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"ambry" Definitions
  1. [dialectal] PANTRY
  2. a recess in a church wall (as for holding sacramental vessels)

68 Sentences With "ambry"

How to use ambry in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "ambry" and check conjugation/comparative form for "ambry". Mastering all the usages of "ambry" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Ambry, which is privately held, would retain its current leadership, these people said.
An Ambry Thomas interception set up another Michigan touchdown early in the second half.
Ambry Genetics is a clinical testing lab, and often when patients go to their doctor afraid that they are at risk for something like cancer because of a variant detected in their raw data, doctors will ask Ambry to confirm those results.
Konica Minolta will own 60 percent of Ambry and INCJ the remainder, the newspaper reported.
The Ambry customers whose data is being used were not told specifically about this project.
Ambry is making the data publicly available; it is not putting the data in the public domain.
Ambry said it hoped to add data from as many as 200,000 customers a year to the database.
Ambry is privately held and majority-owned by Mr. Dunlop and his family, insulating it somewhat from shareholder pressure.
Of course, companies like Ambry have an interest in making sure their business is not usurped by consumer testing firms.
Ambry Genetics specializes in genetic testing and in analyzing large databases of genetic information to screen for diseases like cancer.
A state-backed investment fund, the Innovation Network Corporation of Japan, is teaming up with Konica Minolta in the Ambry acquisition.
Ambry Thomas recovered a muffed punt in Gamecocks territory midway through the first quarter, leading to a 35-yard Nordin field goal.
Various labs, including Ambry, have been pooling information on which mutations in certain known breast cancer risk genes are harmful or not.
An article on Tuesday about Ambry Genetics' decision to release genetic information from the people it has tested described the action incorrectly.
The company, Ambry Genetics, is expected to announce on Tuesday that it will put information from 10,000 of its customers into a database called AmbryShare.
Charles Dunlop, founder and chief executive of Ambry, said he was approached by drug companies, but decided to make the company's data freely available to expedite research.
Ambry Genetics sequenced data from 49 patients who had visited their doctor with concerns about troubling variants that showed up in the raw data from different consumer reports.
"Together with Ambry, we will have the most comprehensive set of diagnostic technologies for mapping an individual's genetic and biochemical makeup," Chief Executive Shoei Yamana said in a statement.
Ambry said its data would be from people with the diseases it tests for, like epilepsy and intellectual development problems, while the Broad database covers a more general population.
"People think they are getting the same kind of genetic testing as they would get from a certified clinical laboratory," said Stephany Tandy-Connor, a genetic counselor at Ambry.
Ambry's move "is to be applauded," said Edward Abrahams, president of the Personalized Medicine Coalition, a Washington advocacy group that includes medical centers, patient groups and companies, though not Ambry.
Ambry Thomas gave the Wolverines a jolt with a 21-yard touchdown on the ensuing kickoff, but otherwise, the much-anticipated Michigan debut of quarterback Shea Patterson was mostly disappointing.
The 10,000 people all have or have had breast or ovarian cancer and were tested by Ambry to see if they have genetic variants that increase the risk of those diseases.
Genetic Test Firm to Put Customers' Data in Public Domain | Ambry Genetics is expected to announce on Tuesday that it will put information from 10,000 customers into a publicly available database.
After the Wolverines started the half with a 75-yard, 10-play drive capped by Karan Higdon's 3-yard touchdown run, Ambry Thomas forced and recovered a fumble on the ensuing kickoff.
Konica Minolta will partner semi-government fund Innovation Network Corp of Japan (INCJ) to buy all shares of Ambry, a private firm that uses genetic data to screen for cancer, the Nikkei said.
Konica Minolta, a company based in Japan best known for making photocopiers, is teaming up with the Innovation Network Corporation of Japan, a state-backed fund, to buy Ambry Genetics for $1 billion.
Ambry, which specializes in genetic testing and analyzing databases of genetic information to screen for diseases, made information public last year that was based on data from thousands of people it had tested.
