Alternative terms

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Lexicographical Neighbors of

enneagonal
enneagons
enneagram
enneagrams
enneagynous
enneahedral
enneandria
enneandrous
enneapetalous
enneastyle
enneatical
ennemie
enneract
enneracts
ennervation (current term)
ennet
ennew
ennewed
ennewing
ennews
enniatin B synthetase
enniche
enniched
enniches
enniching
ennoble
ennobled
ennoblement
ennoblements

Literary usage of

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

1. Birmingham Medical Review (1892)
"Another symptom caused by this increased ennervation is erroneous projection of the field of vision. We judge of the relation of external objects to our own ..."

2. What is Bright's Disease: Its Curability by Seth Pancoast (1882)
"Whatever cause •will produce inflammation of the kidneys, when there is an ennervation of the organic nervous system may produce ..."

3. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by American Neurological Association, Philadelphia Neurological Society, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association, Boston Society of Psychiatry and Neurology (1894)
"This instructive observation demonstrates that the fibres of the facial emanating from the cerebral cortex, and destined for the ennervation of the inferior ..."

4. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by Philadelphia Neurological Society, American Neurological Association, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association (1894)
"... and destined for the ennervation of the inferior part of the face, occupy in their passage a line through the internal capsule. ..."

5. Transactions of the Association of American Physicians by Association of American Physicians (1913)
"... experiments of Peyer, the appendix being the most usual primary focus or are due to reflex disturbances of ennervation. SYMPTOMATOLOGY AND DIAGNOSIS. ..."

6. The North American Medical and Surgical Journal by Hugh L Hodge, Franklin Bache, Charles D Meigs, Benjamin Hornor Coates, R La Roche (1831)
"... which it induces in the ennervation of the encephalo-rachidien centres, at least excepting when there does not occur a copious effusion of ..."

7. The Dublin Journal of Medical Science (1883)
"... of bile may be completely suspended for an indefinite time by what he calls " ennervation," or want of impressions reaching the liver by its nerves. ..."

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