rollator n.— «To improve this resident’s gait, staff worked closely with him, helping him ambulate more regularly. Therapy staff taught him how to use a rollator walker.» —“Pulling together for restraint reduction” by...
rollator n. a wheeled walker used by the infirm to increase mobility. (source: Double-Tongued Dictionary)
rollator n.— «We have assessed the effect of Zimmer, rollator and gutter frames on 6-min walking distance and on arterial oxygenation during exercise in elderly patients with COPD.» —“The effect of walking aids on exercise capacity...
rollator n.— «His sister-in-law commented that older people in Sweden sustain their stamina by walking behind a so-called rollator. Unlike a conventional “clomp and stomp” walker, a rollator glides over pavement, carpet...
bat wing n.pl.— «With so much celebrity flexing and flaunting going on, more women are turning to plastic surgeons to give them shapelier, more sinuous arms, Harper’s Bazaar reports. The “bat wing procedure” for tightening and...
bat wings n.pl.— «You don’t want someone to grab the backs of your arms and come up with bat wings.» —“Arm Yourself For Glamour” by Lisa Garcia Roanoke Times & World News (Va.) Sept. 17, 1995. (source:...