trepan
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
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Marshal Ney had a silver trepan in his skull, a bullet wound in his ankle.
From Time Magazine Archive
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Fearful things: bonesaws, abdomen retractor, trocar and trepan.
From "The Devil in the White City" by Erik Larson
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I cannot think," he said, after a moment's pause, "that the fellow means to trepan us; and, in any event, I trust we should have no difficulty in forcing the door, or otherwise making escape.
From Peveril of the Peak by Scott, Walter, Sir
"I don't know what they would say in some of the swagger hospitals, if they were asked to trepan a man's skull under these conditions," he said as the operation was finished.
From The Rider of Waroona by Scott, G. Firth
To-day a hell-dog is yesterday’s man, And he has no plan, But others to trepan To Hell’s dismal revels.
From The Sleeping Bard or, Visions of the World, Death, and Hell by Borrow, George Henry
She fetches down a skull from her mantelpiece and shows me its several trepanned holes.
From The Guardian ● Feb. 10, 2019
But not all trepanned skulls show signs of head injuries, so it’s possible the surgery was also used to treat conditions that left no skeletal trace, such as chronic headaches or mental illnesses.
From Science Magazine ● Jun. 8, 2018
Verano spoke with National Geographic about his views on the art and science of trepanning, based on decades of study and more than 800 trepanned skulls.
From National Geographic
He was trepanned and spent two years in convalescence.
From Time Magazine Archive
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“You’re looking at the trepanned skulls?” he said.
From "The Subtle Knife" by Philip Pullman
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Beside trepanning, the more radical surgeries included mastectomy, amputation, hernia reduction and cataract couching.
From New York Times ● Jun. 13, 2023
Most unusual were a bone lever, for putting fractures back in place, and the handle of what appears to have been a drill, for trepanning the skull and extracting impacted weaponry from bone.
From New York Times ● Jun. 13, 2023
Come for the trepanning, stay for Judy Davis’s performance as Ratched’s bitter rival, Nurse Bucket.
From Washington Post ● Sep. 9, 2020
Verano spoke with National Geographic about his views on the art and science of trepanning, based on decades of study and more than 800 trepanned skulls.
From National Geographic
This process, it said in spidery writing on a card, was called trepanning.
From "The Subtle Knife" by Philip Pullman
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