GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: NOUN
- (geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other
- The characteristic appearance of the surface of a broken mineral.
- The characteristic manner in which a mineral breaks.
- A break, rupture, or crack, especially in bone or cartilage.
- The condition of having been broken or ruptured.
- The act or process of breaking.
- (geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other
- Breaking of hard tissue such as bone
- A crack or fault in a rock.
- A fault or crack in a rock
- The act of breaking, or something that has broken, especially that in bone or cartilage
- A fracture in which the bone only is ruptured. It does not communicate with the surface by an open wound.
- A fracture in which there is an open wound from the surface down to the fracture.
- A fracture of the bone combined with the lesion of some artery, nervous trunk, or joint.
- A fracture in which the bone is broken into several parts.
- The texture of a freshly broken surface
- The breaking of a bone.
- The act of breaking or snapping asunder; rupture; breach.
- Forcible separation or disunion; quarreling.
- A broken surface, with reference to texture or configuration, or to manner of breaking; specifically, in mineralogy, the characteristic breakage of a substance, or appearance presented on a surface other than that of cleavage: as, a compact fracture; a fibrous fracture; foliated, striated, or conchoidal fracture, etc.
- A breaking or a break; especially, a partial or total separation of parts of a continuous solid body under the action of a force; specifically, in surgery, the breaking of a bone.
- The act of cracking something
- In phonology, same as breaking, 2.
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: VERB
- N/A
- Violate or abuse
- Interrupt, break, or destroy
- Become fractured
- Break (a bone)
- Fracture a bone of
- Break into pieces
- To break, or cause something to break
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To cause to laugh heartily.
- To abuse or misuse flagrantly, as by violating rules.
- To disrupt or destroy as if by breaking.
- To undergo a break in (a bone).
- To cause to break: : break.
- To undergo a fracture.
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To cause a fracture or fractures in; to break; to burst asunder; to crack; to separate the continuous parts of
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To break; cause a fracture in; crack: as, to fracture a bone or the skull.
- Synonyms Cleave, Split, etc. See rend, and fracture, n.
- To break; undergo fracture.
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: RELATED WORDS
- Diaclasis, Upthrow, Contrafissure, Alluvial fan, Natural depression, Reverse fault, Corrasion, Downthrow, Normal fault, Geological phenomenon, Fault plane, Break, Fault line, Fracture, Fault
- Tear, Cleft, Rift, Fragment, Broken, Ruptured, Fissure, Bone, Rupture, Geological fault, Fault line, Cracking, Crack, Break, Fault
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Diaclasis, Upthrow, Contrafissure, Alluvial fan, Natural depression, Reverse fault, Corrasion, Downthrow, Normal fault, Geological phenomenon, Fault plane, Break, Fault line, Fracture, Fault
- Tear, Cleft, Rift, Fragment, Broken, Ruptured, Fissure, Bone, Rupture, Geological fault, Fault line, Cracking, Crack, Break, Fault
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The cave excavation proved difficult and probably abandoned after a geological fault consisting of a mineral layer proved disruptive to stable carvings.
- Colmar, they mark the northern boundary of the geological fault stretching south towards Thann.
- Turkey is particularly vulnerable to earthquakes because it sits on major geological fault lines.
- Why do the Carnac alignments follow geological fault lines?
- The Skeletal System hairline fracture is also known as a stress fracture.
- Fracture of manubrium, subsequent encounter for fracture with delayed healing.
- Jones fracture is a type of fracture in your foot.
- Whether it is an acute fracture or a stress fracture.
- This type of fracture is called a Maisonneuve fracture.
- As with any fracture, in treating a scaphoid fracture, the goal is to stabilize fracture fragments in alignment to allow healing.
- The fracture gel, proppant and fracture designs were then developed to meet the fracture length and conductivity requirements.
- Fracture risk scores are used to identify individuals at high risk of major osteoporotic fracture or hip fracture for antiosteoporosis treatment.
- Cochrane Database review reported that vitamin D alone showed no statistically significant effect on hip fracture, vertebral fracture, or any new fracture.
- Brittle and ductile fracture Fracture preceded by a significant amount of plastic deformation is known as ductile fracture, otherwise it is brittle fracture.
GEOLOGICAL FAULT vs FRACTURE: QUESTIONS
- Was Huddersfield's Stott Hall Farm saved by a geological fault?
- What are metatarsal fracture rehabilitation exercises?
- Is the ankle fracture spur sign associated with the hyperplantarflexion variant ankle fracture?
- How is a Barton fracture different from a volar fracture?
- Does a jaw fracture heal faster with a hairline fracture?
- Is a transverse fracture a fracture straight across the bone?
- When should post-fracture rehabilitation begin in an older adult with a fracture?
- What is the most appropriate fracture type for callos fracture?
- Is a clavicle fracture always an excellent fracture?
- Why is ductile fracture considered better than brittle fracture?
- Which fracture patterns are characteristic of Hangman's fracture?