Orally Sentence Examples

orally
  • It is essentially a book in the form of a discourse, whether it was ever orally delivered or not.

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  • Substitutes may therefore be divided into those administered orally and those administered hypodermically.

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  • The poem, according to Lachmann, was based on some twenty popular ballads, originally handed down orally, but written down about 1190 or 1200.

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  • The daily activities of the great mass of the adult population, in countries where commodities are sold at definite prices for definite quantities, include calculations which have often to be performed rapidly, on data orally given, and leading in general to results which can only be approximate; and almost every branch of manufacture or commerce has its own range of applications of arithmetic. Arithmetic as a school subject has been largely regarded from this point of view.

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  • At the polls, all votes are given orally, a system which facilitates corruption; the officials who control the elections depend for their livelihood on the ban, usually a Magyarist; and thus, even apart from the privileged members, a majority favourable to Hungary can usually be secured.

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  • The fullness and inaccuracy of detail which are a feature of the book suggest that Jason's information was derived from the recollections of eye-witnesses orally communicated.

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  • His work was transmitted orally for over 200 years.

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  • The test is administered orally to an individual child who is seated such that neither the examiner's mouth nor the words on the test form are visible to the child.

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  • When high doses of vitamin B12 are given orally, only a small percentage can be absorbed, which may explain the low toxicity."

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  • Vitamin E used both topically and taken orally may be helpful in protecting you against this dangerous illness.

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  • You may also take vitamin E orally; however, caution is advised.

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  • There has been some documented success in the use of secretin given orally to children with autism.

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  • The most common method of treatment is to give secretin orally three times a day either 20 minutes before or 20 minutes after eating.

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  • In one small study, Curcumin was given orally to 32 chronic anterior uveitis patients who were divided into two groups.

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  • When taking St. John's Wort orally as an antidepressant or antianxiety medication, the herb is available in caplet or tablet form.

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  • Patients consume SciatiGon orally, usually in the form of a few drops diluted in juice or water.

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  • Methodone is a drug taken orally, usually every 24-36 hours.

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  • Although there is currently an injectable treatment available, the Food and Drug Administration is investigating making buprenorphine into a tablet to be taken orally.

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  • As with any type of sugary product that is taken orally, the risk of tooth decay rises.

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  • Most medicines administered at home are given orally or topically; although some medications, such as insulin, are usually given by subcutaneous injection.

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  • Tube feedings may be required in some patients with failure to thrive, aspiration pneumonia, difficulty swallowing, or an inability to ingest adequate calories orally to maintain nutritional status or promote growth.

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  • All medications for ITP are given either orally or intravenously; intramuscular injection is avoided because of the possibility of causing bleeding into the skin.

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  • Chemotherapeutic drugs are given orally or intravenously, either alone or in conjunction with surgery, radiation, or both.

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  • In some cases, vitamin E taken orally or applied topically can speed healing and prevent scarring.

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  • Digital thermometers can and should be used in place of glass thermometers rectally, orally, and under the arm in all age groups.

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  • In this test, an amenorrheic teenager is given a dose of progesterone either orally or as an injection.

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  • Systemic medications may be taken orally and include anticholinergic drugs, sedatives or tranquilizers, and calcium channel blockers.

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  • The orally active stimulants were formerly used as an aid to dieting but were of little value for this purpose.

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  • Once the child can keep fluids down orally and urine output has returned to normal, then intravenous rehydration is discontinued.

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  • A chelating agent specific to the metal involved is given orally, intramuscularly, or intravenously.

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  • Most vaccines are given as injections, but a few are taken orally.

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  • This medication would be taken orally and could prevent the absorption of digested phenylalanine into the patient's bloodstream.

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  • In older children and adolescents, more severe cases of contact dermatitis are treated with corticosteroids applied to the skin or taken orally.

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  • Some children are fed both orally and through the tube.

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  • Moderate dehydration can be treated orally, but severe dehydration requires the child to take fluids intravenously (IV).

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  • The treatments include the use of high doses of steroids (either orally or injected into the lesion) to stop the growth.

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  • It may be used in drugs taken orally or by suppository.

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  • Children must be rehydrated very gradually; this can be done orally in mild hyperglycemia and over an extended period (30 to 36 hours) of intravenous administration with severe hyperglycemia.

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  • Rickets heals promptly with large doses vitamin D administered orally each day for approximately one month.

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  • You can take your temperature orally, rectally, or vaginally each morning, prior to getting out of bed.

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  • Methotrexate is given orally or by injection during your initial doctor visit, then Misoprostol tablets are given orally or inserted vaginally during a second office visit five to seven days later.

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  • Mifepristone is given orally, followed by Misoprostol tablets given orally or inserted vaginally during the second office visit 36 to 48 hours later.

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  • Because vitamin E is a fat-soluble vitamin, it can build up to toxic levels in your body when taken orally.

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  • Many variations of doses both intravenously and orally were compared to each other as though dealing with equal therapies.

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  • Shampoos and conditioners often include B vitamins to reinforce hair's strength and prevent breakage, but many experts agree that these vitamins are most beneficial when taken orally.

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  • Women may take the prescription medication orally, or they may receive an injection for short-term use.

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  • Until that time, hymns were passed down orally, much like history itself.

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  • While it was once a genre of music that was passed down orally and sung in unison, instruments were added in areas of the church.

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  • Isotretinoin is a very strong medicine taken orally to treat deeper cystic acne.

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  • Increasingly, prescription acne medications that are taken orally are far preferred both by doctors and patients.

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  • Tea tree oil is not to be taken orally, but rather to be applied directly to the skin once a day in the form of a five percent tea tree oil gel.

