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21 psychiatric, illness
maladie f psychiatrique -
22 acute, onset
( illness)apparition f brutale -
23 develop
develop [dɪˈveləp]a. [+ mind, body, business, skill] développerb. ( = change and improve) [+ region, area] aménagerc. [+ habit, illness] contracter ; [+ symptoms] présenterse développer ; [problem] surgir ; [talent] s'épanouir ; [friendship] s'établir ; [jealousy] s'installer ; [situation] évoluer━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✎ The French word développer has a double p.* * *[dɪ'veləp] 1.transitive verb1) ( acquire) acquérir [knowledge]; attraper [illness]; prendre [habit]; présenter [symptom]2) ( evolve) élaborer [plan, project]; mettre au point [technique, invention]; exposer [theory]; développer [argument]3) ( create) créer [market]; établir [links]4) (expand, build up) développer [mind, physique, business, market]5) ( improve) mettre en valeur [land, site]; aménager [city centre]6) Photography développer2.1) ( evolve) [child, society, country, plot, play] se développer; [intelligence] s'épanouir; [skills] s'améliorer2) ( come into being) [friendship, difficulty] naître; [crack, hole] se former; [illness] se déclarer3) (progress, advance) [friendship] se développer; [difficulty] s'aggraver; [crack, fault] s'accentuer; [war, illness] s'aggraver; [game, story] se dérouler4) (in size, extent) [town, business] se développer -
24 shaky
shaky [ˈ∫eɪkɪ]• he's still a bit shaky (illness) il ne tient pas encore bien sur ses jambes ; (from nerves) il est encore fragileb. ( = trembling) [legs] (from fear, illness) flageolant ; [voice] (from fear, illness) tremblant ; (from age) chevrotant ; (from nerves) mal assuré ; [hand] tremblant ; [handwriting] trembléc. ( = wobbly) [table] branlant ; [building] peu solided. ( = uncertain) [argument] boiteux ; [knowledge] très imparfait ; [health] chancelant ; [prospects] précaire* * *['ʃeɪkɪ]1) [chair, ladder] branlant2) fig [relationship, position] instable; [argument] peu solide; [knowledge, memory] peu sûr; [regime] chancelantwe got off to a rather shaky start — (in relationship, business) au début cela a été difficile pour nous; ( in performance) nous étions très peu sûrs de nous au début
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25 Illnesses, aches and pains
Where does it hurt?where does it hurt?= où est-ce que ça vous fait mal? or (more formally) où avez-vous mal?his leg hurts= sa jambe lui fait malhe has a pain in his leg= il a mal à la jambeNote that with avoir mal à French uses the definite article (la) with the part of the body, where English has a possessive (his), hence:his head was aching= il avait mal à la têteEnglish has other ways of expressing this idea, but avoir mal à fits them too:he had toothache= il avait mal aux dentshis ears hurt= il avait mal aux oreillesAccidentsshe broke her leg= elle s’est cassé la jambeElle s’est cassé la jambe means literally she broke to herself the leg ; because the se is an indirect object, the past participle cassé does not agree. This is true of all such constructions:she sprained her ankle= elle s’est foulé la chevillethey burned their hands= ils se sont brûlé les mainsChronic conditionsNote that the French often use fragile (weak) to express a chronic condition:he has a weak heart= il a le cœur fragilehe has kidney trouble= il a les reins fragileshe has a bad back= il a le dos fragileBeing illMostly French uses the definite article with the name of an illness:to have flu= avoir la grippeto have measles= avoir la rougeoleto have malaria= avoir la malariaThis applies to most infectious diseases, including childhood illnesses. However, note the exceptions ending in -ite (e.g. une hépatite, une méningite) below.When the illness affects a specific part of the body, French uses the indefinite article:to have cancer= avoir un cancerto have cancer of the liver= avoir un cancer du foieto have pneumonia= avoir une pneumonieto have cirrhosis= avoir une cirrhoseto have a stomach ulcer= avoir un ulcère à l’estomacMost words in -ite ( English -itis) work like this:to have bronchitis= avoir une bronchiteto have hepatitis= avoir une hépatiteWhen the illness is a generalized condition, French tends to use du, de l’, de la or des:to have rheumatism= avoir des rhumatismesto have emphysema= avoir de l’emphysèmeto have asthma= avoir de l’asthmeto have arthritis= avoir de l’arthriteOne exception here is:to have hay fever= avoir le rhume des foinsWhen