ANSWER.
Match the following
| Column 1 | Column 2 |
| Armpit. | G) Axilla. |
| One who stand before. | C) Prostrate. |
| Bend back. | D) Reflex. |
| Neck | I) Cevical. |
| Backward flow. | H) Reflux. |
| Slime. | E) Mucus. |
| Wing shaped bone in the pelvis. | J) ilium. |
| Fluid filled cyst. | A) Ganglion. |
| Rip | B) Mature. |
| Third portion of small intestine. | F) ileum. |
Terminology challenge
* Heart attack - Myocardial infarction.
Pic mothorax econstruct into the elements of prefix, root, combining form, and suffix the way most...
drug mainions and medical error many of which are the percase letters your ability to provide high-quality patienter Throughout this book the pronunciation and m isspelled out phonetically in modern as to show you exactly how the tem p o The word part to be emphasized how For example. pulmonary phonetically written PUL-moh-narees and pulmonology is written Pulmo NOL-ohjee. This states that wonds derived from the came root can have their emphasis placed on different parts of the word, and...
Question 16 Which of the following elements is the root for the word dermatitis? -itis -matitis der- dermat- de- Question 17 Which of the following statements is NOT true of combining vowels? Combining vowels can join a root to another root. Examples of combining vowels are "o" and "a." A combining vowel has no meaning of its own. A combining vowel makes a word easier to pronounce. The most commonly used combining vowel is "u" followed by "i." Question 18...