According to his mother, the youth received burns to his neck and hands and was undergoing treatment at Cork University Hospital. |
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Safety guards will help you protect your child from burns or injury from heat and power appliances. |
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The truck driver suffered minor burns to his face but there were no other injuries or damage to the plant, Reynolds said. |
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When the action heats up, though, there's no mistaking that Shay Sweet burns with a seemingly unquenchable sexual thirst. |
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Post-mortem tests showed the boy had suffered serious head injuries and burns to nearly all of his body. |
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A nurse applies an orange-coloured antiseptic with cotton wool to a girl who suffered serious burns to her back. |
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The man had skull fractures, a severely broken thumb and burns to the bottom of his feet. |
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Jake, who was eight months old at the time, suffered heat burns rather than direct flame injuries and was in intensive care for two weeks. |
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Packing and unpacking your suitcase may seem like a pain, but a 145-pound woman burns approximately 132 calories an hour doing so. |
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She escaped with the help of a passer-by but suffered more than 30 injuries, including burns to her face, arm and knees. |
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Of these often-untrained teens, 200,000 are injured every year through slips, falls, strains and burns. |
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Another bear suffered serious burns to its legs and chest, resulting in festering wounds and fever. |
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Last week, a young Vietnamese woman suffered minor burns to her stomach and hands after her 8210 Nokia mobile phone apparently exploded. |
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He suffered third degree burns to his feet and legs after two young men poured lighter fuel over his lower body and set him alight. |
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The dance is set up as wholesome bobby-soxer swing, but Hayworth projects a voluptuous energy that practically burns a hole in the celluloid. |
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If our house was on fire, the camera is one of few things that I'd risk smoke inhalation and multi-degree burns to save. |
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Shallow burns are allowed to heal on their own, and full-thickness thermal injuries typically are excised and covered with a skin graft. |
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Officers discovered her locked in a cupboard under the stairs and covered in cigarette burns. |
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Sixteen years old, he wears a nylon jacket with round cigarette burns in the shell, dirty cotton batting seeping out. |
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Mrs Church died four days after a major skin graft operation at the hospital on November 2, with cause of death given as burns. |
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The prints are a bit grainy and even retain cigarette burns from their 16 mm origins. |
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After being arrested the man told officers the boy, who had been badly beaten and was covered in cigarette burns, was in the bedroom. |
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Mixed with poor coal are certain unburnable materials that melt and stick together as it burns and form what are known as clinkers. |
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The craft had obviously seen a lot of the galaxy, judging from the dents, pocks, and black burns covering the hull. |
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Harold Thomson's handkerchief showed the bullet hole and powder burns from the highwayman's gunshot. |
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A burn marked his coat, but there didn't seem to be any bleeding of burns on his skin. |
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In others, he burns an old computer with a blowtorch and demonstrates the safe way to smash a monitor. |
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I'm looking for cigarette burns in the carpet, wine stains on the settee and crushed vol-au-vents on the hearth rug. |
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A moment later, he sat on the old faded gold-colored couch with cigarette burns and dog hairs covering its once beautiful state. |
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I'm back at work, after five days of sitting around with half my head swollen up and the other half covered in friction burns. |
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His hands were covered in rope burns and marks, his face red with nervousness and fatigue. |
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Cleo was dumped next to him, her hands and feet bound with coarse rope that caused friction burns on her skin. |
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It spreads rapidly, becomes attached to new objects, and burns with the pain of unassuaged longing. |
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A police spokesman confirmed that the woman's boot had been blown off by a firework and that she had suffered burns to her foot. |
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Experimental technology includes the use of a biofuel boiler that burns discarded cooking oil and used motor oil from the store's auto center. |
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The woman, aged 39, was able to walk to the ambulance before being taken to hospital with minor burns and singes. |
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If I'd been wearing a tie, I'd have started twiddling it and doing slow burns to an unseen camera. |
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The outlaws, aided by an old sibyl, defeat the castle's forces, and it burns to the ground. |
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Little Kara McLaughlin suffered severe burns to her face and left hand when a firework in her garden exploded, showering her in hot sparks. |
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His arms were covered in small trickles of blood that flowed from the many burns on his body. |
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Unconscious for three days from shock and loss of blood, he woke to find himself back in Texas at the burns centre. |
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When punk rock burns brightly, it is capable of amazing feats of transmutation. |
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My grandmother was a nurse there in the Second World War when they were treating servicemen for burns and shell shock. |
