STOP vs OCCLUSION: NOUN
- The act of stopping or the condition of being stopped.
- A halt or stay, as on a trip.
- A place at which someone or something stops.
- A device or means that obstructs, blocks, or plugs up.
- An order given to a bank to withhold payment on a check.
- A brief stay in the course of a journey
- A part in a mechanism that stops or regulates movement.
- The effective aperture of a lens, controlled by a diaphragm.
- The act of stopping a string or hole on an instrument.
- The state of inactivity following an interruption
- An obstruction in a pipe or tube
- A punctuation mark (.) placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop or after abbreviations
- A consonant produced by stopping the flow of air at some point and suddenly releasing it
- A mechanical device in a camera that controls size of aperture of the lens
- A restraint that checks the motion of something
- A spot where something halts or pauses
- The event of something ending
- (music) a knob on an organ that is pulled to change the sound quality from the organ pipes
- The act of stopping something
- A mark of punctuation, especially a period.
- A stop order.
- A fret on a stringed instrument.
- A hole on a wind instrument.
- A device such as a key for closing the hole on a wind instrument.
- A tuned set of pipes, as in an organ.
- A knob, key, or pull that regulates such a set of pipes.
- A line used for securing something temporarily.
- One of a set of speech sounds that is a plosive or a nasal.
- A plosive.
- The depression between the muzzle and top of the skull of an animal, especially a dog.
- A save made by a goalie.
- A control mechanism on an audio or video player that causes a recording to stop playing.
- A projecting stone, often carved, at the end of a molding.
- A stopper.
- Something that occludes.
- An obstruction of an anatomical passage, as of an artery by plaque.
- The alignment of the teeth of the upper and lower jaws when brought together.
- The process of occluding air masses.
- An occluded front.
- In dentistry, the fitting into each other of the cusps of the opposing teeth in the upper and lower jaws.
- A shutting up; a closing; specifically, in pathology, the total or partial closure of a vessel, cavity, or hollow organ; imperforation.
- The process of occluding.
- The act of occluding, or the state of being occluded.
- The transient approximation of the edges of a natural opening; imperforation.
- The phenomenon of absorbing gases, as exhibited by platinum, palladium, iron, or charcoal.
- The process of occluding, or something that occludes.
- Anything that obstructs or closes a vessel or canal.
- The alignment of the teeth when upper and lower jaws are brought together.
- A closure within the vocal tract that produces an oral stop or nasal stop.
- The absorption of a gas or liquid by a substance such as a metal.
- The blocking of the view of part of an image by another.
- In physics and chem., the act of occluding, or absorbing and concealing; the state of being occluded. See occlude.
- Closure at some point in the vocal tract that blocks the flow of air in the production of an oral or nasal stop.
- The act of blocking
- (meteorology) a composite front when colder air surrounds a mass of warm air and forces it aloft
- Closure or blockage (as of a blood vessel)
- (dentistry) the normal spatial relation of the teeth when the jaws are closed
- An obstruction in a pipe or tube
STOP vs OCCLUSION: ADJECTIVE
- Of, relating to, or being of use at the end of an operation or activity.
- N/A
STOP vs OCCLUSION: VERB
- Render unsuitable for passage
- Stop from happening or developing
- Cause to stop
- Come to a halt, stop moving
- Interrupt a trip
- Have an end, in a temporal, spatial, or quantitative sense; either spatial or metaphorical
- Put an end to a state or an activity
- Stop and wait, as if awaiting further instructions or developments
- Seize on its way
- Prevent completion
- Hold back, as of a danger or an enemy; check the expansion or influence of
- N/A
STOP vs OCCLUSION: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To cease moving, progressing, acting, or operating; come to a halt.
- To close (a hole on a wind instrument) with the finger in sounding a desired pitch.
- To press down (a string on a stringed instrument) on the fingerboard to produce a desired pitch.
- To order a bank to withhold payment of.
- To defeat in boxing by a knockout or technical knockout.
- To defeat (an opponent or opposing team).
- To discontinue or cease.
- To prevent or restrain.
- To cause to desist or to change a course of action.
- To be or get in the way of (a bullet or other missile); be killed or wounded by.
