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radiograph
[ rey-dee-oh-graf, -grahf ]
noun
- Also called shadowgraph. a photographic image produced by the action of x-rays or nuclear radiation.
verb (used with object)
- to make a radiograph of.
radiograph
/ -藢伞r忙f; 藞re瑟d瑟蓹蕣藢伞r蓱藧f /
noun
- an image produced on a specially sensitized photographic film or plate by radiation, usually by X-rays or gamma rays Also calledradiogramshadowgraph
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of radiograph1
Example Sentences
All 10 alligators - including Thibodaux - participated in a routine examination which involved blood collection, radiographs and more.
鈥淲e do not have any machine that can make radiographs of large specimens, but luckily our colleagues at the Cultural History Museum did, as archaeologists use this technique much more often,鈥 Ms. Engelschion said.
She had been trained to voluntarily allow zookeepers to do radiographs and ultrasounds on her.
Researchers had a minimum of two clinicians classify over 3,600 hip radiographs.
Riley said she found a pellet from an old gunshot wound behind the turtle鈥檚 skull when radiographs were done for the fractured shell.
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