Toscead betweox fadungum "Lifere"

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Gottistgut (motung | forðunga)
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Gottistgut (motung | forðunga)
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Líne 2:
Sēo '''lifere''' is līflic [[līcdǣl]] þe is on [[hrycgdēor]]um and sumum ōðrum [[dēor]]um. Hēo hafaþ brāde brǣdu woerca, befōnde unǣttrunge, [[ǣglīmtimberes untimbrung]]e, anfd þā forþbǣru līftimbra for [[fōdanmeltung]]e. Sēo lifere is ful nȳdmicel to lifigenne; þǣr nis nū nān wīse tō bētenne þā æfweardnesse þǣre liferan.
 
Þis līcdǣl wyrceþ hefige on [[clēofenaweorcing]]e and hafaþ manig weorc in þǣm [[līc]]e, befōnde [[swēteltimber]]a settunge, ge þǣre rotinge rēadra [[līfclēofa|līfclēofena]] [[blōd]]es, [[blōdwæteres ǣglīmtimber]]a untimbringe, [[līcforðiend]]a forþbǣru, and unǣttrunge. Hēo ligþ unber þǣm midhrife in þǣm brēoste. Hēo wyrceþ [[gealla]]n, asclic gebundenness þe helpaþ [[fōdanmeltung]]e, þurh þone [[inwǣtsettung]]e [[ele|ela]]. <!--ItHēo alsoēac performsdēþ and regulatesgefadaþ agrēate widemissenlicnesse varietygrēatfyldigra oflīftimberlicra high-volumeeftweorca biochemicalþurfende reactionsswīðe requiring highly specializedānliceted [[biologicallīfig tissueflǣsc|tissuesflǣsc]], includingbefōnde theþā synthesisuntimbrunge and breakdown of smallsmealra and complexmanigfealdra molecules[[gemot]]a, manyþāra ofmanig whichsind areful necessarynȳdmicel for normalgewunelicum vitallīflicum functionsweorcum.<ref>{{cite book | last = Maton | first = Anthea | authorlink = | coauthors = Jean Hopkins, Charles William McLaughlin, Susan Johnson, Maryanna Quon Warner, David LaHart, Jill D. Wright | title = Human Biology and Health | publisher = Prentice Hall | year = 1993 | location = Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, USA | isbn = 0-13-981176-1 | oclc = 32308337}}</ref>
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Medical terms related to the liver often start in ''hepato-'' or ''hepatic'' from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word for liver, ''hēpar'' (ἡπαρ).<ref>The Greek word ''"ἡπαρ"'' was derived from ''hēpaomai'' (''[http://old.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2347442 ηπάομαι]''): to mend, to repair, hence ''hēpar'' actually means ''"repairable"'', indicating that this organ can regenerate itself spontaneously in the case of lesion.</ref> -->
==Fruman==