there is an adjective for such conditions, this is often preferred in French:to have asthma= être asthmatiqueto have epilepsy= être épileptiqueSuch adjectives can be used as nouns to denote the person with the illness, e.g. un/une asthmatique and un/une épileptique etc.French has other specific words for people with certain illnesses:someone with cancer= un cancéreux/une cancéreuseIf in doubt check in the dictionary.English with is translated by qui a or qui ont, and this is always safe:someone with malaria= quelqu’un qui a la malariapeople with Aids= les gens qui ont le SidaFalling illThe above guidelines about the use of the definite and indefinite articles in French hold good for talking about the onset of illnesses.French has no general equivalent of to get. However, where English can use catch, French can use attraper:to catch mumps= attraper les oreillonsto catch malaria= attraper la malariato catch bronchitis= attraper une bronchiteto catch a cold= attraper un rhumeSimilarly where English uses contract, French uses contracter:to contract Aids= contracter le Sidato contract pneumonia= contracter une pneumonieto contract hepatitis= contracter une hépatiteFor attacks of chronic illnesses, French uses faire une crise de:to have a bout of malaria= faire une crise de malariato have an asthma attack= faire une crise d’asthmeto have an epileptic fit= faire une crise d’épilepsieTreatmentto be treated for polio= se faire soigner contre la polioto take something for hay fever= prendre quelque chose contre le rhume des foinshe’s taking something for his cough= il prend quelque chose contre la touxto prescribe something for a cough= prescrire un médicament contre la touxmalaria tablets= des cachets contre la malariato have a cholera vaccination= se faire vacciner contre le cholérato be vaccinated against smallpox= se faire vacciner contre la varioleto be immunized against smallpox= se faire immuniser contre la varioleto have a tetanus injection= se faire vacciner contre le tétanosto give sb a tetanus injection= vacciner qn contre le tétanosto be operated on for cancer= être opéré d’un cancerto operate on sb for appendicitis= opérer qn de l’appendicite -
26 recovery
recovery [rɪˈkʌvərɪ]1. noun• to make a full recovery (from illness) guérir complètement ; (from operation) se remettre complètement• to be in recovery (from alcohol, drug addiction) être en cure de désintoxication• a recovery in sales/in the housing market une reprise des ventes/du marché de l'immobilierc. ( = retrieval) récupération fd. ( = regaining) [of territory] reconquête f2. compounds• to put sb in the recovery position mettre qn en position latérale de sécurité ► recovery vehicle noun dépanneuse f* * *[rɪ'kʌvərɪ]1) ( getting better) rétablissement m, guérison f; fig (of team, player) ressaisissement mto make a recovery — ( from illness) se rétablir, guérir; (from mistake, defeat) se ressaisir
2) Economics, Finance (of economy, country, company, market) relance f, reprise f; (of shares, prices) remontée f3) ( getting back) ( of vehicle) rapatriement m; ( of money) récupération f; (of costs, debts) recouvrement m; ( of losses) réparation f -
27 develop
A vtr1 ( acquire) acquérir [skill, knowledge] ; attraper [illness] ; prendre [habit] ; présenter [symptom] ; to develop an awareness of sth prendre conscience de qch ; to develop a taste ou liking for sth prendre goût à qch ; to develop cancer développer un cancer ; the engine developed a fault le moteur a commencé à mal fonctionner ;2 ( evolve) élaborer [plan, project] ; mettre au point [technique, procedures, invention] ; exposer [theory, idea] ; développer [argument] ;6 Phot développer.B vi1 ( evolve) [child, seed, embryo] se développer ; [intelligence] s'épanouir ; [skills] s'améliorer ; [society, country, region] se développer ; [plot, play] se développer ; to develop into devenir ;2 ( come into being) [friendship] naître ; [trouble, difficulty] naître ; [crack, hole] se former ; [illness, symptom] se déclarer ;3 (progress, advance) [friendship] se développer ; [difficulty] s'aggraver ; [crack, fault] s'accentuer ; [war, illness] s'aggraver ; [game, story] se dérouler ;4 (in size, extent) [town, business] se développer. -
28 disable
A vtr1 Med [accident, sudden illness] rendre [qn] infirme ; [chronic illness, permanent handicap] handicaper ; to be disabled by arthritis être handicapé par l'arthrite ;3 Mil mettre [qch] hors d'action [weapon, ship, vehicle] ;4 Comput désactiver ; -
29 risk
