Definición, Significado, Sinónimos & Anagramas | Palabra Inglés NECK


NECK

Definiciones de NECK

  1. Cuello, cogote, pescuezo.
  2. Por extensión, cuello de una prenda de vestir.
  3. Por analogía, cuello de una botella o mango de un instrumento de cuerda.

16
NIX
PET
GAP

1

Número de letras

4

Es palíndromo

No

5
CK
EC
ECK
NE
NEC

136

79

374

22
CE
CEN
CK
CN
EC
ECK
ECN
EK
EKC
EN
ENC
KC
KCN
KE

Ejemplos de uso de NECK en una oración

  • It is a plucked string instrument similar in appearance and construction to an electric or acoustic guitar, but with a longer neck and scale length.
  • Bands (neckwear), two pieces of cloth fitted around the neck as part of formal clothing for clergy, academics, and lawyers.
  • A common symptom is angina, which is chest pain or discomfort which may travel into the shoulder, arm, back, neck, or jaw.
  • In Puerto Rico and in Hispanic America it is generally described as a heavy creature, reptilian and alien-like, roughly the size of a small bear, and with a row of spines reaching from the neck to the base of the tail, while in the Southwestern United States it is depicted as more dog-like.
  • First attested in English in 1785, the word camelopardalis comes from Latin, and it is the romanization of the Greek "καμηλοπάρδαλις" meaning "giraffe", from "κάμηλος" (kamēlos), "camel" + "πάρδαλις" (pardalis), "spotted", because it has a long neck like a camel and spots like a leopard.
  • A goitre can present as a palpable or visible enlargement of the thyroid gland at the base of the neck.
  • The kora is built from a gourd, cut in half and covered with cow skin to make a resonator with a long hardwood neck.
  • Under their neck, they have a ruff, which has black bars resembling a bow tie, although this is often not visible.
  • Variously described as a living creature or a spirit, mokele-mbembe descriptions vary widely based on conflicting purported eyewitness reports, but it is often described as a large quadrupedal herbivore with smooth skin, a long neck, and a single tooth or horn, much like the extinct lineage known as sauropods.
  • Green – who walked with a cane as a result of childhood polio – put together a singing group with three friends from Fremont High School, Andrew Blue (tenor), Randolph Bryant (baritone), and Ira Foley (bass), and named them the Medallions because of his own penchant for wearing medallions around his neck.
  • Doctors who specialize in this area are called otorhinolaryngologists, otolaryngologists, head and neck surgeons, or ENT surgeons or physicians.
  • mild symptoms which can occur include sore throat and fever; in a proportion of cases more severe symptoms develop such as headache, neck stiffness, and paresthesia.
  • Separating these from other bowed string instruments such as the viola da braccio (viol for the arm) was the instruments' orientation; members of the older viol family were played with the neck oriented upwards, the rounded bottom downwards to settle on the lap or between the knees.
  • Cranial nerves relay information between the brain and parts of the body, primarily to and from regions of the head and neck, including the special senses of vision, taste, smell, and hearing.
  • One way to distinguish them is that in the reef knot each loop passes completely over, or completely under (not through) the neck of the other.
  • The severity can be variable with symptoms including reduction or alteration in consciousness, headache, fever, confusion, a stiff neck, and vomiting.
  • In less than 1% of people, encephalitis or meningitis occurs, with associated neck stiffness, confusion, or seizures.
  • The pulse may be palpated in any place that allows an artery to be compressed near the surface of the body, such as at the neck (carotid artery), wrist (radial artery or ulnar artery), at the groin (femoral artery), behind the knee (popliteal artery), near the ankle joint (posterior tibial artery), and on foot (dorsalis pedis artery).
  • Christophe Guy Denis Lambert was born in Great Neck, New York, on March 29, 1957, the son of Yolande Agnès Henriette (née de Caritat de Peruzzis), and was raised in Geneva, where he attended the International School of Geneva and the Institut Florimont until his teenage years, when the family moved to France and settled in Paris.
  • In many Bursovaginoidea, one of the major group of gnathostomulids, the neck region is slightly narrower than the rest of the body, giving them a distinct head.



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