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  • Zinc that is taken orally in capsule form has proven to be effective in treating teenage acne by strengthening the immune system and helping to repair the skin.

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  • There were no doubt in the earliest times popular songs orally transmitted and perhaps books - of annals and laws, but except in so far as remnants meat- of them are embedded in the biblical books, they have Scrip- entirely disappeared.

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  • The Judas legend, however, never really became popular, whereas that of Oedipus was handed down both orally and in written national tales (Albanian, Finnish, Cypriote).

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  • All instruction was communicated orally, but for ordinary purposes they had a written language in which they used the Greek characters.

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  • Their most characteristic literature is to be found, not in their writings, but in the folk-tales which are trans mitted orally from generation to generation, and repeated by the wandering minstrels called by the people Peng-lipor Lara, i.

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  • In the latter case the name may have been intended to be supplied orally, in communicating the letter, or a different name may have been written in each of the individual copies.

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  • The most original statement is perhaps the view that the words of Isaiah were preserved orally by his disciples, and did not see the light (in a revised form) till a considerable time after the crystallization of the reforms of Josiah into laws.

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  • He was taught Latin orally by servants (a German tutor, Horstanus, is especially mentioned), who could speak no French, and many curious fancies were tried on him, as, for instance, that of waking him every morning by soft music. But he was by no means allowed to be idle.

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  • Although known for centuries, they have seldom been mentioned by writers on playing-cards, and the rules have for the most part been handed down orally.

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  • It consists of sacred songs or chants, partly composed independently, partly formed out of the contents of the Bible, which, however, has evidently been gathered by them orally, as until quite lately they were almost entirely illiterate and did not possess any written book.

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  • In stories which have passed through a literary medium, like The Arabian Nights, the geni or Jan do not so much resemble our fairies as they do in the popular superstitions of the East, orally collected.

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  • For some time, probably for upwards of thirty years, both the facts of the life of Jesus and His words were only related orally.

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  • Reference has already been made to the fact that during the greater part of the Apostolic age the Gospel history was taught orally.

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  • Nor did the laziness which made him unwilling to sit down to his desk prevent him from giving instruction or entertainment orally.

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  • On the one hand, it seemed to follow from the existence of such a family that Homer was a mere " eponymus," or mythical ancestor; on the other hand, it became easy to imagine the Homeric poems handed down orally in a family whose hereditary occupation it was to recite them, possibly to add new episodes from time to time, or to combine their materials in new ways, as their poetical gifts permitted.

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  • Chairs had therefore to be founded under the title of rhetoric, from which men like Chrysoloras and Guarino, Filelfo and Politian expounded orally to hundreds of eager students from every town of Italy and every nation in Europe their accumulated knowledge of antiquity.

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  • Orally Giving fluids by mouth will only help mildly affected rabbits.

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  • Ecstasy is a hallucinogenic amphetamine which is taken orally.

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  • Sensitive patients challenged with an extract of poison ivy orally developed degranulation of circulating basophils within an hour (Shelley & Resnik 1965 ).

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  • On average, 34% of the orally administered dose is absorbed, with an absolute bioavailability of 17% .

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  • As tonics, a root decoction of [bauhinia] is taken orally; .

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  • Assess and report (orally and in writing) on herd fertility management.

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  • Only 0.5 g of infective material given orally has been found in experiments to be necessary to infect a sheep with BSE.

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  • Accidental or deliberate oral ingestion The product would only be expected to be harmful if orally ingested in very large quantities.

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  • It may be administered orally, intramuscularly, or by an intravenous bolus injection or infusion.

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  • On 7 January 2002 junior counsel then instructed on behalf of Miss Brennan orally advised her solicitor at the time against appealing the decision.

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  • The national policy on heroin treatment is to dispense methadone to be consumed orally, every day, in the presence of the pharmacist.

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  • The only orally active prostaglandin E1 analog on the market is Cytotec.

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  • But Middle Eastern society (as we have noted) preserves orally thousands of such wisdom sayings.

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  • While most drugs are taken by mouth (orally) some are given by suppository or by injection.

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  • Laudanum is an alcoholic tincture of opium that is given orally to treat diarrhea.

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  • The Mexican pictures so far approached writing proper as to set down legibly the names of persons and places and the dates of events, and at least helped the professional historians to remember the traditions repeated orally from generation to generation.

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  • I studied it with Madame Olivier, a French lady who did not know the manual alphabet, and who was obliged to give her instruction orally.

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  • Each contains 50mg of sumatriptan base, as the succinate salt, to be taken orally.

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  • A basic question was how much of such material would suffice to transmit the disease orally.

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  • It supercedes all prior agreements or understandings you have with Western Union and cannot be modified orally.

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  • His instructions were for some time handed down orally, but were subsequently committed to writing, and formed the twelve books of Tages, containing a complete system of Etruscan lore.

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  • Thus he is led to the view that the ideas were orally set forth by Paul, but that the language and composition were due to some one giving from memory a sort of free interpretation of his teacher's mind.

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  • It was supposed that it had been handed down by Ezra; that it was indebted to Joshua, David or Solomon; that it was as old as Moses, to whom it had been communicated orally or in writing, complete or in its essence.

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  • Besides definite works of this kind, there was also being formed during this period a large body of exegetical and legal material, for the most part orally transmitted, which only received its literary form much later.

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  • We cannot but suppose that at a time when the number of the original band of disciples of Jesus who survived must have been becoming noticeably smaller, and all these were advanced in life, the importance of writing down that which had been orally delivered concerning the Gospel-history must have been realized.

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  • In the first place, it would be natural that the habits of thought of the period when the Gospel was delivered orally should have continued to exert influence even after the tradition had been committed to writing.

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