prothesis - significado y definición. Qué es prothesis
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Qué (quién) es prothesis - definición

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Prothesis (disambiguation)

Prothesis         
·noun ·see Prosthesis.
II. Prothesis ·noun A credence table;
- so called by the Eastern or Greek Church.
prothesis         
['pr???s?s]
¦ noun (plural protheses -si:z)
1. (especially in the Orthodox Church) the action of placing the Eucharistic elements on the credence table.
a credence table, or the part of a church where it stands.
2. another term for prosthesis (in sense 2).
Derivatives
prothetic adjective
Origin
C16: from Gk, 'placing before or in public view'.
Prothesis (linguistics)         
ADDITION OF A SOUND OR SYLLABLE AT THE BEGINNING OF A WORD WITHOUT CHANGING THE WORD'S MEANING OR THE REST OF ITS STRUCTURE
Prothetic; Prothetic consonant; Prosthesis (linguistics); H-prothesis; Prosthetic (linguistics); Prothetic (linguistics); T-prothesis
In linguistics, prothesis (; from post-classical Latin based on 'placing before'), or less commonlyTrask, Robert Lawrence. 1999.

Wikipedia

Prothesis

Prothesis may refer to:

  • Liturgy of Preparation, also known as Prothesis
  • Prothesis (altar)
  • Prothesis (linguistics)
  • A form of the custom of lying in repose in Ancient Greece; see Ancient Greek funeral and burial practices
Ejemplos de uso de prothesis
1. A third operation implanted a prothesis, it said.
2. Castro underwent a third operation to implant a Korean–made prothesis, but it did not work and was replaced by one brought from Spain, according to El Pais.
3. "I was run over by a Bobcat while there was sniper fire going on," Gardner said as he did leg presses on a machine to exercise his wounded limb and get used to the other one now fitted with a prothesis.
4. David Gardner, who lost a leg and sustained serious injuries to his other leg when a small bulldozer, being used to fill a hole caused by an explosion, ran over him in Iraq. I was run over by a Bobcat while there was sniper fire going on,‘‘ Gardner said as he did leg presses on a machine to exercise his wounded limb and get used to the other one now fitted with a prothesis. It kinda hurts,‘‘ said Gardner, an engineer stationed at Fort Bragg, N.C. It hurts to put pressure on it.‘‘ Gardner‘s wife, Beverly, who was pregnant when her husband was injured and gave birth to their daughter, Hailey, just days after he came out of a three–week coma, had no complaints about her husband‘s care at Walter Reed. They‘ve been great,‘‘ she said.