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The patients to undergo this new medical procedure have been seriously disfigured by burns, serious accidents or personal tragedies. |
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They seemed to be no better off than their subjects, with hair and teeth falling out and sores like burns on bare faces and hands. |
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A 19 year old man suffered serious burns after climbing 30 feet up an electricity pylon carrying 30,000 volts. |
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If there is a God who can see inside mezuzahs, a God who burns people's houses for two smudged letters, then He must know that secret, too. |
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He taps the pipe's bowl against his palm, and throws the tobacco out the window before it burns him. |
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Deep partial-thickness burns that are sensate but do not blanch well are usually treated with topical antibiotics. |
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The finale burns down the barn with sennets and tuckets from the trumpets, echoed rhythmically by the timpani. |
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Solutions do not lie in tinkering with the system, fiddling while Earth burns. |
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One firefighter suffered burns to his neck, and was treated by ambulance medics at the scene. |
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Their convoy was hit by a suicide car bomber and three friends were medevacked with severe burns. |
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The car was cut open and the woman freed but she had suffered third-degree burns and died at the scene. |
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Deborah suffered third-degree burns and was in the hospital for six months. |
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Areas of deep second degree and third-degree burns may continue to build up scar tissue for at least two years. |
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Some second-degree burns can heal with time, but deep ones and third-degree burns require skin grafts. |
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The wounds inflicted often include shattered limbs, third-degree burns and ruptured organs. |
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After the incident, she was immediately taken to the hospital with deep third-degree burns, inflicted on 5 per cent of her skin. |
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Peter suffered third-degree burns to his arms and had to be airlifted to hospital. |
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A boy who suffered third-degree burns in a suspected arson attack has died in hospital more than two months after the incident. |
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He wound up spending a month in the hospital being treated for second-degree burns on his hands and arms. |
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Natural color may return to superficial burns and some second-degree burns in several months. |
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It also reduces the potential for burns from a hot stovetop by eliminating the need to reach over electric or gas burners. |
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His whole face is blistered and he has first and second-degree burns to his face which may leave scarring. |
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Do not remove dead burned tissue and do not open blisters that may form, particularly in second-degree burns. |
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Well seasoned firewood is easier to start, produces more heat, and burns cleaner. |
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It turns out that a year's worth of running for the bus, walking the dog or doing a weekly shopping burns more than 100,000 calories. |
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Superficial cuts, scratches, abrasions, minor burns, stings and bites will heal with the same treatment. |
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Without the proper equipment, a worker risks injuries such as abrasions, or friction burns. |
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The school also raided wardrobes and cupboards for old clothes to sell to a company that re-use, recycle or burns them to create energy. |
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One of their animals is a Quarter Horse dubbed Phoenix because he survived life-threatening burns in a fire in Lexington in mid-August. |
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A peat fire burns all day and locals sometimes turn up with their bagpipes, accordions or mouth organs! |
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Some range into Alaska and the Yukon, where thick carpets of morels grow in burns accessible only by helicopter, floatplane, or river raft. |
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Cigarette burns are part of the inevitable aftermath of most parties, as is spilt candle wax. |
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Care needs to be taken to avoid walking barefoot because of the serious risk of burns to the foot. |
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Anyone who disagrees with me is guilty of cheap demagoguery and will get what's coming when I'm doling out the wedgies and the Chinese burns. |
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That sympathomimetic drug, which stimulates the nervous system, increases metabolism and burns fat. |
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An abandoned Iraqi Soviet-made tank sits in the Kuwaiti desert in April 1991 as an oil well burns in the background. |
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A barrel of wood preservative caught fire and exploded leaving nine-year-old Stephen with extensive burns from which he died. |
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The carbon dioxide absorbed by the rape seed plants as they grow compensates for that produced when it burns. |
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For example, there are several cases on record of third-degree burns healing with extraordinary rapidity. |
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It cannot be true for you that petrol burns and not true for me, since what happens when I put a match to petrol is just what happens if you do. |
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Edamame, or soybeans, contain a balance of carbs, protein, and good fat, so your body burns them slowly and you avoid an afternoon slump. |
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The Americans whitewashed the walls to cover the burns, and it has since been called the White House. |
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Even when the equipment started melting, and they got burns to their arms, they kept going. |
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Cross-country skiing burns an enormous amount of calories, but I do eat a lot of fresh fruit and wholefoods. |
