Inclosures -- Europe -- Antiquities : Enclosing space, opening new ground : Iron Age studies from Scotland to mainland Europe / edited by Tanja Romankiewicz, Manuel Fernández-Götz, Gary Lock and Olivier Büchsenschütz
2019
1
Inclosures -- Government policy : Parliamentary enclosure in England : an introduction to its causes, incidence, and impact, 1750-1850 / G.E. Mingay
Inclosures -- Great Britain -- Digests : The laws respecting commons and commoners : comprising the law relative to the rights and privileges of both lords and commoners; and in which the law relative to the inclosing of commons, is particularly attended to as collected from the several statutes, reports, and other books of authority, up to the present time; to which is likewise added an appendix containing the mode and expence of proceeding in the Houses of Lords and Commons, for the purpose of obtaining acts of Parliament for the inclosing of commons and other waste lands / by the author of the Laws of landlord and tenant, Law of wills, Laws of masters and servants, &c
Inclusion Bodies -- chemistry : Protein aggregation in bacteria : functional and structural properties of inclusion bodies in bacterial cells / edited by Silvia Maria Doglia, Marina Lotti
Inclusion Bodies -- physiology : Protein aggregation in bacteria : functional and structural properties of inclusion bodies in bacterial cells / edited by Silvia Maria Doglia, Marina Lotti
A generic term for any circumscribed mass of foreign (e.g., lead or viruses) or metabolically inactive materials (e.g., ceroid or MALLORY BODIES), within the cytoplasm or nucleus of a cell. Inclusion bodies are in cells infected with certain filtrable viruses, observed especially in nerve, epithelial, or endothelial cells. (Stedman, 25th ed)
A generic term for any circumscribed mass of foreign (e.g., lead or viruses) or metabolically inactive materials (e.g., ceroid or MALLORY BODIES), within the cytoplasm or nucleus of a cell. Inclusion bodies are in cells infected with certain filtrable viruses, observed especially in nerve, epithelial, or endothelial cells. (Stedman, 25th ed)
1
Inclusion cytomégalique maladies -- diagnostic -- congrès. : CMV-related immunopathology / 1st International Consensus Round Table Meeting on CMV-Related Immunopatholoy, Frankfurt am Main, Germany, August 28-30, 1997 ; volume editors, Martin Scholz [and others]
1998
1
Inclusion cytomégalique maladies -- physiopathologie -- congrès. : CMV-related immunopathology / 1st International Consensus Round Table Meeting on CMV-Related Immunopatholoy, Frankfurt am Main, Germany, August 28-30, 1997 ; volume editors, Martin Scholz [and others]
1998
1
Inclusion cytomégalique maladies -- thérapeutique -- congrès. : CMV-related immunopathology / 1st International Consensus Round Table Meeting on CMV-Related Immunopatholoy, Frankfurt am Main, Germany, August 28-30, 1997 ; volume editors, Martin Scholz [and others]
A generic term for any circumscribed mass of foreign (e.g., lead or viruses) or metabolically inactive materials (e.g., ceroid or MALLORY BODIES), within the cytoplasm or nucleus of a cell. Inclusion bodies are in cells infected with certain filtrable viruses, observed especially in nerve, epithelial, or endothelial cells. (Stedman, 25th ed)
Here are entered works on the education of exceptional children in age-appropriate, heterogeneously grouped classrooms. Works on bringing exceptional children into frequent contact with nonexceptional children and placing them in regular educational programs whenever possible are entered under Mainstreaming in education
A generic term for any circumscribed mass of foreign (e.g., lead or viruses) or metabolically inactive materials (e.g., ceroid or MALLORY BODIES), within the cytoplasm or nucleus of a cell. Inclusion bodies are in cells infected with certain filtrable viruses, observed especially in nerve, epithelial, or endothelial cells. (Stedman, 25th ed)
A generic term for any circumscribed mass of foreign (e.g., lead or viruses) or metabolically inactive materials (e.g., ceroid or MALLORY BODIES), within the cytoplasm or nucleus of a cell. Inclusion bodies are in cells infected with certain filtrable viruses, observed especially in nerve, epithelial, or endothelial cells. (Stedman, 25th ed)