In the novel, Joe killed his former girlfriend Candace (Ambry Childers), but in the season 1 finale of the Netflix show, Candace is alive and well — even if Joe seems pretty surprised about it.
Still, scientists at Ambry were able to confirm only 60 percent of the results when they compared the raw data from consumer tests with more thorough genetic tests done by themselves and other clinical laboratories.
"We're going to discover a lot of new diagnostic targets and a lot of new drug targets," Aaron Elliott, interim chief scientific officer at Ambry, which is based in Southern California, said in an interview.
Ambry returned to the samples from those customers and, at its own expense, sequenced their exomes — the roughly 43 percent of a person's genome that contains the recipes for the proteins produced by the body.
TOKYO — Konica Minolta, the Japanese manufacturer of photocopiers and printers, is preparing to announce a $900 million deal to acquire the American testing company Ambry Genetics, according to two people with knowledge of the discussions.
Konica Minolta will pay roughly 100 billion yen, or about $880 million, for Ambry, according to the people with knowledge of the deal, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discussions are private.
Buying Ambry Genetics allows Konica Minolta to rely less on the declining office industry and will give it a foot in the door with pharmaceutical companies and hospitals that are experimenting with genetics testing and labs.
In one small study, Ambry Genetics — a lab certified to do medical testing — looked at 49 samples sent in by physicians whose patients had been told that they had disease-causing mutations by third-party interpreters.
Konica Minolta is close to announcing a $900 million deal to buy Ambry Genetics, an American testing company, in what would be its largest acquisition, The Times reports, citing two people with knowledge of the talks.
Ambry, which processes DNA for doctors and research institutions, looked at variants that consumer test results identified that were associated with a risk of disease, and found that as many as 40 percent of those test results were false positives.
Ambry Nurhayati's version is clearly inspired by the trailer for the game, and you can see the filmmaker clambering up tall landmarks in her video to re-create the kinds of thrilling views the game itself has become famous for.
A new study published by the diagnostics company Ambry Genetics in the journal Genetics in Medicine casts some doubt on the testing methodologies of direct-to-consumer genetic tests like those offered by AncestryDNA and 23andMe, though it doesn't call out any specific companies in its paper.
Beside the sedilia is a piscina with quatrefoil basin. There is an ambry beside the east window.
The 1995 edition also featured Brian Ambry as principal researcher. The first edition of the book listed DeWolf as coauthor.
In July 2017, the company acquired Aliso Viejo, California-based genetic testing firm Ambry Genetics, for a reported US$1 billion.
Ambry Moss (born November 2, 1990) is a soccer player who played college soccer for the Northeastern Huskies and internationally for the Bahamas national team.
Statue of Blessed Virgin Mary in the cloister courtyard; windows of Blessed Sacrament Chapel In the west wall of the chapel is a small space or ambry where the holy oils (called Chrism) are kept. The ambry is backed by a panel with a gold sculptured image of Christ on it. This panel was a door, once part of the tabernacle of the High Altar of old St Mary's Cathedral. The front of the ambry has a wide red and yellow, glass, mosaic border (created by Con Kiernan) around the glassed-in space where can be seen the three glass, amphora-like, chrismaria containing the holy oils.
Even some traditionally Low Church parishes, such as St. Anne's, Toronto, reserve the sacrament. Ambry containing vessels for holy oil: Chrism, Oil of catechumens, and the Oil of the Sick.
Small portions of the building still survive, which include a Gothic moulded door, ornamental spandrels and original ambry. The archway beyond the door leads to a passage of the original structure.
The majority of fittings in the church are from the 19th century but it does have door arches, a piscina and ambry surviving from the original building. In the churchyard is an early 17th century chest tomb to the Danyell family.
The church dates to the early 14th century. It is triple-aisled and made of granite and fieldstone, the west tower is wooden. The oldest parts of the carved altar date to the 15th century. The ambry is in the shape of a pinnacle turret.
