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Complete//www.medicinenet.com/hysterectomy/article.htm">hysterectomy: Complete surgical removal of the uterus and cervix. Also called a total hysterectomy.
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CompleteHaving all necessary parts, elements, or steps
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Completelate 14c.; see complete (adj.). Related: Completed; completing.
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Completelate 14c., from Old French complet "full," or directly from Latin completus, past participle of complere "to fill up, complete the number of (a legion, etc.)," transferred to " [..]
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Completeto finish.
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CompleteFinished, ended, concluded all according to requirements. [D02497]
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Completehaving every necessary or normal part or component or step; "a complete meal"; "a complete wardrobe"; "a complete set of the Britannica [..]
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Completewhole, with nothing missing
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Completedergantsn
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Completefulshtendik
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CompleteUsed in the holdings statement to describe a serial title for which the library owns 95-100 percent of the published run. Compare with incomplete. See also: completeness.
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CompleteSee: Full and accurate record
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Complete(v) come or bring to a finish or an end(v) bring to a whole, with all the necessary parts or elements(v) complete or carry out(v) complete a pass(v) write all the required information onto a form(adj) [..]
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CompleteFusion that has occurred over the entire base material surfaces intended for welding, and between all layer and passes.
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Completethe end of the process of buying and/or selling a property. Once you have ‘completed’ the transaction has ended. Conservation Area
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Completen. completar, llenar, diligenciar
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Completeadv. "completely, perfectly," s.v. complete a. OED. KEY: complete@adv
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Completeadv 1 complet 1
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Complete(1) Hold'em: To call preflop from the small blind if no bets have been placed.
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Complete(economics theory definition) A model's markets are complete if agents can buy insurance contracts to protect them against any future time and state of the world. (statistics definition) In a con [..]
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Complete
(transitive) To finish; to make done; to reach the end.
''He completed the assignment on time.''
(transitive) To make whole or entire.
''The last chapter completes the book nicely.''
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Complete Expulsion of entire product of conception.
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CompleteIn the context of general equities, to fill an order.
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