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It's an affordable over-the-counter remedy that's said to visibly improve keloids, burns and some scars. |
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This caused Adrian to acquire more burns, and to fall onto the barbwire fence by his parked truck. |
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As the gas burns, it moves rapidly rearward, propelling the aircraft forward. |
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All victims are suffering varying degrees of burns to their skin, lungs and windpipes, caused by inhaling hot gases. |
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Rubel burns a fire down to embers and braises vegetables, simmers spelt, roasts fish, and even steams a chocolate cake, all at his fireplace. |
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Holding a gas torch in his gloved hand, he burns some excess solder off the machine's scrubber. |
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Doctors treated her for third-degree burns and welts from swarms of stinging black March flies. |
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How, it asks, is poetic talent related to worldly success, and ought one to live if the talent burns out? |
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Don't let financial worries stress you out and burn your credit card before it burns you. |
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Sandy is a superannuated swinger, complete with stash, burns and a 17-year-old hippie on his arm. |
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With any relaxer kit, you must carefully follow all directions to avoid potential skin and scalp burns, hair loss and eye injury. |
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The allegro finale burns down the barn, without sacrificing musicality or a sharply-defined independence of voices. |
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Yet beneath the laid-back exterior, a lifelong love for playing sport still obviously burns away. |
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Of aloe vera's many uses, most probably the best known is in the treatment of burns. |
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He suddenly cries out in pain as the hot knife handle burns his hand, but he doesn't let go. |
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As the mixture burns, the length of tube above it increases and the wavelength of the standing wave increases. |
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So, being bad at golf actually burns up more calories than being good at it. |
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He has scarring from burns on his face, chest, and arms, but those have healed quite well, and certainly aren't the cause of his problems now. |
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Cutting-edge equipment will mean that those with burns, lesions and other skin scars can now have their cases reviewed on a computer. |
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Now she gets involved with men who have multiple partners and burns herself out trying to be number one with them. |
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Her burns were slowly healing and turning into scars, the skin on the back her neck was still a little black and her skin was still peeling. |
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Because the fare burns quickly at a high temperature, it also burns cleanly, with virtually no emissions up the stack. |
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Signs of torture may be subtle and include occult fractures from beatings or 1-2 mm clustered scars from electrical burns. |
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He had already suffered a shock and 35 per cent burns but the nail compounded his woes when it pierced his left buttock. |
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On examination we observed a healthy man with no other burns of the skin of the scalp, face or neck. |
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The plant burns lignite coal from the Maritsa Iztok mining complex and produces a large amount of sulphur dioxide. |
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Liquids like petrol must not be used to light the fire as they ignite too quickly and can cause serious burns. |
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Small rips, tears and burns in these applied materials reveal the varying hues of the paper underneath. |
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I would answer your question with the scene in which Angela burns the roast she was preparing for dinner. |
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Sophie sustained first, second and third degree burns when a bowl of boiling water spilled over her torso and legs. |
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It burns the ciliary body, reduces production of the aqueous humour, and can reduce intraocular pressures even in refractory disease. |
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At this hour, Mission Control has fired up the rocket engine on a supply ship attached to Mir for the second of what will be three burns. |
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The ground burns just scorched the butts a bit, whereas the crown fires damaged the stems. |
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Acid rain from industrial pollution has killed off fish life in around 300 miles of rivers and burns in south-west Scotland. |
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Several small burns rushing towards the river are easily crossed, and the vegetation is symbolic of marshy land, with bog myrtle plentiful. |
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Censorship burns me up, and I wish that anime distributors were required to state up front that the content has been censored. |
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Soon his main engine burned out, shooting sparks all over Titty and giving her third degree electrical burns. |
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In one of his drunken stupors, he lights their house on fire and burns it down. |
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High impedance leads to heating of the material, arcing to the material under the dispersive electrode, and subsequent burns. |
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He asserts his evidence proves that Aboriginal people did not conduct regular burns in the land now encompassed by the park. |
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He required skin grafts to his upper body, arms and legs and spent almost two months in the hospital's burns unit. |
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We have a spin with a DVD burner that burns up to 8x for DVDs and is cheap to boot. |
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With respect to orbit altitude, four of six planned ascent burns have been completed. |
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The busy staff showed us to our table decorated with a spilt ashtray and cigarette burns. |
