seal
1. To close firmly.
2. A material such as an adhesive or wax used to make an airtight closure.
3. A carnivorous marine mammal with flippers positioned hind and front. Seals can transmit illnesses to humans including mycoplasma (“seal finger”), leptospirosis, and seal pox.
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Citation
Venes, Donald, editor. "Seal." Taber's Medical Dictionary, 25th ed., F.A. Davis Company, 2025. Nursing Central, nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/734097/all/border_seal.
Seal. In: Venes DD, ed. Taber's Medical Dictionary. F.A. Davis Company; 2025. https://nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/734097/all/border_seal. Accessed April 18, 2025.
Seal. (2025). In Venes, D. (Ed.), Taber's Medical Dictionary (25th ed.). F.A. Davis Company. https://nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/734097/all/border_seal
Seal [Internet]. In: Venes DD, editors. Taber's Medical Dictionary. F.A. Davis Company; 2025. [cited 2025 April 18]. Available from: https://nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/734097/all/border_seal.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
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