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Tenodynia or tenalgia mean tendon pain in medical terms.
- Golgi tendon reflex - When there is too much tension on a muscle, the afferent sensory nerves send the information to the spinal cord which sends its information to the cerebellum where the information is used to adjust muscle tension. Simultaneously, the motor neurons of the spinal cord that innervates the contracting muscle are inhibited and the antagonistic muscles are activated. I believe (but am not certain sure) the term you're looking for is "deep tendon reflex" (aka "monosynaptic reflex"). When a muscle's tendon is suddenly stretched, receptors within the tendon send signals to cause the muscle contract, so it opposes the stretch. This is the reflex that's tested when you tap just below your knee and your foot swings out (a knee-jerk reaction :-) See Glossary of Terms in Spinal Cord Injury Research [sci.rutgers.edu/dynarticles/CareCureGlossary_20Jun02.doc ]
It depends on the terms of the lease. The lease may terminate or the lease may "run with the land."
If the terms of the lease include that the tenant must have electric and the tenant is in violation of the lease terms you can evict him.
no
The word pollicis in anatomy makes a reference to anything to do with the thumb. For example, the muscle Flexor pollicus longis refers to the muscle that causes flexion of the thumb, and has a long tendon. Try putting the term together with other anatomical terms and see if they make any sense! :)
I'd suggest finding an easy lease with flexible terms which will serve you better in the big picture than differing between a long term or a short term lease. Leasing shouldn't be complicated and finding an easy lease (http://officewarehousespace.net/easy-lease-program/) where you can name the terms is the ticket.
The terms voluntary and automatic have opposite meanings. If a muscle is voluntary that means that it is under conscious control, rather than operating automatically.
You can always cancel any kind of lease agreement but there may be costs associated with cancellation of the contract. I would advise you to read your lease terms to see what the cancellation policy is and the terms of the policy if you have not already read them.
The owner can sell a house under a lease, but the buyer must either honor the terms of the lease or make an offer to get the tenant to break the lease.
In many cases, yes. You will have to look into the terms of your specific lease to be certain.
It depends on the terms of the lease that is in effect now. If you have a lease that does not allow for a sub-lease (or whatever you are trying to do), then yes, you will have to get the agreement of the landlord before sub-leasing.