177,903 research outputs found

    killick

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    killick ncomplementary data from elsewhere. Pulman is Somerset/Dorset folk, but he was very literate. [Apparently, I didn't see any Cornish quotes from printed matter in R. Morton Nance.] WK_File_ JAN. 13 1978Used I and SupUsed I and SupNot usedcillick, kellick, killock, lose your killick, and [you'll] find it in the fall, have a rock in one's killick, killick-claw, killick-rod, killick-stone, keel-log, kellock, keylock, GRANNY 2Checked by Raji Sreeni on Wed 08 Jul 201

    killick

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    killick nKunnosnep, a Killick, or anchor.anchor_OED_Used I and SupUsed I and Sup1Not usedcillick, kellick, killock, lose your killick, and [you'll] find it in the fall, have a rock in one's killick, killick-claw, killick-rod, killick-stone, keel-log, kellock, keylock, GRANNY 2Checked by Raji Sreeni on Tue 21 Jul 2015; OED is cited in DNE I for 1630-, but this quotation does not appear. The following phrases are written upside down :[-] 'eat his path'; 'Dollimount, John'; 'Francois', 'P 64'[-

    killick

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    killick np.47 '... it is nasty enough on deck, and if it lasts like that that poor "angishore" up there tramping the deck won't last the night.' note 3, p.156: 'Angishore' (<Ir._ ainniseoir_) is quite common in Hiberno-English, and may be translated 'poor fellow', 'wretch', etc.; but no English word can quite convey the expressive and emotive undertones of the Irish word. ch V This is from a fine autobiography, full of proverbs and folklife. "Killigs" are also mentioned, p.31. = p 72 in Irish text (wooden anchors mackerel fishing "Cailleaca" in quotes DA 990 C 593wooden anchorsJAN. 30 1980 M.Lovelace/FolkloreUsed I and SupUsed I and SupNot usedcillick, kellick, killock, lose your killick, and [you'll] find it in the fall, have a rock in one's killick, killick-claw, killick-rod, killick-stone, keel-log, kellock, keylock, GRANNY 2Checked by Raji Sreeni on Wed 17 Jun 2015; a note about "angishore" from Lovelace to Kirwin, with the reference to "killick" as an aside

    A prey on normal people: C. Killick Millard and the euthanasia movement in Great Britain, 1930-55

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    Examines the contribution of English public health activist C. Killick Millard to the euthanasia movement. Implications of the legislative decisions on the right to die; Contribution of the early twentieth-century Unitarians to humanism; Reaffirmation of the Christian messages of compassion.; Examines the contribution of English public health activist C. Killick Millard to the euthanasia movement. Implications of the legislative decisions on the right to die; Contribution of the early twentieth-century Unitarians to humanism; Reaffirmation of the Christian messages of compassion

    The Quest for economic stabilization: the IMF and the Third World

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    directed and edited by Tony Killick ; contributors, Graham Bird ... [et al.].ix, 340 p. ; 23 cm

    Clegg H. A., Killick A. J., Adams R., Trade-union officers. A study of full-time officers, branch secretaries and shop stewards in British trade unions.

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    Montuclard M. Clegg H. A., Killick A. J., Adams R., Trade-union officers. A study of full-time officers, branch secretaries and shop stewards in British trade unions.. In: Revue française de sociologie, 1961, 2-4. pp. 343-345

    p53 is upregulated in Alzheimer's disease and induces tau phosphorylation in HEK293a cells

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    p53 and tau are both associated with neurodegenerative disorders. Here, we show by Western blotting that p53 is upregulated approximately 2-fold in the superior temporal gyrus of Alzheimer's patients compared to healthy elderly control subjects. Moreover, p53 was found to induce phosphorylation of human 2N4R tau at the tau-1/AT8 epitope in HEK293a cells. Confocal microscopy revealed that tau and p53 were spatially separated intracellularly. Tau was found in the cytoskeletal compartment, whilst p53 was located in the nucleus, indicating that the effects of p53 on tau phosphorylation are indirect. Collectively, these findings have ramifications for neuronal death associated with Alzheimer's disease and other tauopathies. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved

    TAp73 alpha induces tau phosphorylation in HEK293a cells via a transcription-dependent mechanism

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    p73 and tau both play roles in neurodevelopment and neurodegeneration. In this pilot study we show by Western blotting that TAp73 alpha induces phosphorylation of human 2N4R tau at threonine-205 and at the PHF-1 epitope (serine366/serine404) in HEK293a cells. Neither the dominant negative isoform, Delta Np73, nor a transcriptionally inactive mutant TAp73 alpha(R292H) altered tau phosphorylation indicating that tau phosphorylation is dependent on the transcriptional activity of TAp73 alpha. Consistent with this, confocal microscopy revealed that tau and TAp73 alpha were spatially separated within the cell; tau being located in the cytoskeletal compartment whilst TAp73 alpha was found in the nucleus. These findings have ramifications for microtubule dynamics associated with axonal growth during development and for neuronal death associated with Alzheimer's disease and other tauopathies. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved

    Killicks

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    killick n[-] 1922 Cambridge Antiquarian Society Proceedings, xxiii, 46 [-] 'Killicks: A Study in the Evolution of Anchors.'W.Kirwin 11/77 JH 11/77Used I and SupUsed I and SupNot usedcillick, kellick, killock, lose your killick, and [you'll] find it in the fall, have a rock in one's killick, killick-claw, killick-rod, killick-stone, keel-log, kellock, keylock, GRANNY 2Checked by Raji Sreeni on Fri 10 Jul 2015 ; R. in R. Morton Nance was originally a J

    Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis

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    We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis
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