syndrome
The outward sign was, and still is, the brit milah (ברית מילה), which is the covenant of circumcision.
Visible/exterior.
Endureth would be signed the same way as endure. Press your two thumbs one atop the other (other fingers curled into the palm) outward.
Xanthelasma, diabetic retinopathy, and hypertensive retinopathy are all associated with heart disease. Roth's spots can be a sign of bacterial endocarditis.
you mean outward and visible sign? this is the catholic way of reffering to the sacraments or a religious outlook on the sacrements meaning or symbol
In American Sign Language, the sign for "can't" is made by forming both hands into fists with thumbs sticking up, then placing one fist on top of the other and moving them down and outward.
Objective evidence of disease such as a fever is called a/an sign.
The feel sign is made which is the middle finger moving up the chest, but then the finger is turned outward to show the feeling is directed outward (mercy). Have seen the sign also made by simply circling the feeling sign outward.
In American Sign Language (ASL), you can sign "why" by furrowing your eyebrows and extending your dominant hand outward in a questioning manner.
If you mean that the eyes look protuberant or "bugged" out, some people have that as a normal feature of their facial bone structure. In other cases, it can be a sign of a disorder called Grave's Disease, an autoimmune disease that affects the thyroid gland. This common sign of exophthalmos (sometimes called proptosis), or protuberance of the eyes, often is the first indication of Grave's Disease. There are too many other possibilities to list all conditions that can involve this sign. If only one eye is bulging, it can also be a sign of a tumor behind the eye. An eye examination by an Ophthalmologist is recommended when this condition either of one eye or both is first noted.
A condition, test, maneuver named after someone or somewhere. Examples: Coxsackievirus Lyme disease Murphy's sign Islets of Langherhans
Hi: Make a B with the hand (thumb tucked in with other fingers up and together); then circle the face.