"Tinzaparin" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Tinzaparin is a low molecular weight heparin used as an anticoagulant to prevent and treat deep vein thrombosis and prevent ischemic complications in patients at risk of venous thromboembolism.
British writer Virginia Woolf used "tintinnabulation" to describe the sound of a tailor's needle clicking against his lap. The term eventually gained a more widely applicable definition and extended to include the gentle ringing of small bells. The concept itself, however, can also be used metaphorically for a melodic sound.
Tintinnabulation refers to aclear, ringing, and usually musical sound, especially of a bell. The word is derived from the Latin "tintinnare," which means "to tinkle," and is often used to describe the sound of a bell's gentle ringing or the sound of tiny bells being rung, such as those on a wind chime or a sleigh bell.
Tintinnabulations are the ringing or tinkling sounds, like those produced by a small bell, especially a handbell or a sleigh bell. The word is often used in a literary or poetic context to describe the sound that is light, musical, and clear, but also perhaps nostalgic or evocative of a bygone era.<br><br>The word has a particular association with the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt, who used the term "tintinnabuli" (a related but distinct term) to describe a style of music that features a repeating pattern of acoustic harmonies. However, in general usage, the term "tintinnabulations" is not specifically musical and can be applied to any situation or sound that is characterized by a gentle, ringing or tinkling quality.
Hints or signs that suggest something, especially a crime, is about to happen or has happened.