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The longest one he found was "Dermatoglyphics" at 15 letters.
The scientific study of fingerprints is called dermatoglyphics.
Other characteristics include skeletal abnormality, joint laxity, short stature, and unusual Dermatoglyphics patterns.
Examples applications include dermatoglyphics and soft biometrics.
'Dermatoglyphics' and 'uncopyrightable' are the longest words in English language with no repetition of a letter.
The longest words with no repeated letters are dermatoglyphics, misconjugatedly and uncopyrightables.
All studies of the dermal ridge arrangements including genetics, anthropology and Egyptology are classified under the term dermatoglyphics.
Dermatoglyphics for genetic disorders, read in International Conference of Paediatrics, Manila, 1983.
He is well-known and quoted for his work in electrocrygram, dermatoglyphics and oral rehydration solution.
Other characteristics include unusually short arms and legs; short fingers; and unusual skin ridge patterns (dermatoglyphics) on the fingers, palms, and toes.
To his disappointment, a subsequent 1983 article in the journal Cryptozoology, titled "Anatomy and Dermatoglyphics of Three Sasquatch Footprints," was largely ignored.
The number of letters in the words "uncopyrightable", "dermatoglyphics", "misconjugatedly", and "hydropneumatics", which are the longest words in the English language that do not repeat a letter.
The syndrome may also include various dermatoglyphics, including transverse flexion creases, distal axial triradius, increased whorls and arches on digits, and a single palmar crease.
Other symptoms include dermatoglyphics, tooth deformities or missing teeth, abnormal kidney development, shortened limbs, mental retardation, undescended testes or cryptorchidism, and anal atresia.
His research focuses on forensic anthropology, skeletal biology, dermatoglyphics, anthropometry, anthropological genetics, and human variation, as well as developing computerized databases in these areas which aid in anthropological research.
Dermatoglyphics as diagnostic tool, paper read in XX World Congress of Paediatrics, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Sept. 1992 and Cairo (Egypt) Sept. 1995.
Harold Cummins M.D. (May 1894 - May 12, 1976) was a dermatoglyphics specialist, considered to be the father of dermatoglyphics.
In some traditions, readers also examine characteristics of the fingers, fingernails, fingerprints and palmar skin patterns (dermatoglyphics), skin texture and color, shape of the palm, and flexibility of the hand.
The word dermatoglyphics comes from two Greek words (derma, skin and glyphe, carve) and refers to the friction ridge formations which appear on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet.