gid


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gid

[gid]
(veterinary medicine)
A chronic brain disease of sheep, less frequently of cattle, characterized by forced movements of circling or rolling, caused by the larval form of the tapeworm Multiceps multiceps.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

gid

(operating system)

gid

(filename extension)
This article is provided by FOLDOC - Free Online Dictionary of Computing (foldoc.org)
References in periodicals archive ?
(158) As discussed previously, GID by itself is not a life- threatening condition, and while it is the duty of the prison to prevent the wanton infliction of pain upon a prisoner, it is also the prison's duty to protect the prisoner from harming himself.
Gender Identity Disorder (GID), which involves the misalignment between one's anatomy and gender identity, is a harder case.
"For instance, female GID sufferers actually have the brain of a male.
(17) One year before she was hired, Blatt was diagnosed with Gender Dysphoria, (18) sometimes referred to as Gender Identity Disorder ("GID").
NPS leaders then sent learning teams from each school, including teacher librarians and teachers, to a 3-day GID institute.
The GID remains a potent counterterrorism partner, U.S.
In Japan, many patients with GID stand miserable situations.
Coenurus cerebralis infection (Gid disease) in Black Bengal goats.
GID has announced the closing of residential construction financing for Waterline Square, its three-building luxury residential development now under construction on Manhattan's Upper West Side along the Hudson River, the company said.
AMMAN, Aug 4 (KUNA) -- Jordan's State Security Court sentenced on Thursday Mohammad Al-Masharfeh to death due to his act of attacking the Jordanian General Intelligence Department (GID) last Ramadan.
It was not until two double-blind placebo-controlled trials were performed [19, 20] that it was described for the first time that grafts may induce a new type of dyskinesia [21-23], known as off-state dyskinesia [19, 20] or graft-induced dyskinesia (GID), which was unrelated to the ongoing medication [19, 20, 23, 24].