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There is little love lost between them, although mutual respect burns strongly. |
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The differential diagnosis of bullous impetigo includes thermal burns, blistering disorders, and Stevens-Johnson syndrome. |
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We were doing the final burns for orbital insertion when I finally had time to look at the unpromising object on the screen. |
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Because of a faulty rail, he fell into a vat of boiling liquid and died three weeks later from his burns. |
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The couple suffered severe burns as they battled in vain to rescue their boys from the blaze. |
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The mission would fail if any of the four engine burns needed to reach the Moon and get into lunar orbit underperformed. |
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Best economy fuel burns at the above settings are 14 and 11 gph, respectively. |
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The end result is that you'll be able to kiss those nasty razor burns goodbye. |
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Each participant took their respective places and was getting handkerchiefs or spare shirts to act as a protection from rope burns. |
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For example, acid burns may be neutralized by the application of a paste of sodium bicarbonate to the affected area. |
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The overpowering scent and taste of whiskey fills my nostrils and burns my taste buds. |
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She asked that I tell no one about the bruises he left on her shoulders, the belt marks on her thighs, the rope burns on her wrists and ankles. |
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Avoid hot-water or steam vaporizers that can cause accidental burns and scalds in children. |
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You can put it neat on the skin for things like cuts, grazes, burns and scalds. |
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Traumatic injuries include incisions, gunshot and sword wounds, scalds and burns, contusions, sprains or animal stings and bites. |
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Charl, 43, became profoundly deaf when, aged eight, infection set in after he received 80 percent burns in a braaivleis accident. |
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The villagers cook on open fires with precariously balanced pots, which result in many scalds and burns. |
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Aloe vera is an excellent first aid remedy to keep in the house for minor burns, cuts, scalds and sunburns. |
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According to another survey conducted in the US, many parents still fail to recognize their child's potential risk of burns and scalds. |
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Its triple action of pain relief and antiseptic and healing qualities makes this remedy suitable for even serious burns and scalds. |
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Healed burns will be sensitive and have dry scaly skin, which may develop pigmental changes. |
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These estimates are difficult because they rely on complex models and calculations about how a star burns its nuclear fuel and ages. |
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This not only burns diesel fuel, but can also spread disease as soil is moved from field to field. |
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When it's underactive, your body burns fewer calories and burns them more slowly, which is why it can affect your ability to lose weight. |
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Anarchy naturally results in an escalating series of parties, during the last of which the family's home burns to the ground. |
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Specifically, thyroid hormone helps regulate how many calories your body burns each day. |
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These chimneys may be hard to start and they may smoke as the fire burns low. |
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As a teenager, a magnesium flare exploded and left 70 percent of his body covered in third-degree burns. |
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Rivers and burns became torrents and turned the colour of pus. |
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The hill burns are torrents of water and the main river a chocolate flood. |
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The company says this produces wood that ignites easier and burns cleaner, with less creosote and ash. |
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Families that do build petty empires flame out, but the grand empire ruled by our churning elites burns on, evidently, forever. |
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As the wood burns, chemical potential energy becomes kinetic energy like heat which can presumably radiate out of the fixed area of space you defined in your question. |
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I never do burns for heavy compound lifts, such as squats or bent rows. |
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These chemical burns resulted despite treatment with ranitidine. |
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These resulted in trips to the ER for burns, corneal abrasions, and the odd amputation. |
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Exercise is important for maintaining good health and well-being because it burns up kilojoules and raises your body's metabolic rate for 24 to 48 hours afterwards. |
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On contact, strong acids, alkalis, and heavy metals cause chemical burns. |
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I still have all the marks from the rug burns from the lap dance I did. |
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In the dress rehearsal, I almost got some real proper, go-to-the-hospital burns. |
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When the civilian President Maduro burns in effigy, soldiers can still warm their hands around the flames. |
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He anoints them with water, pelts them with rocks, and burns Asian bank notes inside the craniums before covering them with Mardi Gras beads and found objects. |
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The technology could revolutionise the treatment of burns and skin damage, offering a less painful alternative to skin grafts and reduced scarring. |
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Light cigarette burns which have not penetrated the finish may be removed with a thin paste of rotten-stone, soda or cigarette ashes mixed with mineral oil or linseed oil. |
