单词:Dupuytren's tourniquet
单词:Dupuytren's tourniquet 相关文章
[00:06.86]Paul. Paul [00:10.74]Isnt that wonderful? 真是太好了 [00:16.54]Yes. 是啊 [00:25.86]Okay. 好的 [00:27.30]Okay. 好的 [00:28.26]- Im so happy. - I know. - 我真是太高兴了 - 我知道 [00:34.22]I know. 我知道 [00:37.02]If yo
[00:07.70]You're alone 'cause you're faster than the others. 你孤身一人,因为你比别人都快 [00:12.78]But not stronger. 但是不够强 [00:16.58]I'm strong enough to kill you. 足够杀死你 [00:26.58]I'm sorry. 对不起 [01:30.58]Bell
孟加拉国的蛇为什么会让人毛骨悚然呢? Dima: Hi, welcome to this edition of 6 Minute English with me, Dima Kostenko Kate: and me, Kate Colin. Hi. Dima: And today we're talking about some animals Kate, forgive me for asking a banal que
(e) 之后若接辅音 (n) 时,我们极易念成 (En) 的错误发音,不可不慎。请跟着念下列各字 : plane (plen) 飞机不要念成 (plEn) main (men) 主要的 不要念成 (mEn) train (tren) 火车不要念成 (trEn) saint (sent) 圣人
Majority of Mississippi, with water rising, breaching levees, drowning crops and threatening homes. People have been pitching in all day, filling sand bags, trying to fight back. But it may not be enough, and the wheather could make things even worse
A: The doctor sent me over here to have my blood drawn. B: Certainly, please have a seat and roll up your left sleeve. A: What is this test for? B: Well, today your doctor wants us to check your white blood cell count. A: What does that tell him? B:
Broadcast: Feb 18, 2003 By George grow VOICE ONE: This is Phoebe Zimmerman. VOICE TWO: And this is Doug Johnson, with science in the news, VOA Special English program about recent developments in scie
Time now for Business News. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan gave lawmakers on Capitol Hill a fresh warning yesterday. The budget deficit, he said, is on an unsustainable path. Unless that trend is reversed, at some point, these deficits will
The emotional aftershocks of the earthquake in Haiti that killed or wounded 100s of thousands of people and left millions homeless are still being felt in New York's thriving Haitian American community, nearly 2,500 kilometers and a world away. The H
The U.S. and Russia presidents are scheduled to meet for the first time Wednesday on the sidelines of the G20 summit in London. The new Kremlin leader comes to the meeting with a record of policy initiatives that have swung between belligerent threa
A: The doctor sent me over here to have my blood drawn. B: Certainly, please have a seat and roll up your left sleeve. A: What is this test for? B: Well, today your doctor wants us to check your white blood cell count. A: What does that tell him? B:
A: My doctor says that I need a blood test. B: I can help you with that. Just have a seat and roll up your left sleeve. A: What are you taking my blood for? B: Your doctor has requested a check of your white blood count. A: What information does that
A: I came to this lab to have my blood drawn. B: You are in the right place. Roll up your left sleeve and have a seat. A: What am I being tested for? B: Your doctor wants to know what your white blood cell count is. A: What does my white blood cell c
SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - Learning the Basics of First Aid: What to Do Until Medical Help ArrivesBy Nancy Steinbach Broadcast: Tuesday, November 14, 2006 VOICE ONE: This is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in VOA Spec
SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - FIRST AID: How to Help When Someone Is Sick or Injured By Nancy Steinbach Broadcast: Tuesday, July 12, 2005 (MUSIC) VOICE ONE: This is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS, in VOA Special English
The largest Haitian community outside of Haiti is scrambling to get news of loved ones hit by the devastating earthquake. More than 100,000 Haitians live in New York's Little Haiti in Brooklyn, and there are several Haitian radio stations. As news of
BBC Learning English6 Minute EnglishBangladesh snake bites NB: This is not an accurate word-for-word transcript Dima: Hi, welcome to this edition of 6 Minute English with me, Dima KostenkoKate: and me, Kate Colin. Hi. Dima: And today we're talking a
US blizzards, Asia's typhoons, other extreme weather all linked to Pacific Ocean anomaly Steve Baragona | Washington, DC 10 February 2010 Experts say the oceanic disturbance known as El Ni?o is to blame for severe weather in Washington, D.C. and arou
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) RACHEL MARTIN, HOST: It's time now for StoryCorps. Today, a story about the railroad. It comes to us from Barnie Botone in Bismarck, N.D. In 1875, his ancestor, along with dozens of other Native American leaders, was taken by tra