Word: defectively
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...recently won from Rome an extended approval of simpler annulment procedures, which, among other things, no longer demand that a favorable decision by one matrimonial court always be confirmed by a second court. Moreover, more and more diocesan marriage tribunals recognize "psychic incapacity" in either partner as a fatal defect in the original marriage contract-an interpretation that has led to a sharp rise in the number of annulments granted. The liberality of the courts, however, can vary widely: in Brooklyn last year there were 575 annulments, in Boston only five...
Taking the case selection authority away from the Supreme Court was "the defect in the Freund plan," Bruce said...
...Raymond Liggio, who treated Anderson after the July incident, told The Crimson in August that his examination showed Anderson's eye was struck by a blunt object. He said a pupil defect observed in Anderson's eye may indicate permanent damage to the optic nerve...
...victims' futures brightened immeasurably with the development of an effective drug treatment in 1967 by Dr. George C. Cotzias of the Brookhaven (L.I.) National Laboratory. The drug, L-Dopa, counters the major chemical defect in Parkinsonian brains, which is a deficiency of dopamine, a natural body chemical essential to normal nerve activity. Thousands of Americans today are leading much better lives than would be possible without the treatment. But there should be many fewer such patients in the future-provided, of course, that Poskanzer wins...
...reality ? to behavior or opinions more blatant than their own. Middle leads naturally to mediocre, a word that takes its roots from what is middling and therefore ordinary. Yet Aristotle, judging the temperaments of men, exalted the intermediate and argued that anything more extreme was either excess or defect. To him there was, for example, a desirable quality called bravery, and on one side of it cowardice, and on the other, foolhardiness. There was pride, and on one side of it boasting, and on the other, excessive modesty. This sort of cataloguing, while admirable, soon begins sounding as platitudinous...