Indoasian

"Indoasian" in a Sentence (11 examples)

Stocks of Indoasian rice are still large; there is a considerable holdover.

Chinese and Indoasian miniatures and precious stones are of such delicacy that the Chinese of antiquity must have worn spectacles and must have been versed in the science of optics before our Western World.

Indoasian cultures have produced numerous aphrodisiacs for aging males.

In 1947, the French military joined the colonial government's search for abandoned Eurasian children, this time seeking out Afroasian and Indoasian children as well.

TB prophylaxis should be considered and usually instituted in patients with previous history of TB and in patients deemed at high risk of developing TB post-transplant such as those of Indoasian ethnic origin.

Recently, in an Indoasian family, three members of the same family with GPA who share the allele HLADPB1*04:01 were described, furthermore demonstrating the HLA locus is involved in AAV genesis (18).

A belated report from Antara 's correspondent in Samarinda has confirmed that a proa (small boat) with several dozen Indoasians on board was shot to splinters by a British patrol boat early in April.

The 'platerans', Chinese/Indonesian indoasians, were sometimes able to study two family systems, but it was not common for them to teach others until fairly recently- most kuntao was taught and practiced by ethnic Chinese.

The presence of 97 million Japanese, 100 million Indoasians and 900 million Chinese forced the 12 million Australians to accept social reality.

In a recent analysis of the 1996 Census in relation to Toronto, Ornstein (2000, p. 51) notes that groups with low chances of dropping out include Caribbeans and Indoasians, the Japanese, koreans, West asians, Europeans, Germans, ukrainians, and Jews.

Compared with other world regions, Indoasians are at increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes at a lower body mass index, develop it at a younger age, and undergo a more aggressive progression to macrovascular and microvascular complications.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.