anatomy

એનાટોમી
definition
noun
The basic human sciences involved are anatomy , physiology, and psychology.
the branch of science concerned with the bodily structure of humans, animals, and other living organisms, especially as revealed by dissection and the separation of parts.
Machiavelli's anatomy of the art of war
a study of the structure or internal workings of something.
translation of 'anatomy'
શરીરરચનાવિજ્ઞાન
noun
શરીર વિધા
example
The conference was chaired by Dr Peter Dangerfield, a lecturer in human 'anatomy' at Liverpool University
Since the sixteenth century, human 'anatomy' had been one of the most venerated medical sciences of the early modern period.
The book is primarily designed for students of forensic anthropology and presumes a background in human 'anatomy' and osteology.
He also left extensive studies of human 'anatomy' based on dissection of animals and anatomical writings of others.
To paraphrase Tommy's robust phraseology, O'Neill will kick certain parts of the 'anatomy' .
The Louvre has sent a tiny St George that shows how dodgy was his early grasp of animal and human 'anatomy' .
Farm animals are valuable models for normal human 'anatomy' and physiology and for many disease states.
Take, for example, the sad case of Michael Servetus, who had worked with the father of 'anatomy' , Andreas Vesalius, as a prosector in Paris.
human 'anatomy'
The rough portrayal of both human 'anatomy' and the landscape indicates not the artist's incompetence but rather the intention to fashion the images in the way the book was to be enjoyed.
In his letter yesterday, Mr Espinal, described a lengthy 'anatomy' of his service collapse, and took readers through the layers of technical foul-ups.
Films about films are no great novelty in the DVD age, but Lost in La Mancha is a rarity: an 'anatomy' of a film that never was.
The real value in his account, however, is in its detailed 'anatomy' of failed institutional leadership.
His work covered four main themes: painting, architecture, the elements of mechanics, and human 'anatomy' .
I'm more concerned with the fact that human and duck 'anatomy' is so gosh darn similar.
he studied physiology and 'anatomy'
We then moved on to a series of movements, including touching toes, heels, knees or any other part of the 'anatomy' you could reach, as we bounced.
Webster employs this episode in a final analysis of the 'anatomy' of contemporary New Zealand anthropology and Maori studies.
Instead of his head, Jack has a different part of his 'anatomy' patched up with vinegar and brown paper.
This is not an 'anatomy' of his murder, nor the autopsy of a black man lynched by three young white males, but more an evocation of how this event fits in to a landscape and climate as much mental as physical.
A detailed 'anatomy' of misordered situations shows that deviations from the true order in such cases are due mainly to interchanges of adjacent markers.
she was unable to reach for the bag in case she revealed more of her 'anatomy' than she already had
The 'anatomy' of different oaks has implications for barrel making.
Neill refuses to wonder but instead conducts an 'anatomy' of the anecdote's historical conditions through the opening.
Whether it's blunt trauma wounds, the path of a bullet or the 'anatomy' of a fight, we see it all.
Natural Born Heroes also reveals how the 'anatomy' of the human face is unique in the animal kingdom and can show an extraordinary range of emotions.
Hello and welcome to the 'anatomy' of democracy, the perils of democracy and the truth about democracy.
descriptions of the cat's 'anatomy' and behaviour
For much of Bu00e9nabou's writing can be read as an 'anatomy' of reading; and looming at the center thereof is the search for the ideal Reader.
Like all League tutors, McDaid is trained in 'anatomy' , physiology, science of movement, personal performance and choreography.
Credits: Google Translate