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Because it is not atomising the diesel enough, the fuel volume burns erratically and slowly as the flame burns through the large droplets of oily fuel. |
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He or she attaches the illuminator to the light source, sets it at 1,000 lumens, and places the light source on standby to reduce the chance of burns. |
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This form of exercise is tailor-made for women in particular, because it effectively works the hips, buttocks, legs, arms and stomach and burns tremendous body fat. |
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Not until the army fires an explosive into their hideout and the mall burns down does the ordeal finally reach closure. |
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The presence of excessive splash burns or of scalds on areas of the body not likely to get wet when a child spills a container of hot liquid suggests an inflicted injury. |
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Your body burns a number of calories for every kilogram you weigh. |
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One person suffered burns to the arm and the other had a burnt finger. |
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Eight-year-old Daniel did not mind taking off his baseball cap to show the burns to his head that are now healing after three months of intensive treatment. |
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Roberts said injuries in such an accident could range from burns to broken bones, bruises and sprained ankles from sliding down the emergency chutes. |
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He was rushed to hospital where he was treated for burns to his head. |
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The flames were soon doused but the patient suffered burns to an arm. |
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He suffered burns to the back, neck and hands while trying to save his home from a blaze which engulfed the building during the wee hours of yesterday morning. |
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Queen size it may be, but from the mattress you can see it carried many stains that the last owners were trying to bleach off, and cigarette burns. |
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Cobwebs, chewing gum, dust and cigarette burns were some of the sights which greeted a team of inspectors when they arrived for an unannounced visit to Southend Hospital. |
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Costs for excess wear and tear, such as cigarette burns on the seats or damage to the body, may fall on your shoulders if outlined in the contract. |
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Medical evidence was given to the inquest that death was caused by asphyxia secondary to compression with fractures of the ribs and friction burns. |
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My hands have rope burns from trying to hang onto the camera. |
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Initially Mrs Davis, who managed to walk from the bus with more minor friction burns, and her husband were taken to a local cottage hospital in Tonopah. |
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The state currently carries out only 20 percent of the prescribed burns and brush clearing called for in the goals set by the forestry department. |
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In the period prior to the bush fire danger period, landholders are still responsible for any burning activity including pile burns or broad acre burns. |
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It burns you up that I march through life with laughter in my heart! |
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Nothing burns me up more than to see a rich, white, educated defendant walk out of the courthouse on bail when a minority defendant who did the same thing is under the jail. |
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During this election season, it burns me up that Republicans and Democrats can't talk about poverty here in the U.S. and shrinking government services to the poor. |
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The only significant natural damaging action, in the current climate, is erosion by topographically canalised rain water, mostly confined to becks and burns. |
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Liquids at that temperature can cause third-degree burns in 2-7 seconds. |
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She got very bad third-degree burns on her left arm, her whole back was bruised, she had a fractured wrist and some very bad lacerations on her leg. |
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Then followed the story related to Holi, where Lord Shiva, annoyed by Manmatha for disturbing his meditation, burns the latter to ashes with his third eye. |
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The self-sealing fuel tanks were my idea, but it was Fiona who got the fuel mix just right and we did our first test run with only minor problems and first-degree burns. |
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Hove's incandescent anger and contempt for the lies and platitudes of the time-serving politicians, opposition as well as government, burns off the page. |
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However, in contrast to thermal burns, the fluid losses do not occur until the blisters form and the fluid lost is a transudate, which means protein losses are less. |
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She burns through staffers and appears to have a megalomaniacal sense of her own destiny. |
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For some reason, which no one can prove to my knowledge, when black powder is trickled into the cartridge case through a drop tube it burns more cleanly. |
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The extract also mobilizes fatty acids from adipose cells, which increases the amount of fat the body burns as fuel, particularly during exercise. |
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One woman said her dog came back from Green Acre with unexplained chemical burns. |
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A blinding pain burns in my left shoulder, and I yell in pain. |
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The smouldering passion that ignites the central love triangle, with it's heated arguments and graphic lovemaking, burns brightly for a brief moment and then blows itself out. |
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No matter how hot a blowtorch burns, it doesn't shed much light. |
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It increases the number of calories the body burns each day, including calories from bodyfat, and it blunts hunger, thereby decreasing the amount of calories taken in. |
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Small, nimble, and underpowered for many jobs, the 480-horsepower tug burns little fuel and draws only five feet of water, two feet less than most small tugs. |
