Tibio

Word TIBIO
Character 5
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Tibio"

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Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word tibio. Define tibio, tibio synonyms, tibio pronunciation, tibio translation, English dictionary definition of tibio.

Gabo. Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Tibio

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The word "tibio" in example sentences

¡Gracias, Alba, por compartirlo! la voz cuando los pasos desnuden el impiadoso regreso en lugar apenas tibio dormido entre mis ojos cuando todo se olvide ❋ Veruscio (2008)

Si bien hubo un tibio intento por revivirla en marzo de 1947, el distributismo como opción político social quedaba relegado “sin haber sido probado” frente a la realidad de la Guerra Fría. ❋ Unknown (2008)

Entonces empezó el viento, tibio, incipiente, lleno de voces del pasado, de murmullos de geranios antiguos, de suspiros de desengaños anteriores a las nostalgias más tenaces. ❋ Unknown (2007)

Do the same by the other wing, and then push the leg on the same side up through the skin, pushing the skin down with the fingers and thumb of the left hand, and pulling with the right, until you have stripped the skin nearly down to the so-called "knee," q (not the proper knee, however, that being situated higher up -- Plate II), or tibio-tarsal joint. ❋ Montagu Browne (N/A)

The fact is -- gulls, when standing, tuck the tibia quite close to the abdomen, apparently under the wing, and reveal only a very little portion of the tibio-tarsal joint, keeping the metatarse perfectly straight, or, as someone wrote to me once, "like two arrows or sticks." ❋ Montagu Browne (N/A)

There is a common synovial cavity for the ankle and the inferior tibio-fibular joints. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

# -- In this dislocation, which results from the same kinds of violence as the last, the talus retains its position in the tibio-fibular socket, and the calcaneus and navicular, with the rest of the foot, are carried away from it. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

Dislocation of the _inferior tibio-fibular joint_ is exceedingly rare, except in association with fractures of the lower ends of the bones of the leg, particularly Dupuytren's fracture, or with dislocation of the ankle-joint proper. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The talus projects on the dorsum, the anterior part of its trochlear surface escapes from the tibio-fibular socket, and the calcaneus is drawn up so that it comes into contact with the bones of the leg (Fig. 147). ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The ankle-joint owes its strength chiefly to the malleoli and the collateral ligaments, and to the inferior tibio-fibular ligaments, which bind together the lower ends of the bones of the leg. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The bones also are altered in their shape and mutual relations, the talus being rotated forwards so that a large portion of its trochlear surface protrudes from the tibio-fibular socket. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The tibio-fibular interosseous ligament may rupture, or the outer portion of the tibia, to which it is attached, may be avulsed. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

_Fractures of metatarsal bones_; _Fractures of phalanges_ -- DISLOCATIONS: _Of ankle joint_; _Of inferior tibio-fibular joint_; _Complete dislocation of talus_; _Sub-taloid dislocation_; _Medio-tarsal dislocation_; _Tarso-metatarsal dislocation_; _Dislocations of toes_. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

# -- In describing dislocation of the talus from the tibio-fibular socket, the varieties are named according to the direction in which the foot passes -- backward, forward, medially, laterally, or upward. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The points of tenderness are over the deltoid ligament or medial malleolus, the inferior tibio-fibular joint, and at the seat of fracture of the fibula. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The synovial cavity of the superior tibio-fibular articulation is usually distinct from that of the knee-joint, but may communicate with it through the popliteal bursa. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The synovial membrane of the ankle-joint passes up between the bones of the leg to line the inferior tibio-fibular joint; but it is distinct from that of the intertarsal joints, which communicate with one another in a complicated manner. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

Apart from this, the ankle is usually sprained in fractures by indirect violence, and we have frequently found the superior tibio-fibular articulation torn open in severe fractures of both bones of the leg from indirect violence. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The individual tarsal bones, especially the talus and calcaneus, are altered in shape as well as in their relations to one another and to the tibio-fibular socket. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

The tibio-fibular interosseous ligament usually resists, and an oblique fracture of the fibula 2 or 4 inches above its lower end results. ❋ Alexander Miles (1893)

[gabo], from the [peruvian] come cullos, is a [latin] american word meaning tibio. ❋ Aiuhdasfl (2022)

Cross Reference for Tibio

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