WordNet
- deteriorate in health; "he relapsed" (同)relapse
- reach by calculation; "What do you get when you add up these numbers?"
- cause to move; cause to be in a certain position or condition; "He got his squad on the ball"; "This let me in for a big surprise"; "He got a girl into trouble" (同)let, have
- a return on a shot that seemed impossible to reach and would normally have resulted in a point for the opponent
- come into the possession of something concrete or abstract; "She got a lot of paintings from her uncle"; "They acquired a new pet"; "Get your results the next day"; "Get permission to take a few days off from work" (同)acquire
- reach with a blow or hit in a particular spot; "the rock caught her in the back of the head"; "The blow got him in the back"; "The punch caught him in the stomach" (同)catch
- succeed in catching or seizing, especially after a chase; "We finally got the suspect"; "Did you catch the thief?" (同)catch, capture
- irritate; "Her childish behavior really get to me"; "His lying really gets me" (同)get under one''s skin
- receive as a retribution or punishment; "He got 5 years in prison" (同)receive
- acquire as a result of some effort or action; "You cannot get water out of a stone"; "Where did she get these news?"
- communicate with a place or person; establish communication with, as if by telephone; "Bill called this number and he got Mary"; "The operator couldnt get Kobe because of the earthquake"
- evoke an emotional response; "Brahmss `Requiem gets me every time"
- overcome or destroy; "The ice storm got my hibiscus"; "the cat got the goldfish"
- purchase; "What did you get at the toy store?"
- reach and board; "She got the bus just as it was leaving"
- (comparative of `ill'
- something inferior in quality or condition or effect; "for better or for worse"; "accused of cheating and lying and worse"
- changed for the worse in health or fitness; "I feel worse today"; "her cold is worse" (同)worsened
- (comparative of `bad'
- a unit of force equal to the force exerted by gravity; used to indicate the force to which a body is subjected when it is accelerated (同)gee, g-force
PrepTutorEJDIC
- …‘を'『受け取る』,もらう(受動態にできない) / …‘を'『手に入れる』,得る(受動態にできない) / …‘を'『取ってくる』,持ってくる / 〈人〉‘に'『させる』,『してもらう』 / …‘を'『する』 / 《目的語の名詞の意味を受けて》…『する』,『される』 / 〈病気〉‘に'かかる(受動態にできない) / …‘を'捕らえる,捕まえる / …‘を'覚える,知る / …‘を'聞く,聞き取る(hear);《話》…‘を'理解する,了解する,分かる / 〈放送局〉‘を'キャッチする;…‘と'連絡がつく / 〈食事〉‘の'準備をする,したくする / 《話》《『have got』+『名』》…‘を'持っている(have) / 《話》《『have got to』 do》…しなくてはならない / 〈人〉‘を'やっつける,参らせる / 《副詞[句]を伴って》(ある場所に)『着く』,達する;(ある場所・方向に)動く / (ある状態に)『なる』 / 《『get』+『過分』〈補〉》(…)『される』 / 《話》《『get to』 do=『get』 do『ing』》『やっと』(…)『するようになる』,(…)しだす,し始める
- (badの比較級)(…より)『もっと悪い』(劣った),いっそう不当な《+than+名(節,句)》 / (illの比較級)《補語にのみ用いて》(病気が)(…より)『もっと悪化した』,さらに悪くなった《+than+名(節,句)》 / (badlyの比較級)(…より)『もっと悪く』;いっそうひどく《+than+名(節,句)》 / いっそう悪いこと,さらに悪化しているもの
UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
- Projected impacts of climate change on farmers' extraction of groundwater from crystalline aquifers in South India.
- Ferrant S1, Caballero Y2, Perrin J3, Gascoin S4, Dewandel B2, Aulong S2, Dazin F5, Ahmed S6, Maréchal JC2.Author information 11] Université de Toulouse, UPS (OMP), GET, 14 av. Edouard Belin, F-31400 Toulouse, France [2] IRD, CNRS, GET, F-31400 Toulouse, France [3] UPS, IRD, CNRS, CNES, CESBIO, 18 av. Edouard Belin 31400 Toulouse.2BRGM, Water Division, NRE Unit, 1039 rue de Pinville, 34000 Montpellier, France.31] BRGM, Water Division, NRE Unit, 1039 rue de Pinville, 34000 Montpellier, France [2] Indo-French Centre for Groundwater Research, N.G.R.I., Uppal Road, Hyderabad 500 606, India.41] Université de Toulouse, UPS (OMP), GET, 14 av. Edouard Belin, F-31400 Toulouse, France [2] UPS, IRD, CNRS, CNES, CESBIO, 18 av. Edouard Belin 31400 Toulouse.5SIRS, 27 rue du Carrousel, Parc de la Cimaise, 59 650 Villeneuve d'Ascq, France.6Indo-French Centre for Groundwater Research, N.G.R.I., Uppal Road, Hyderabad 500 606, India.AbstractLocal groundwater levels in South India are falling alarmingly. In the semi-arid crystalline Deccan plateau area, agricultural production relies on groundwater resources. Downscaled Global Climate Model (GCM) data are used to force a spatially distributed agro-hydrological model in order to evaluate Climate Change (CC) effects on local groundwater extraction (GWE). The slight increase of precipitation may alleviate current groundwater depletion on average, despite the increased evaporation due to warming. Nevertheless, projected climatic extremes create worse GWE shortages than for present climate. Local conditions may lead to opposing impacts on GWE, from increases to decreases (+/-20 mm/year), for a given spatially homogeneous CC forcing. Areas vulnerable to CC in terms of irrigation apportionment are thus identified. Our results emphasize the importance of accounting for local characteristics (water harvesting systems and maximal aquifer capacity versus GWE) in developing measures to cope with CC impacts in the South Indian region.