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Staff from York Dungeon will be joining forces with students from York College to dramatise the dangers of slips, trips, burns, cuts and stabbings in the kitchen. |
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The exposed white appears in a brash yellow field, a pale blue sky and the hide of a large gray cow, unifying the painting, which burns like a summer's high noon. |
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Honey has long been a popular infection fighter, going back to the days of the Ancient Egyptians and Greeks, who used it to treat burns, cuts and ulcers. |
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He had a Breton thing, in that he burns friend and foe alike. |
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So Nollywood burns bright and threatens to use up all the oxygen that the Ghanaians and others across Africa need to sustain their own film cultures. |
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It's a chemical irritant and it burns the lining of the spider vein. |
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There were scars from burns, from stabs, slashes, and from his own magic. |
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Devotees must know the position of the sun when observing their religious rituals, and their temples contain an inner sanctum in which burns a perpetual fire. |
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The hospital was almost completely occupied by aircrew burns patients. |
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By now the tandem pair were out of sight, but no doubt they shared the exhaustion and biting pain that burns through the legs as the gradient increases to punishing steepness. |
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As a consultant, she undertook technically challenging specialist work, providing anaesthesia for burns surgery, paediatric plastic surgery, and major oncological surgery. |
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The gel is known to be a remarkably effective healer of wounds and burns. |
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In people with third-degree burns, for example, any regenerating skin appears as a growing island with a hair follicle at its center. |
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In severe burns, it actually destroys the cells by causing the body to produce autodestruct proteins. |
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Thus marimba'd night And multifoliate sea become phantasmal space, and there, light-years away, one farewell image Burns and fades and burns. |
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A WOMAN suffered burns to her arms and legs after a toaster caught fire in her home in Menai Bridge. |
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Take the case of Frank Morris, a black cobbler who died from burns in 1964 after a Klansman set fire to his shop in Ferriday, Louisiana. |
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The first cultured cell type used for therapy was the keratinocyte of the epidermis, for the treatment of burns. |
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I watched the villagers and they would use all the fruits and plants in the jungle, including paw paw, on burns, open wounds, even a broken leg. |
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In severe burns, the body loses large amounts of nitrogen, in the urine and by exudation from the burned body surface. |
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Other experimenters, including Elihu Thomson and Nikola Tesla, also reported burns. |
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Gwion then placed his thumb in his mouth to soothe his burns resulting in Gwion's enlightenment. |
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However, Fionn burns his thumb on the salmon's juices, and he instinctively puts it in his mouth. |
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Nonlower extremity injuries range from saddle burns to nerve compression to lumbar muscle spasm. |
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In the Eastern United States, the species once bred widely in the Appalachian Plateau near burns, open marshes, meadows, bogs and lakes. |
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I don't call in Bill Wyman to come in and do him over for me, with one of his vicious ankle-twisters or Chinese burns. |
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Since the community burns livestock manure as fuel, rather than plowing the nutrients back into the land, the crop production is reduced. |
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She then related an anecdote involving industrial glue and pelvic burns. |
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A student was treated for minor burns after a cooking session got out of hand at a Tyneside hall of residence. |
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I debated childproofing my house, but decided against, on the basis that any scars or burns would serve as object lessons in restraint. |
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Moreover, hydrogen fire, while being extremely hot, is almost invisible, and thus can lead to accidental burns. |
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A WOMAN was left in agony with serious burns at a cocktail bar where the bartenders play with fire. |
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The western and eastern boundaries of the city are marked by two burns that are tributaries of the River Tay. |
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So, like a heart surgeon, Jesus cracks open the scripture and burns the words of faith on their broken hearts. |
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In another incident in Sharjah the same day, two workers received first-degree burns. |
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The brothers suffered first-degree burns on different parts of their bodies, including thighs, back and abdomen. |
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Skin grafts are used to heal deep burns at the earliest so that they don't lead to bad scarring, deformity and infections. |
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Brown trout are common in many burns and a number of the rivers in the area have populations of sea trout, salmon and otters. |
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Referral of patients with major burns to the burns unit at TBH remained the greatest single problem in the system. |
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Potential non-timber product of this tress is Cajuput oil, which use as traditional medicine for pain, burns, cold, influenza, dyspepsia. |
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Another Amish-inspired product found in many medicine cabinets is a salve used for burns. |
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We can only hope this boondoggle burns itself out before many people are killed. |
