IN DoC EN 



610 



INFANTILISM 



L Pre p *< ■ ;• 





. 





: i \ V | roduct 



. m uli alk; 



.In 



Indian ; 



.in] 

 1 to ulcers, tun. 



i by ih' 

 , I H a S0 4> 



r/]. 

 I. -blue. nts, 



Indian; 

 Sami ri. 



. >liarp], 



with oxindol. It re- 



lioxid from indoxylic 



atile in aqueous vaj 



ililc in wing yellow fluor- 



jxylic Acid d. 



Induced [///.-. 1 into]. Made 



:iv mean-. I. Cur- 



reni 



Inductio: , to lead 



in; .in abstract law or pro- 



ific or ] .articular facts. 

 I. -balance, in an instrument used tor the 



ik to affect the galvano- 



I. -current. ; I., Faradic. 



I. of Labor, the bringing on of labor 



I. -coil. 



Inductorium [L., a covering]. A 



for phys imposes, 



-blue. 



, indigo matter]. 



m They 



■ -blue in color, and ai 



■ I amido-azo- 



1 .i ■■•. are also 



. to put on 

 bird or the 



[in, in, on; duplicat 



. or 

 bent 



in; du 



"I- 



I. telae 

 on] 



ture ; a hardened mass or lump. I., Black. See/., 

 I., Brown, a hardening of lung-tissue, with 

 deposition of pigmentary matter. I. of Chancre, 

 a bard nodule, or a cup-like ring, about the margin of a 

 chancre or syphilitic ulcer. I., Fibroid. See/., Gray, 

 and Cirrhosis. I., Granular. See Cirrhosis. I., 

 Gray, the appearance of the lung in chronic pneu- 

 monia, the cut surface of the lung being smooth, 

 glistening, gray, and dense. It is also called black or 

 induration. I., Red, a firm, resistant, red- 

 dened condition of the lung in chronic pneumonia. 



Indusiate [in-du' '-ze-dt) [induere, to put on]. In bi- 

 ology, having an indusium. 



Indusium [in-du' -ze-um) [induere, to put on : />/., Ih- 

 dusia~\. i. In biology : (a) that portion of the epider- 

 misofa fern frond that covers the fruit-dots orsori; 

 [b) tin 1 case or covering of an insect larva. 2. The 

 vestigial layer of the cerebral cortex existing with 

 greater or less distinctness upon the dorsal surface of 

 the callosum ; it is also seen in many other mammals 

 beside man. It is called also Indusium griseum. 



Induviae [in-du'--.', •-<•). [L. ://. Clothes]. In biology, 

 persistent withered leaves. 



Induviate [in-du' -ve-dt) [induvia, clothes]. In biology, 

 clothed with old or withered parts. 



Inebriant [in-e'-bre-ant)[inebrians ; inebriare, to make 

 drunk], i. Intoxicant; causing inebriation. 2. An 

 agent or drug that causes inebriation. 



Inebriation [in-e bre-a'-shun) [inebriation inebriate, 

 to make drunk]. The condition of drunkenness. 



Inebriety [in-e-bri'-et-e) [inebrietas, drunkenness]. In- 

 ebriation ; especially habitual drunkenness. 



Inedia [in-e'-de-ah) [in, not; edere, to eat]. Synonym 

 of Fasting. 



Inein [in'-e-in). A crystalline substance obtained from 

 the hairs of the seeds of Stropkanthus . 



Inenucleable [in-e-nu' -kle-a-bl) [in, not ; enudeare, 

 to shell out]. Nol removable by enucleation. 



Inequivalve [in-e-kwi'-valv) [in, not ; equus, equal ; 

 valva, the leaf of a door]. In biology, applied to 

 shells having unequal valves. 



Inerm [in-erm') [in, without; artna, arms]. In biol- 

 ogy, without hooks, thorns, or prickles ; unarmed. 



Inertia [in-er'-she-ah) [iners, inactive, unskilled ; in, 

 not; ars, skill]. Sluggishness. In physics, the ina- 

 bility of matter to change its condition except by 

 means of an external force. In physiology, inactivity 

 of any organ or function of the body. I. of Drugs, 

 lack of power, from inferior quality, to produce cus- 

 tomarj physiologic reactions. I., Intestinal, torpor 

 of intestinal action, or peristalsis. I., Time. See 

 Time. I., Uterine, the failure or sluggishness of 

 uterine contractions in labor. 



In extremis [in eks-tre'-mis) [in, in ; extremis, last]. 

 A Latin phrase, meaning at the end; at the point of 

 ih or in extreme dangi r of speedy death. 



Infancy [in'-fan-se) [infans, a little child]. Early 

 childhood. I., Diseases of, those to which infants 

 are peculiarly liable. 



Infant [in'-fant) [infans, a little child] . A babe. Accord- 

 ing to English law, one not having attained the age of 

 twenty-one. I.. Overlaying of, suffocation of an 

 infant by the lying upon it of an adult in sleep. 

 I. -shelter, a day nursery where the infant-children 

 o| working mothers are kept at a moderate expense 

 dui i labor. In fiance, a crlche. 



Infanticide [in-fanf [infans, a little child; 



. to kill]. The murder of an infant. 



Infantile [in' -fan-til) [infantilis, of an infant]. Per- 

 I. Paralysis. See Paralysis. 



Infantilism [in-fan' -til-izm) [infans, a Kttle child]. 

 The persistence of the characters of childhood into 