- Scientific reports.Sci Rep.2014 Jan 15;4:3697. doi: 10.1038/srep03697.
- Local groundwater levels in South India are falling alarmingly. In the semi-arid crystalline Deccan plateau area, agricultural production relies on groundwater resources. Downscaled Global Climate Model (GCM) data are used to force a spatially distributed agro-hydrological model in order to evaluate
- PMID 24424295
- The modern age of Physiological Measurement.
- Moorman JR.Author information University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA.Abstract[Formula: see text] Clinical doctors (I am one) feel confident that apparently sudden and catastrophic illness sometimes has subtle beginnings, ones that could be detected by experienced doctors at times where interventions would be miraculously useful. Since doctors cannot be at every bedside all the time, continuous physiological measurement in the form of electronic cardiorespiratory monitoring has been in heavy use for the past half century and maybe more. The big idea is that small aberrations in physiology, if recognized in time, could lead to early detection and treatment, and improved outcomes. Readers and contributors to Physiological Measurement are, of course, familiar with this line of thinking. Is it any good? Frankly, it has been hard to tell. In 1958, Hon published a paper in an obstetrical journal that changed forever how babies are born (Hon 1958). He discovered an unmistakable signature of distress in the physiological monitoring of the fetus, such as might be brought about by strangling on the umbilical cord when the uterus contracted during labor. The signature lay in the pattern of heartbeats-instead of the normal variability we all know about, the heartbeats became monotonously regular with ominous punctuations of slowing down. Today, nearly every mother in labor has a belt around her tumultuous gravid abdomen that records the contraction of the uterus and the heart beat pattern of the fetus. The output is a long strip of paper that collects on the floor and is periodically swept up, held out like a banner, and pronounced as 'non-reassuring' or 'not non-reassuring' based on the degree to which reduced variability and transient decelerations were present. A non-reassuring tracing-as judged solely by the emotional response of the beholder-very often prompts Caesarean section, despite repeated demonstrations that this practice does not improve the outcome of the babies. Clearly, all this has brought us is a lot more Caesarean sections. This is not the fault of Dr Hon, and does not mean that the fetus is not trying to tell us something when the heart shows us reduced variability and transient decelerations. But the evidence that such monitoring saves babies does not exist. What went wrong? In my view, this was the right idea but at the wrong time, a time of paper chart recordings of the original data, and paper medical records that had insufficient clinical detail. Cloistered groups unable to share methods or data sets published small studies of selected patients, in journals that existed only in hard copy in medical school libraries. The times are rapidly changing, and with them our capabilities and our imperatives. We are simultaneously watching unfold the revolutions of open access in the academic publishing world, big data in the scientific world, and quality and patient safety initiatives in the clinical world. So, one would think, we should all expect to have freely available studies of very large data sets reporting on ways to save lives using existing monitors. It is appealing to think there will soon be a time when all the data that we collect in patient care are used in real time to monitor clinical changes, both for the better and for the worse. What is the role of Physiological Measurement in these times? My vision is that it should be the world's most respected and useful source on quantitative analysis of human physiology in clinical settings. And its mission, in my view, is to publish repeatable, rigorous, accessible, clinically relevant papers that help the medical and engineering community take care of patients. There is something specific we will work towards. The Editorial Board and I are committed to the prospect of what the Royal Society in its 'Science as an Open Enterprise ' document of summer 2012 called the 'executable paper' (The Royal Society 2012). The essence of such a paper is that the data and the programs for analysis are made available through hyperlinks. In concept, the interested reader might download them, and reproduce the results. One aspect of the mission is to make Physiological Measurement the preferred venue for such works-paper, data and code. While all of us should applaud and support this concept, it is a serious matter to produce such a work. We are exploring mechanisms, mindful of the complex issues of data storage and access, privacy of personal health information, cross-platform availability and compatibility, not to mention the costs involved at each step. There are advantages, though, to investigators in producing these research works. Government funding is increasingly scrutinized for its direct benefits to human health. Focusing your work in this direction is thus doubly appealing-change the world, and get grant funding, too. We invite accounts of quantitative description and representation of human physiology and pathophysiology. I hope to increase the clinical applicability of our papers while maintaining the historically very high standard of mathematical explication. It is fun to think about how the unexpected may change these views. Three years time (the duration of my contract) may have us agog at something completely new and different, as CT and MRI imaging left us disoriented by their clarity at first. Finally, I am honored to occupy the role of Editor-in-Chief, so ably performed by my predecessors, Professor Richard Bayford, Professor Michael Neuman and many others before them. Giants indeed, and the view from their shoulders is very appealing. References Hon E H 1958 The electronic evaluation of the fetal heart rate Am. J. Obstet. Gynecol. 75 1215-30 The Royal Society 2012 Science as an open enterprise Science Policy Centre Report 02/12 (London: The Royal Society).