The gates to the former communion rail were made into table tops. The old sedalia was remade into a presider's chair. A new ambo, baptismal font and ambry were made to complement the church's Gothic design. The seating capacity of the church was reduced to 300.
The stone building has a slate roof and consists of a nave, chancel and small single stage west bell tower. The interior has carved chairs depicting biblical scenes which were made in the late 16th or early 17th century and a wooden ambry. The circular font is Norman.
Centered within those 4 carvings listed above, is the Ambry that contains the Holy Oils. This Ambry, or case, was created and built by Parishioner William O'Donnell and takes the shape of the Church itself to house the 3 oils; the Oil of Catechumens, the Chrism and the Oil of the Sick. Unfortunately, Mr. O'Donnell passed away before he could complete the case and for years, the case hung on the wall of the church "as is" until the upper portions were completed last year by another parishioner in honor of Mr. O'Donnell. A Parishioner also created the altar on which the tabernacle of the Upper Church now sits, on the Main Altar.
"Edmund Kinsman", "John Young". The clock face is early 20th- century. Inside there is simple arched piscina and a hollow chamfered ambry in the largely 19th-century chancel (built based on excavations made during the Victorian restoration) which has a fine 19th-century altar rail with iron- twist uprights to the Sanctuary.
Mid-13th century aumbry at St Matthew's Church, Langford, Oxfordshire, England An ambry (or almery, aumbry; from the medieval form almarium, cf. Lat. armārium, "a place for keeping tools"; cf. O. Fr. aumoire and mod. armoire) is a recessed cabinet in the wall of a Christian church for storing sacred vessels and vestments.
At some point between 1662 and 1669 he married "a Mrs Dayrell, his 'old sweetheart'", the daughter of a Buckinghamshire noble. Harrington died at Little Ambry, Dean's Yard, Westminster. He was buried next to Sir Walter Raleigh in St Margaret's, Westminster. There is a slate wall memorial to him at St Michael's Church, Upton.
The basin is a cruciform, with three steps representative of the 3 days between Jesus' crucifixion and his resurrection. The rill symbolizes the four Evangelists, who cast their nets to catch men. Its location directly between the doors and the altar is representative of the faith journey. To the south is the Ambry Cabinet, containing the oils used in the sacraments.
The north doorway to the nave also dates from this period. Under the southern window of the chancel, there is an ambry or wall cupboard and a piscina, a basin used for washing the sacred vessels. A few metres south of the cathedral an early cross of local granite, with an unpierced ring, is commonly known as St. Kevin's Cross.
The floor is made of similar marble to that which is in the sanctuary. An ambry, built in 2004, resides in the baptistry and is made of wood and glass. It contains the oil of the sick, Sacred Chrism, and the oil of the Catechumens, blessed at the Chrism Mass, which is celebrated each Lent in the cathedral. A statue of the Risen Christ is also present.
They are sometimes near the piscina, but more often on the opposite side. The word also seems in medieval times to be used commonly for any closed cupboard and even bookcase. Items kept in an ambry include chalices and other vessels, as well as items for the reserved sacrament, the consecrated elements from the Eucharist. This latter use was infrequent in pre-Reformation churches, although it was known in Scotland, Sweden, Germany and Italy.
Interior of the church A medieval stone ambry is located west of the sedile which is located on the south wall of the chancel and formed from a relocated medieval trefoiled two-light window. The east end of the chancel is occupied with a five panel wooden reredos of circa 1736 featuring the Ten Commandments on the central panel with the Lord's Prayer and religious texts on the outer panels. The hexagonal wooded pulpit is 18th century and the stone font is octagonal.
Chrism is made of olive oil and is scented with a sweet perfume, usually balsam. Under normal circumstances, chrism is consecrated by the bishop of the particular church in the presence of the presbyterium at the Chrism Mass, which takes place in the morning of Holy Thursday. The oil of catechumens and the oil of the sick are also blessed at this Mass. These holy oils are usually stored in special vessels known as chrismaria and kept in a cabinet known as an ambry.
