Browsing by Title
Now showing items 17419-17438 of 38271
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Hops, Urias
(1906-01) -
Hopscotch
(1997) -
Horace
(1935) -
Horace Walpole's England
(1931) -
Horizons of Tomorrow's Wealth
(Institute of Public Affairs, Dalhousie University, 1950) -
Horizontal Semicircular Canal Occlusion in a Patient with Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo
(2008-06)The article presents a case study of a 39 year old man who presented to physicians with vertigo and nausea. A discussion of diagnostic testing which was conducted on the patient and resulted in him receiving a diagnosis ... -
HORMONAL REGULATION OF CARBOXYPEPTIDASE-D GENE TRANSCRIPTION IN BREAST CANCER CELLS
(2015-04-28)Carboxypeptidase-D (CPD), bound to the plasma membrane, cleaves C-terminal arginine from extracellular substrates. Arginine is converted to nitric oxide (NO), which can promote tumour progression. We have previously ... -
Hormone Replacement Therapy: Changing Guidelines, Changing Practice
(Dalhousie Medical Journal Editorial Board, 2004) -
Horne, Charles - family
(1906-03) -
Horne, E., Miss
(1918-09) -
Horne, Joe
(after 1870) -
Horne, John
(1900-08) -
Horne, John, Mrs.
(1900-08) -
Horne, Mattie
(1904-02) -
Horne, Mr.
(after 1870) -
Horne, Thomas, Mrs. & daughter
(1906-04) -
Horne, Thomas, Mrs. & daughter of
(1920-12) -
Horreur des villes maudites dans l'oeuvre de H. P. Lovecraft
(Dalhousie University. Electronic Text Centre, 2004)Howard Phillips Lovecraft is forever weaving the same spider-web, in which both his hero and his readers invariably get caught. The real curse of his ancient cities (R'lyeh, Innsmouth, Arkham, Marblehead, Kingsport, Dunwich ... -
Horreur et fantastique: L'Animalité dans le film Nosferatu de Murnau
(Dalhousie University. Electronic Text Centre, 2004)Fantastic and horror, as they are experienced through literature, do not create fear in the same way. The feeling of the fantastic comes from the acceptance of the existence of a strange and disquieting alternate universe. ... -
Horreur, hyperbole et réticence chez Lovecraft
(Dalhousie University. Electronic Text Centre, 2004)The work of Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890-1937) represents a kind of « discursus interruptus » on horror and on the literary language that can best represent it. Lovecraft invents a new kind of horror, more hyperbolic ...