- Physiological measurement.Physiol Meas.2014 Jan 7;35(2):93-95. [Epub ahead of print]
- [Formula: see text] Clinical doctors (I am one) feel confident that apparently sudden and catastrophic illness sometimes has subtle beginnings, ones that could be detected by experienced doctors at times where interventions would be miraculously useful. Since doctors cannot be at every bedside all t
- PMID 24398565
- Lived challenges and getting through them: alaska native youth narratives as a way to understand resilience.
- Wexler L, Jernigan K, Mazzotti J, Baldwin E, Griffin M, Joule L, Garoutte J Jr; CIPA Team.Author information 1University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA.AbstractBecause of imposed rapid social change, Alaska Native youth are growing up in a context different from their elders and suffering far worse health and behavioral outcomes. This research seeks to understand (a) their everyday struggles and life challenges, (b) the practices and resources they rely on to get through challenges, and (c) the meaning they make from these experiences. Data were generated from interviews with 20 Alaska Native youth between the ages of 11 and 18 years, balanced by gender and age-group (early and late adolescence). Purposive sampling identified participants with a broad range of experiences. Following a semistructured guide, youth participated in face-to-face, audio-recorded interviews, transcribed verbatim. A codebook was developed using an iterative process and transcripts were coded using ATLAS.ti. The most commonly identified stressors were relationship loss, "not being there for me," nonsupportive/hostile experiences, transitioning into adulthood, and boredom. Resilience strategies included developing and maintaining relationships with others, being responsible, creating systems of reciprocity, practicing subsistence living, and giving back to family and the community. These opportunities allowed youth to gain a sense of competence and mastery. When difficult experiences align with opportunities for being responsible and competent, youth are most likely to exhibit resilience.
- Health promotion practice.Health Promot Pract.2014 Jan;15(1):10-7. doi: 10.1177/1524839913475801. Epub 2013 Feb 21.
- Because of imposed rapid social change, Alaska Native youth are growing up in a context different from their elders and suffering far worse health and behavioral outcomes. This research seeks to understand (a) their everyday struggles and life challenges, (b) the practices and resources they rely on
- PMID 23431127
Japanese Journal
- P-37 固定価格買取制度における木質バイオマス発電の経済性評価 : 燃料の違いによる影響(システム,Poster Session 2)
- 柳田 高志,吉田 貴紘,久保山 裕史,陣川 雅樹
- バイオマス科学会議発表論文集 (10), 121-122, 2015-01-08
- … In case of fuel price increase, the power generation business with less than 10,000 kW scale plant get drastically worse in profitability. …
- NAID 110009926313
- Endothelial dysfunction, insulin resistance and inflammation in congenital hypogonadism, and the effect of testosterone replacement
- Sonmez Alper,Haymana Cem,Aydogdu Aydogan,Tapan Serkan,Basaran Yalcin,Meric Coskun,Baskoy Kamil,Dinc Mustafa,Yazici Mahmut,Taslipinar Abdullah,Barcin Cem,Yilmaz Mahmut Ilker,Bolu Erol,Azal Omer
- Endocrine Journal 62(7), 605-613, 2015
- … This increased cardiometabolic risk however, do not improve but even get worse after six months of TRT. …
- NAID 130005089850
- Endothelial dysfunction, insulin resistance and inflammation in congenital hypogonadism, and the effect of testosterone replacement
- Sonmez Alper,Haymana Cem,Aydogdu Aydogan,Tapan Serkan,Basaran Yalcin,Meric Coskun,Baskoy Kamil,Dinc Mustafa,Yazici Mahmut,Taslipinar Abdullah,Barcin Cem,Yilmaz Mahmut Ilker,Bolu Erol,Azal Omer
- Endocrine Journal advpub(0), 2015
- … This increased cardiometabolic risk however, do not improve but even get worse after six months of TRT. …
- NAID 130005066948
Related Links
- get worse 悪くなる、悪化する、増悪する、重くなる、病状が悪化する、こじれる... - アルクがお届けする進化するオンライン英和・和英辞書データベース。一般的な単語や連語から、イディオム、専門用語、スラングまで幅広く収録。
- get worseとは。意味や和訳。病気が重くなる - 80万項目以上収録、例文・コロケーションが豊富な無料英和和英辞典。 ... で始まる で一致する で終わる を説明文に含む を見出しに含む
★リンクテーブル★
[★]
- (bad, illの比較級)いっそうわるい、さらにいどい
- get worse 増悪する
[★]
得る、取る、なる
- 関
- acquire、become、come、gain、go、obtain、procure、take、turn、yield
[★]
グラム
- 関
- gram