- To put an end to what one is doing; cease.
- To halt the motion or progress of.
- To prevent the flow or passage of.
- To obstruct or block passage on (a road, for example).
- To constrict (an opening or orifice).
- To close (an opening or hole) by covering, filling in, or plugging up.
- To interrupt one's course or journey for a brief visit or stay. Often used with by, in, or off:
- To block or deflect (a blow, for example); parry or ward off.
- N/A
STOP vs OCCLUSION: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Cause to end
- Hold back, as of a danger or an enemy
- Either spatial or metaphorical
- N/A
STOP vs OCCLUSION: RELATED WORDS
- Stopover, Arrest, Check, Intercept, Kibosh, Point, Stay, Break, Terminate, Block, Catch, Discontinue, Quit, Cease, Halt
- Septal, Venous, Basilar artery, Stenosis, Coronary sinus, Greenhouse, Warming, Sequestration, Obstruction, Stop, Block, Occluded front, Stoppage, Closure, Blockage
STOP vs OCCLUSION: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Contain, Layover, Stopover, Arrest, Check, Intercept, Point, Stay, Break, Terminate, Block, Catch, Quit, Cease, Halt
- Circumflex artery, Ostium, Septal, Venous, Basilar artery, Stenosis, Coronary sinus, Greenhouse, Warming, Sequestration, Stop, Block, Stoppage, Closure, Blockage
STOP vs OCCLUSION: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Body armor can stop shrapnel, but nothing can stop blast waves.
- They will only stop when they learn to stop regarding women as sexual objects.
- Stop signs makes the orange ducks stop their march, instead of walking toward deathly devices and places.
- No stop signs, the kind of place where nobody bothered to stop or slow down.
- Stop Following this project to stop seeing updates on your home page.
- Click the Stop button to stop this service.
- Stop the flow of, stop from not comply.
- Please help us make every stop a Safe Stop.
- APPEAL OF STOP USE, STOP DISTRIBUTION, OR REMOVAL ORDER.
- When required to stop because of a sign or signal, you must stop before the front of your vehicle reaches the stop line.
- So this long established term would better read: Freedom in centric occlusion or long centric occlusion.
- However, the vas occlusion literature suffers from serious methodological flaws that reduce certainty regarding conclusions about the relative efficacy of various occlusion techniques.
- Functional occlusion An occlusion that is free of interferences to smooth gliding movements of the mandible, with absence of pathology.
- Torsion of the testicle initially causes venous occlusion, and if it is persistent, it will ultimately lead to arterial occlusion, causing ischemia.
- Global properties are sensitive to occlusion and, specifically, to self occlusion.
- If mechanical occlusion is excluded, thrombotic occlusion is treated with alteplase.
- RE, regardless of cuff width, absolute occlusion pressure and occlusion pressure prescription method.
- Occlusion An ideal occlusion should provide comfort and function in a predictable way.
- Help you reach optimal occlusion during your occlusion training workouts.
- This controls how occlusion from Distance Field Ambient Occlusion is combined with Screen Space Ambient Occlusion.
STOP vs OCCLUSION: QUESTIONS
- Why did Tilade stop making chlorofluorocarbon inhalers?
- When will natnatwest stop sending payment statements?
- What happens when you stop taking medroxyprogesterone?
- How do consumers stop sweatshops from proliferating?
- Does border security help stop illegal immigration?
- When to stop taking antiplatelets before colonoscopy?
- What causes persistent flatulence (Non-Stop Farting)?
- What celebrities are in Popstar never stop never stop?
- Do you have to stop at all stop signs in California?
- When does the start-stop function stop working on a car?
- What is an occlusion of subclavian-innominate veins?
- When does Severe occlusion affect target trajectory prediction?
- Is thermal cautery an alternative for punctal occlusion?
- Is occlusion necessary for absorption of EMLA cream?
- Is contrast enhanced ultrasound necessary for carotid occlusion?
- Is facial expression recognition possible under partial occlusion?
- What does arterial occlusion mean in medical terms?
- What is punctal occlusion (plugging your tear ducts)?
- Does dynamic occlusion matter in Moonwalk illusion?
- What is bilateral distal vertebral artery occlusion?