0 US spelling of fibre
1 any of the thin parts like thread that form plant or artificial material, esp. those that can be made into cloth, or a mass of such parts twisted together:
2 the quality of a person’s character, esp. its moral strength:
3 the part of foods eaten that is not digested but that passes through the body and is excreted as waste:
Doctors recommend a diet of fruits, vegetables, and grains that are high in fiber.
It may possibly be the quantity of fiber and not the antioxidants in vegetables that has protective effects.
Hence, it is hard to imagine that these two fiber types are working in synchrony on the same behavioral and thought processes.
By considering these additional characteristics, whorl data offer impor tant insights into religious significance of spinning, as well as practical qualities of fiber production.
Since their distributions along unstable fibers coincide by assumption (ii), it is enough to compare ^ their distributions along stable directions.
The overlooked resolving possibilities for probably had to do, at least in part, with the nature of fiber products.
In this case, elastic fibers did not appear through the smooth muscle cells which were surrounding the recanalized vessels.
Thirty-eight percent had evidence of interhemispheric widening, suggesting damage to the callosal fibers that link the two hemispheres, most prominent in frontal regions.
These might be strictly visceroresponsive or might be supplied by mechanically insensitive afferent fibers.
中文繁体
(fibre的美式拼寫)…
More中文简体
(fibre的美式拼写)…
MoreEspañol
fibra [feminine], hilo [masculine], fibra muscular [feminine]…
MoreFrançais
fibres [feminine, plural], fibre [feminine]…
MoreNorwegian
fiber [masculine], tråd [masculine], stoff [neuter]…
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