A limb can be lost through traumatic incidents such as severe accidents, including car crashes, industrial equipment mishaps, or military combat injuries. Medical conditions like uncontrolled Diabetes can lead to amputations due to complications such as infections or gangrene. Additionally, severe burns or frostbite can result in tissue damage that necessitates limb removal.
It loses its tail.
No, James Stacy did.
Symptoms of mercury ingestion typically include sensory impairment such as vision, speech and hearing, disturbed sensations and lack of coordination. ItÍs not limb numbness per say but it might feel that way because you lose you coordination,
The only way to lose that much weight in three weeks is to cut off a limb!
remove the dead limb all the way to the base
No, Sir Peter Markham Scott did not lose a limb in the war. He served in the Royal Navy during World War II and was involved in various operations, but he returned from the war without any injuries that resulted in limb loss. Scott is best known for his work as a conservationist and ornithologist, as well as for founding the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust.
Dress and bandage the burn before the limb is splinted.
Yes, look up "air Layering" for the method of propagating many varieties from a limb. Roots are grown on the limb, then it is cut from the tree and planted. Many bonsai are started this way.
limb for a limb will make the world a horrible place. Limbs allow our movements.
Perhaps the expression you want is "limb from limb" and not "from limb to limb."
Alot of times it is to cover up an old scar, but I find it very elegant and sexy on a woman, and on a man very sophisticated. I don't know what it means, but I do know a lot of people are concerned with tattooing completely around a limb (arm band, wrist band, anklette). It's a superstition that afterwards you will lose that limb in some way or another.
The same way you'd treat any other burn.