A n1 gen risque m (of de ; of doing de faire) ; there's a risk of him catching the illness ou that he'll catch the illness il risque d'attraper la maladie ; is there any risk of him catching the illness? est-ce qu'il risque d'attraper la maladie? ; there's a risk that the operation will not succeed l'opération comporte un risque d'échec ; there is no risk to consumers il n'y a aucun danger pour le consommateur ; without risks to health sans danger pour la santé ; to run the risk of being injured/ridiculed courir le risque d'être blessé/tourné en ridicule ; they run a higher risk of cancer ils courent un risque supérieur de cancer ; to take risks prendre des risques ; it's not worth the risk le risque est trop grand ; children at risk enfants menacés de violence ; their jobs are at risk leurs emplois sont menacés ; the factory is at risk of closure l'usine est menacée de fermeture ; to put one's life/health at risk mettre sa vie/santé en danger ; her health could be at risk sa santé pourrait être compromise ; at one's own risk à ses risques et périls ; he saved the child at considerable risk to himself il a sauvé l'enfant en prenant des risques considérables ; at the risk of seeming ungrateful/paradoxical au risque de paraître ingrat/de sembler paradoxal ; ‘at owner's risk’ ‘aux risques et périls du propriétaire’ ;2 Fin, Insur risque m ; to be a good/bad risk être un bon/mauvais risque ; to spread a risk diviser les risques ; an all-risks policy Insur une assurance tous risques.B vtr1 ( endanger) to risk one's life risquer sa vie ; to risk one's health compromettre sa santé ; to risk one's neck (doing) lit, fig risquer sa peau (à faire) ;2 ( venture) to risk doing courir le risque de faire ; we're prepared to risk cash nous sommes prêts à risquer de l'argent ; to risk death risquer la mort ; to risk injury risquer de se blesser ; to risk one's all risquer le tout pour le tout ; we decided to risk it nous avons décidé de prendre le risque ; let's risk it anyway c'est un risque à prendre. -
30 sham
1 noun(a) (pretence → of sentiment, behaviour) comédie f, farce f, faux-semblant m;∎ what he says is all sham il n'y a rien de vrai dans ce qu'il dit;∎ her illness/grief is a sham sa maladie/son chagrin n'est qu'une mascarade;∎ their marriage is a complete sham leur mariage est une véritable farce;∎ the elections were a sham les élections ont été une véritable farce(b) (mock → jewellery) fantaisie, faux (fausse);∎ a sham election un simulacre d'élections;∎ a sham peace une paix de pacotillefeindre, simuler;∎ to sham illness faire semblant d'être maladefaire semblant, jouer la comédie;∎ he's not really ill, he's only shamming il n'est pas vraiment malade, il fait semblant -
31 afflict
afflict [əˈflɪkt]* * *[ə'flɪkt]transitive verb [poverty, disease] frapper; [grief] accabler; [illness] toucherto be afflicted by — souffrir de [illness]; être affligé de [stammer]
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32 attack
attack [əˈtæk]1. noun• to leave o.s. open to attack ( = criticism) prêter le flanc à la critiqueb. ( = illness) crise f* * *[ə'tæk] 1.1) gen, Military, Sport attaque f (on contre); ( criminal) agression f (against, on contre); ( terrorist) attentat mto come under attack — Military être attaqué ( from par); fig être l'objet de critiques virulentes ( from de la part de)
to leave oneself open to attack — fig s'exposer à la critique
to mount ou launch an attack on something — lit attaquer quelque chose; fig s'attaquer à quelque chose
2) Medicine ( of chronic illness) crise f (of de)2.transitive verb1) gen, Medicine, Military, Sport attaquer; ( criminally) agresser [victim]; fig attaquer [book, idea]2) ( tackle) s'attaquer à [task, problem] -
33 chill
chill [t∫ɪl]1. nouna. froid m• to take the chill off [+ water, room] réchauffer un peub. ( = illness) refroidissement m[+ person] faire frissonner ; [+ wine, melon] (faire) rafraîchir ; [+ champagne] frapper ; [+ dessert] mettre au frais[wine] rafraîchir4. compounds[music] relaxant* * *[tʃɪl] 1.1) ( coldness) fraîcheur f2) ( illness) coup m de froidto catch a chill — prendre or attraper un coup de froid
3) fig frisson m2.1) lit [wind] frais/fraîche2) fig [reminder, words] brutal3.transitive verb1) Culinary ( make cool) mettre [quelque chose] à refroidir [dessert, soup]; rafraîchir [wine]; ( keep cool) réfrigérer2) ( make cold) faire frissonner [person]3) fig ( cause to fear) faire frissonner [person]4.to chill somebody's ou the blood — glacer le sang à quelqu'un
