Virginia Apgar - traduction vers Anglais
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Virginia Apgar - traduction vers Anglais

AMERICAN OBSTETRICAL ANESTHESIOLOGIST (1909-1974)
The Virginia Apgar Award; Apgar, Virginia; Virginia Abgar
  • Virginia Apgar with self-made violin (60s)
  • alt=Dr. Virginia Apgar, standing, facing right, examining baby with stethoscope.
  • Virginia Apgar on the President's Committee on Employment of the Handicapped (November 28, 1973)
  • Virginia Apgar standing in a field and playing the violin in 1920

Virginia Apgar         
n. Virginia Apgar (1909-1974), amerikanischer Arzt der den Apgar Score Test für die Prüfung des körperlichen Zustandes eines Neugeborenen (in 1952) entwickelte
Virginia Woolf         
  •  alt=Photograph of 46 Gordon Square, Virginia's home from 1904 to 1907
  • alt=Bearded Virginia Woolf in Ethiopian costume 1910, in the Dreadnought Hoax
  • 1892}}. Back row: Gerald Duckworth, Virginia, Thoby and Vanessa Stephen, George Duckworth. Front row: Adrian, Julia, Leslie Stephen. Absent: Stella Duckworth, Laura Stephen.
  • alt=Close up view of Godrevy Lighthouse in 2005
  • 2015}}
  • alt= Photo of Julia Stephen with Virginia on her lap in 1884
  • alt=Group of neopagans, Noel Olivier; Maitland Radford; Virginia Woolf; Rupert Brooke, sitting in front of a farm gate on Dartmoor in August 1911
  • Statue of Virginia Woolf in Richmond created by Laury Dizengremel
  • alt= Portrait of Woolf in 1917 by Roger Fry
  • 2016}}}}
  • alt= Photograph of 22 Hyde Park Gate with commemorative plaques for the Stephen family
  • alt=Virginia Woolf portrayed on Romanian postage stamp in 2007
  • alt=Lytton Strachey with Virginia Woolf 1923
  •  alt= Photo of Talland House, St. Ives during period when the Stephen family leased it
  • alt=Virginia Stephen with Katherine Cox at Asham in 1912
  • Blue Plaque installed at 29 Fitzroy Square in 1974
  • alt=Portrait of Virginia Woolf 1927
  • alt=Photo of 29 Fitzroy Square, Virginia's home from 1907 to 1910
  • alt=Portrait of Virginia Woolf with he rfather Leslie Stephen in 1902, by Beresford
  • alt=Virginia and Leonard on their engagement in July 1912
  • alt=Photo of Vita Sackville-West in armchair at Virginia's home at Monk's House, smoking and with dog on her lap
ENGLISH MODERNIST WRITER
Woolf, Virginia (Stephen); Virginia woolf; Virgin woolf; Woolf, VA (Stephen); Virginia Stephen; Virginia Stephen Woolf; Virginia Wolfe; Virginia woolfe; Adeline Virginia Woolf; Adeline Virginia Stephen; Virginia Woolfe; Virginia wolfe; Adeline Virginia Stephen Woolf; The Common Reader (Woolf book); Street Haunting: A London Adventure; Adeline Stephen; Adeline Woolf; Virginia (Stephen) Woolf; Woolf; Woolf, Virginia
n. Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), englische Autorin und Literaturkritikerin
West Virginia         
  • ''Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight'', a statue on the grounds of the [[West Virginia State Capitol]]
  • Bluefield]], a major center for coal mining, in 2014
  • [[Bituminous]] coal seam in southwestern West Virginia
  • Packed circles diagram showing estimates of the ethnic origins of people in West Virginia in 2021.
  • Family of a coal miner, circa 1935
  • [[Francis H. Pierpont]], a leader during the Second [[Wheeling Convention]]
  •  url = https://www.nps.gov/hafe/learn/historyculture/hf-civil-war.htm}}</ref>
  • A slave wedding in Virginia, 1838
  • climate normals]]
  • Map of Virginia dated June 13, 1861, featuring the percentage of slave population within each county at the 1860 census and the proposed state of Kanawha
  • Votes by county in the October 1861 statehood vote
  • Welch]], McDowell County, 1946
  • 200x200px
  • Seneca Rocks, Pendleton County
  • The summit of [[Spruce Knob]] is often covered in clouds.
  • Charleston]] is home to the [[West Virginia Legislature]].
  • Thomas Lee]], the first manager of the [[Ohio Company]] of Virginia
  • Child labor]] in the coal mines of West Virginia, 1908
  • Fayetteville]]
  • Shaded relief map of the [[Cumberland Plateau]] and [[Ridge-and-valley Appalachians]]
  • West Virginia counties]]
  • A toll plaza on the [[West Virginia Turnpike]]
  • Veterans Memorial Bridge]] carries US 22 from Steubenville into Ohio.
  • 90%+}}
{{col-end}}
}}
  • West Virginia population density map
STATE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Wv; West virgina; West Virginia, United States; Mountain State; West virginia; State of West Virginia; West Virginia (state); The Mountain State; Demographics of West Virginia; West Virginia (U.S. state); 35th State; W.Va.; US-WV; WestVirginia; Sports in West Virginia; Climate of West Virginia; State symbols of West Virginia; Religion in West Virginia; West Virginia Department of Commerce; West Virginia (State); W.V.; W.v.; Wv.; W V; Loyal Virginia; West Vrignia; WV; W. Va.; Thirty-Fifth State; Thirty-fifth State; Wes Virginia; West VA; Culture of West Virginia; Tourism in West Virginia; W Va; Poverty in West Virginia; Natural resources of West Virginia; Ethnic groups in West Virginia; Life expectancy in West Virginia; Health in West Virginia; Healthcare in West Virginia; Health care in West Virginia
West Virginia

Définition

Apgar score
['apg?]
¦ noun Medicine a number expressing the physical condition of a newborn infant (a score of ten representing the best possible condition).
Origin
1960s: named after the American anaesthesiologist Virginia Apgar.

Wikipédia

Virginia Apgar

Virginia Apgar (June 7, 1909 – August 7, 1974) was an American physician of Armenian ethnic background, obstetrical anesthesiologist and medical researcher, best known as the inventor of the Apgar Score, a way to quickly assess the health of a newborn child immediately after birth in order to combat infant mortality. In 1952, she developed the 10-point Apgar score to assist physicians and nurses in assessing the status of newborns. Given at one minute and five minutes after birth, the Apgar test measures a child's breathing, skin color, reflexes, motion, and heart rate. A friend said, "She probably did more than any other physician to bring the problem of birth defects out of back rooms." She was a leader in the fields of anesthesiology and teratology, and introduced obstetrical considerations to the established field of neonatology.