : name used as an Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Manaráin, which Woulfe believes to be a dissimilated form of Ó Manannáin (see Murnan).

    Mannering

  • Manville
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Manville

    English : variant of Mandeville.French : habitational name from Menville in the Haute-Garonne.

    Manville

  • Manner
  • Surname or Lastname

    German

    Manner

    German : variant of Männer (see Maner).English : unexplained. Perhaps a variant of Manners.Finnish : ornamental name from manner ‘continent’. This name occurs throughout Finland, but chiefly in the southwestern part.

    Manner

  • Mantel
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, German, French, and Dutch

    Mantel

    English, German, French, and Dutch : metonymic occupational name for a cloak maker or a nickname for someone who wore a cloak of a particularly conspicuous design, from Anglo-Norman, Middle High German, Old French, and Middle Dutch mantel ‘cloak’, ‘coat’ (Late Latin mantellus).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : probably from German Mantel or Yiddish mantl ‘coat’, which are related to 1 above.German : topographic name from Middle High German mantel ‘Scots pine’.

    Mantel

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Online names & meanings

  • Kanakadhara
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Telugu

    Kanakadhara

    Flow of Gold

  • Fizza
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Muslim

    Fizza

    Silver; Ibn Abu Mawdood; A Narrator of Hadith had this Name

  • Tejesh
  • Boy/Male

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Tamil

    Tejesh

    Sun; God of Brightness

  • Kywrkh
  • Boy/Male

    Welsh

    Kywrkh

    Legendary son of Cleddyv.

  • Penni
  • Girl/Female

    American, Australian, Chinese, Greek

    Penni

    Weaver; Duck

  • DONOGH
  • Male

    English

    DONOGH

    Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Donnchadh, DONOGH means "brown warrior."

  • Zaram |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Zaram |

    One in thousand

  • Manjinder
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Manjinder

    Warrior God

  • Renie
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Christian, Danish, French, German, Greek, Latin

    Renie

    Peace; Reborn; Diminutive of Irene

  • SERGIU
  • Male

    Romanian

    SERGIU

    Variant form of Romanian Serghei, possibly SERGIU means "sergeant."

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OSSIFIED MAN

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OSSIFIED MAN

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OSSIFIED MAN

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Other words and meanings similar to

OSSIFIED MAN

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing OSSIFIED MAN

OSSIFIED MAN

  • Basisphenoidal
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to that part of the base of the cranium between the basioccipital and the presphenoid, which usually ossifies separately in the embryo or in the young, and becomes a part of the sphenoid in the adult.

  • Manyways
  • adv.

    Alt. of Manywise

  • Many-sided
  • a.

    Interested in, and having an aptitude for, many unlike pursuits or objects of attention; versatile.

  • Manywise
  • adv.

    In many different ways; variously.

  • Many-sided
  • a.

    Having many sides; -- said of figures. Hence, presenting many questions or subjects for consideration; as, a many-sided topic.

  • Gasified
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Gasify

  • Ossified
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Ossify

  • Unossified
  • a.

    Destitute of a bony structure.

  • Maxillo-mandibular
  • a.

    Pertaining to the maxilla and mandible; as, the maxillo-mandibular nerve.

  • Russification
  • n.

    The act or process of Russifying, or the state of being Russified.

  • Ossification
  • n.

    The state of being changed into a bony substance; also, a mass or point of ossified tissue.

  • Many-minded
  • a.

    Having many faculties; versatile; many-sided.

  • Manx
  • n.

    The language of the inhabitants of the Isle of Man, a dialect of the Celtic.

  • Exogenous
  • a.

    Growing from previously ossified parts; -- opposed to autogenous.

  • Epiphysis
  • n.

    The end, or other superficial part, of a bone, which ossifies separately from the central portion, or diaphysis.

  • Diaphysis
  • n.

    The shaft, or main part, of a bone, which is first ossified.

  • Coenenchyma
  • n.

    The common tissue which unites the polyps or zooids of a compound anthozoan or coral. It may be soft or more or less ossified. See Coral.

  • Osseous
  • a.

    Composed of bone; resembling bone; capable of forming bone; bony; ossific.

  • Ossific
  • a.

    Capable of producing bone; having the power to change cartilage or other tissue into bone.

  • Ossified
  • a.

    Changed to bone or something resembling bone; hardened by deposits of mineral matter of any kind; -- said of tissues.