0 a tearing or breaking -- sprængning; brud
a rupture of the spleen.
1 to break or tear. -- sprænge; bryde
Both papers report on the immediate leakage of particulate matter, which is evidence for ruptures in the cell walls.
The aneurysms ruptured into the right ventricle in 73%, into the right atrium in 27% and into the left ventricle in less than 1%.
Ourfindingsindicate that antigen is liberated into the culture medium as soon as the first cells in culture rupture, liberating free trypanosomes.
Therefore, the social and political organization of newly created settlements in the north embodied more continuity than rupture with pre-colonial history.
Thus, in the song's opening gestures, sound ruptures spacious silence and silence engulfs assertive sound; neither sound nor silence gains a firm perceptual foothold.
In the present case, the historically grounded theory that we propose tends to emphasise continuities rather than ruptures.
The evidence presented by archaeology and mythology is both abundant and ruptured.
Defining the limits of survival: lethal pulmonary hypoplasia after midtrimester premature rupture of membranes.
中文繁体
(使)破裂, (使)裂開, (使)斷裂…
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(使)破裂, (使)裂开, (使)断裂…
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romper(se), ruptura, hernia…
MorePortuguês
romper(-se), ruptura, hérnia…
MoreTürk dili
kes(il)mek, yırt(ıl)mak, kır(ıl)mak…
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rupture, hernie, (se) rompre…
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trhlina, roztržka, zlomení…
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robekan, merobek…
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