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to oar
noun
An implement used to propel a boat or a ship in the water, having a flat blade at one end, being rowed from the other end and being normally fastened to the vessel.
synonyms
Exact(10)
"Whip it in early, bank on Timmy being there" were the instructions from Postecoglou to Oar during Australia's only pre-match training session.
The most obvious method would be to leap joyfully, from oar to oar, along the flank of a longship; that is how Douglas announced his homecoming in "The Vikings" (1958), making the happiest of returns to his people.
Fitzinger derived the genus' name, Eretmochelys, from the Greek roots eretmo and chelys, corresponding to "oar" and "turtle", respectively.
AXB predicted up to 3% lower mean doses to OAR.
Minimizing these uncertainties can facilitate smaller CTV to PTV margins, thereby reducing the dose to OAR.
The highest sparing to OAR obtained with RapidArc was borne out by a comparison with the IMRT plans.
Similar(49)
Indeed, it is more like a galley ship in which the wage slaves are strapped to oars and exhorted to work harder for less.
— Wading into an explanation of his new, more-powerful straight-arm stroke, the United States sprinter Cullen Jones compared his arms to oars.
The plans based on superimposed CT image datasets achieved full coverage of the tumor, while allowing tight margins around the PTV and minimizing the dose to OARs.
While the ultra high dose IMRT is very efficient to treat the prostate cancer [31], the DVCs to OARs used in normal IMRT cases cannot be applied ordinarily due to the increase of irradiated OARs with escalating dose.
To treat the prostate cancer, we designated the blue region containing the prostate as a PTV and assigned the regions colored green, red, cyan, and magenta to OARs (OAR1 to OAR4).
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