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White phosphorus burns on the bodies of civilians wounded in clashes near Bagram were confirmed. |
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But he was beaten back by flames, sustaining 40 per cent second-degree burns. |
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A dermatologist can remove skin tags with electrocautery, which burns them off. |
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Cobra Derringers are for up close work and, if they have to be used, the target will probably be close enough to receive powder burns. |
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A firefighter suffered second-degree burns on one ear but did not need medical attention, according to Capt. |
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Anyone who's experienced physical contact with this plant will have a clear idea why it's used homeopathically for burns. |
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A 14-year-old boy suffered third-degree burns to his hands and second-degree burns to his back and face, Rex said. |
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The boy, identified only as RM, suffered bleeding blisters on his back and face and had second-degree burns. |
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It provides a controlled stream of normal saline solution for wetting dressings prior to removal or for cleansing minor wounds, burns and cuts. |
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There is also pain relief wet tissue and wipes, which help relieve pain and treat minor burns as they contain alcohol and benzocaine. |
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Finally, unlike many other holiday bulbs if one bulb of the LED lights burns out the whole strand will stay lit. |
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A 20-year-old man from Southport was treated for burns at the town's infirmary after falling into a lime pit. |
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A TEENAGER was taken to hospital suffering burns to his hands after setting off a smoke bomb in school. |
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But the fire exploded in his face giving him third-degree burns over 45 per cent of his body. |
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Both teenagers suffered second and third-degree burns over more than 95 per cent of their bodies. |
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When Eula May leaves Roberta to baby-sit her dead father while she hurries to her suicide, the house burns to the ground. |
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He's punched me, clawed his way up me, pulled my hair and attempted to give me Chinese burns. |
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Withering asides, snide remarks, and Chinese burns would be absolutely fine and dandy as long as you show us the money. |
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The massage at times felt like the Chinese burns my brother used to give me as a child. |
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Probably because all the PR people have been locked in a room, where they are being tortured with Chinese burns and wedgies at this very moment. |
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On vacation, I'm a worrywart for fretting about third-degree burns and puncture wounds. |
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The sun burns your face as you smoke the after-breakfast pipe, but it leaves the snow unthawed. |
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White phosphorus has been condemned by human rights organizations as cruel and inhumane because it causes severe burns. |
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Paramedics then climbed up, slathered a soothing gel on his burns, gave him pain medication, a neck brace and slid him on a spine board. |
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Some are said to have suffered burns to their bodies, but not their clothes. |
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When a bushfire broke out, he was again injured, sustaining second degree burns on his legs, front torso, lips, left hand and right forearm. |
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This could cause eye trouble, lung ailments, heat exhaustion, cut, and burns. |
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Six hundred eight-eight children hospitalized with burns were randomly assigned to receive early enteral nutrition or late enteral nutrition. |
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That burns out the torquer motor that moves the mirror within the periscope head itself. |
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I'll melt the hole and as it burns to two inches indiameter, I spray water on it with a squirter. |
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His burns are typical of those caused by napalm or similar incendiary bombs. |
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Indeed, the lamp burns brighter in dangerous atmospheres thus acting as a warning to miners of rising firedamp levels. |
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As a result, wet cement is strongly caustic, and can easily cause severe skin burns if not promptly washed off with water. |
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Buttocks, lower back, and perineum burns occur when a child's middle body is forcibly held under hot water. |
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Chlorine is a respiratory irritant that attacks mucous membranes and burns the skin. |
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In addition, it exhibits a strong dehydrating property on carbohydrates, liberating extra heat and causing secondary thermal burns. |
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Sulfuric acid is capable of causing very severe burns, especially when it is at high concentrations. |
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It delivers high energy per its weight and burns cleanly with little soot, making it ideal for this purpose. |
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But it is Verner Panton, Danish architect, designer and experimental colourist, who burns the retina. |
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Herbs such as Slippery Elm and Comfrey leaf help to put back moisture into the lungs that smoking burns out. |
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So I had an operation called a submucous diathermy which burns through the back of your nose to try to clear it out. |
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Anthracite ignites with difficulty and burns with a short, blue, and smokeless flame. |
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Phosphorus and sulfur may be burnt out of the molten iron, but this also burns out the carbon, which must be replaced. |
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Carbonization starts and produces volatile matter, which burns inside the partially closed side door. |
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