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tunica Meaning in Tamil ( tunica வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)



துநீகா

Noun:

Tunica,



tunica தமிழ் அர்த்தத்தின் உதாரணம்:

இவை அடுக்கிதழ் உறிஞ்சான்கள் (Tunicates) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படும்.

பூச்சிகள், நீர்நில வாழ்வன, மெல்லுடலிகள், Cnidarians, Crustaceans, முட்தோலிகள், Tunicates என்பன இவ்வகை உருமாற்றத்துக்கு உட்படுவனவாகும்.

இதனை முதுகுநாணித் தொகுதியில் தியுனிக்காட்டா (Tunicata) என்னும் துணைத்தொகுதியில் வைத்துக் கருதுகின்றார்கள்.

கடற்குடுவைகளை (தருணிக்காட்டா, Tunicata) முதன்முதலாக இழான் பாப்டிசிட்டே இலமார்க்கு (Jean-Baptiste Lamarck) என்னும் உயிரினவறிஞர் 1816 இல் அடையாளப்படுத்தினார்.

tunica's Usage Examples:

It was either sleeveless (colobium) or sleeved (tunica manicata or manuleata), and originally fell about to the knee, but later on reached to the ankles (tunica talaris).


The tunic with long sleeves (tunica manicata) was a later fashion.


tunicata) is characterized by having each kernel enclosed in a husk.


They supposed that it was accompanied by a peculiar hyaline thickening of the arterial wall, usually of the tunica intima, and hence they termed the supposed diseased state " arterio-capillary fibrosis," and gave the fibrous substance the name " hyaline-fibroid.


dalmatica, tunica dalmatica), a liturgical vestment of the Western Church, proper to deacons, as the tunicle (tunicella) is to subdeacons.


It is certainly not derived from the antique stola, called tunica, as was formerly always held, nor yet from the prayer blanket (tallith) of the Jews.


Venous valves are folds of tissue formed from the endothelial lining of the tunica intima.


Can you identify the endothelium, and underlying connective tissue of the tunica intima layer in this photograph?These soluble salts combine with the albumins in the body, and are deposited as minute granules of silver albuminate in the connective tissue of the skin papillae, serous membranes, the intima of arteries and the kidney.


The tunica, a loose sack-like tunic with a hole for the head, was the innermost garment worn by all classes of Roman citizens under the republic and empire.


About the 6th century the long tunica alba went out of fashion in civil life, but it was retained in the services of the Church and developed into the various forms of the liturgical alb (q.


The tunica was precisely like the Greek chiton; that of the senator had two broad stripes of purple (latus clavus) down the centre, that of the knight two narrow stripes (angustus clavus).


i I), an under tunic (linea), an upper tunic (dalmatica, tunica) and mantle (lacerna, byrrus).


In this period, however, the tunica, corresponding to the Greek chiton, was universally worn in ordinary life, and the toga gradually became a full-dress garment which was only worn over the tunica on important social occasions; Juvenal (iii.





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