d da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dr ds dt du dw dx dy dz

Перевод: dysentery speek dysentery


[существительное]
дизентерия


Тезаурус:

  1. At Walvis Bay he survived a severe attack of dysentery, while his comrades "were dying like flies".
  2. Flies, it was argued, were the main vectors of disease, carrying on their tiny feet the bacteria responsible for dysentery, cholera, tuberculosis and even smallpox.
  3. Amoebic dysentery - since the time of Louis XIV it has been treated with ipecac, a South American plant
  4. The pathogens which cause dysentery, typhoid and some forms of gastroenteritis are excreted in the faeces, so hands contaminated with faeces, if inadvertently put near the mouth, can re-infect the person himself or infect food which may be consumed by others.
  5. In June 1183, the Young King fell victim to a sudden attack of dysentery and died a few days later.
  6. Untouched by the reforms of Baron Larrey, it bore the permanent stench of death and corruption, its handful of battle casualties heavily outnumbered by those suffering from accidental or self-inflicted injury, fever, dysentery and venereal complaints.
  7. His Bermuda project, his attempt to develop tar-water as a cure for the dysentery which followed the hard Irish winter of 1739-;40, and his evident concern for his parishioners, were all born of a kind and generous character.
  8. Dysentery like diarrhoea with awful tenesmus; they may pass a little blood or green slime.
  9. "Dysentery."
  10. Among the references to the Ritz, for instance, was that Joan Collins was a frequent guest at the hotel, she "of Dyenasty, Dinnasty, Dysentery, whatever it's called".
  11. Contaminated food, water or milk can result in an epidemic outbreak and these infections, such as the salmonelloses and bacillary dysentery, are further spread by unwashed hands contaminated with faeces.
  12. Locust Abortion Technician was a glorious mire, a glistening palace of ordure, a cataract of dysentery.
  13. The other poem which Coleridge wrote during his retreat, and the circumstances of its composition, have entered the mythology of English literary history: while staying at the Culbone farmhouse he took three grains of opium to relieve what he variously described as "a dysentery" or "a slight indisposition", and in the deep reverie which followed composed two or three hundred lines of poetry "without any sensation of consciousness of effort".

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru