depression upon the =body.= What is related by Laennec?)
Page 250: Was single-quote (Let another person press upon the
projecting part of the neck, called "Adam's =apple,"=
while air is introduced into the lungs through the
bellows.)
Page 263: Changed '.' to '?' (persons that have broad chests and
voluminous lungs suffer less from cold than the
narrow-chested with small =lungs?=)
Page 269: Added '.' (still broader behind, where it is connected
with the thyroid =cartilage.= Below, it connects with the
first ring of the trachea.)
Page 271: Was 'glot tis' (The aperture, or opening between these
ligaments, is called the =_glot'tis_=, or _chink of the
glottis_.)
Page 276: Added '.' (vocal organs are in action, will induce too
great a flow of blood to these parts, which will be
attended by subsequent =debility.=)
Page 289, Fig. 115: Added '.' (These ducts open into the sheath of
the hair, (B.) All the figures, from 1 to 4, are magnified
thirty-eight =diameters.=)
Page 294: Added ';' (A proper thickness of the cuticle is in this
manner =preserved;= the faculty of sensation and that of
touch are properly regulated;)
Page 326: Added '?' (What causes the edge of the nail "to grow into
the flesh" of the =toe?= How prevented?)
Page 329: Added '.' (731. What does the term brain designate? Name
=them.= How are they protected? Describe fig. 120.)
Page 330, Fig. 121: Added '.' (Fig. =121.= A section of the
skull-bones and cerebrum. 1, 1, The skull.)
Page 330, Fig. 121: Added '.' (1, 1, The skull. 2, 2, the dura
=mater.= 3, 3, The cineritious portion of the cerebrum.)
Page 330, Fig. 121: Added '.' (3, 3, The cineritious portion of the
cerebrum. 4, 4, The medullary =portion.= The dark points
indicate the position of divided blood-vessels.)
Page 332: Added '.' (=733.= Describe the appearance of the brain
when a horizontal section has been made. What is the gray
border often called? What connects the)
Page 333, Fig. 123: Added '.' (4, 4, The optic foramen in the
sphenoid bone; through which passes the second pair of
=nerves.= 5, 5, The sphenoidal fissure.)
Page 334, Fig. 124: Ad
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