In the School Library there are more than 2200 classbooks and more than 11 820 pieces of belles-lettres, as well as the multimedia system. Students and their parents can use computers in the Library. The school uses the web-based electronic journal MYKOOB where parents and students have the opportunity to see students’ marks, homework, lesson plans and other information. The school cloakroom is also very comfortable – each student has his own ambry. During the summer holidays, students have a possibility to visit the summer camp «Lūcija» organised at school.
Variants in the PALB2 gene are associated with an increased risk of developing breast cancer of magnitude similar to that associated with BRCA2 mutations and PALB2-deficient cells are sensitive to PARP inhibitors. PALB2 was recently identified as a susceptibility gene for familial pancreatic cancer by scientists at the Sol Goldman Pancreatic Cancer Research Center at Johns Hopkins. This has paved for the way for developing a new gene test for families where pancreatic cancer occurs in multiple family members. Tests for PALB2 have been developed by Ambry Genetics and Myriad Genetics that are now available.
Many Christian churches have at least one lamp continually burning, often before an ambry or tabernacle, not only as an ornament of the altar, but for the purpose of worship. The General Instruction of the Roman Missal in the Catholic Church, for instance, states (in 316): "In accordance with traditional custom, near the tabernacle a special lamp, fueled by oil or wax, should be kept alight to indicate and honor the presence of Christ." Such sanctuary or tabernacle lamps are often coloured red, though this is not prescribed by law. This serves to distinguish this light from other votive lights within the church.
More usually the sacrament was reserved in a pyx, usually hanging in front of and above the altar or later in a "sacrament house". After the Reformation and the Tridentine reforms, in the Roman Catholic Church the sacrament was no longer reserved in ambries; some ambries were used to house the oil for the Anointing of the Sick. Today in the Roman Catholic Church, the consecrated elements may only be reserved in a tabernacle or hanging pyx; reservation in an ambry is now forbidden. The Reformed churches abandoned reservation of the elements, so that ambries, unless used for housing vessels, became redundant.
The church consists of a nave and chancel with high gables, and the remains of a bell-gable in the west. The arch leading into the chancel is of particular interest: Carved stones on each side of the arch show three dogs attacking an otter or fox, and another carving of three men, possibly depicting the Arrest of Jesus. There is a single lancet window and an ambry (recess for storing sacred vessels and vestments) at ground level on the north wall and a surviving lancet and piscina at the east end of the south wall. There is a small bullaun stone in the nave.
Altar lamp at St Pancras Church, Ipswich, representing a chained rather than a fixed style A chancel lamp hangs above the altar of St. Matthew's German Evangelical Lutheran Church In many Christian churches there is an altar lamp, also known as a chancel lamp, which is found in the chancel (sanctuary), either hanging or fixed. In Anglican, Old Catholic and Roman Catholic churches, the chancel lamp burns before a tabernacle or ambry to demonstrate the belief that Christ is present there through His Real Presence, as the Blessed Sacrament is reserved in these denominations. It is also found in the chancel of Lutheran and Methodist churches to indicate the presence of Christ in the sanctuary, as well as a belief in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. The sanctuary lamp may also be seen in Eastern Orthodox Churches.
The eastern end was partitioned off and set aside as the burial vault of the family of Ross of Balnagown. The chapels or aisles attached to the church were erected at later dates against the original walls. The most important addition to the building was the south wing, a chapel dedicated to St. Michael, which was probably erected by Abbot Finlay McFead (d. 1485). It is 32 feet long by 23 feet wide and is connected to the main building by an archway 14 feet wide. On the west side is a doorway; on the east side, an ambry, or recess; on the south side, a canopied monument to Abbot Finlay, which displays the abbot’s shield and the inscription: “Hic jacet Finlaius McFaed abbas de Fern qui obit anno MCCCCLXXXV” (Here lies Finlay McFaed, abbot of Fearn, who died in the year 1485.) A small monumental chapel was erected, probably in the sixteenth century, against the southeast angle of the church, blocking two of the windows.

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