intransitive verb [dessert] refroidir; [wine] rafraîchir5.chilled past participle adjective [wine] bien frais; [food] réfrigéréPhrasal Verbs: -
34 chronic
-
35 come
come [kʌm]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━2. modifier━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. venir• coming! j'arrive !► to come + preposition• to come behind sb/sth suivre qn/qch• to come between two people ( = interfere) s'interposer entre deux personnes• to come for sb/sth venir chercher qn/qch• where do you come from? tu viens d'où ?• if it comes to that,... dans ce cas-là...• when it comes to... quand il s'agit de...► to come + -ing• to come running/shouting arriver en courant/en criant► to come + adverb/adjective• to come apart ( = fall to pieces) tomber en morceauxb. ( = have one's place) se trouverc. ( = happen) arriver• how do you come to be here? comment se fait-il que vous soyez ici ?• how come it's so expensive? (inf) comment se fait-il que cela soit si cher ?d. ( = result from) nothing came of it il n'en est rien sortie. ( = be available) this dress comes in three sizes cette robe existe en trois tailles• how do you like your tea? -- as it comes comment voulez-vous votre thé ? -- ça m'est égalf. ► to come to + infinitive ( = end up) finir parg. ( = reach orgasm) (inf!) jouir2. modifier(gen = lure) attrape-nigaud m( = happen) arriver• how did it come about? comment est-ce arrivé ?► come acrossa. ( = cross) traversera. venir• come along! (allez,) venez !• why don't you come along? pourquoi ne viendrais-tu pas ?b. ( = progress) faire des progrès ; [plans] avancera. ( = leave) s'en aller• come away from there! va-t'en de là !b. ( = become detached) se détacher[person, fashion] revenira. descendre• come down from there at once! descends de là tout de suite !b. ( = fall) [rain, curtain] tomberd. ( = be demolished) être démolie. ( = drop) [prices] baisserf. ( = be transmitted) [tradition] être transmis (de père en fils)► come down with inseparable transitive verb[+ disease] attraper• after the burglary, her neighbours came forward with offers of help après le cambriolage, ses voisins ont offert de l'aidera. [person] entrer ; [tide] monter• come in! entrez !• reports are now coming in of a terrorist attack des informations nous parviennent selon lesquelles il y aurait eu un attentat terroristec. he has £20,000 coming in every year il touche 20 000 livres par an• we have no money coming in at the moment nous n'avons aucune rentrée d'argent en ce moment► come in for inseparable transitive verb[+ criticism] être l'objet dea. ( = inherit) hériter deb. ( = play a role) logic doesn't really come into it la logique n'a pas grand-chose à voir là-dedans► come offa. [button] se découdre ; [mark] partirb. ( = take place) avoir lieuc. ( = succeed) [plan] se réaliser ; [attempt, experiment] réussird. (in contest, conflict) to come off best avoir le dessusb. [+ drug] arrêtera. come on, try again! allez, encore un effort !b. ( = progress) faire des progrès• how are your plans coming on? où en sont vos projets ?d. [actor] entrer en scène( = start discussing) aborder• I'll come on to that in a moment j'aborderai cette question dans un moment► come out intransitive verba. sortir ; [sun, stars] apparaître ; [truth, news, qualities] apparaître au grand jour ; [stain] partir• to come out for/against sth prendre position pour/contre qchd. (British) ( = come out on strike) se mettre en grève• she came out as a lesbian elle a révélé son homosexualité► come out with (inf) inseparable transitive verb• you never know what she's going to come out with next on ne sait jamais ce qu'elle va sortir (inf)► come overa. venirc. ( = make impression) he came over as a decent person il a donné l'impression d'être une personne décente[feeling] envahirb. ( = drop in) passerc. ( = happen) se tenird. ( = change one's mind) changer d'avise. ( = regain consciousness) revenir à soi► come througha. ( = survive) s'en sortirc. what came through most was her enthusiasm ce que l'on remarquait surtout, c'était son enthousiasme( = survive) [+ illness, danger, war] survivre à► come to( = regain consciousness) reprendre connaissance( = amount to) se monter à• how much does it come to? ça se monte à combien ?• it comes to $20 ça fait 20 dollars en touta. ( = be subjected to) [+ sb's influence] tomber sous ; [+ attack, pressure] être l'objet deb. ( = be classified under) être classé sousc. ( = be the responsibility of) this comes under another department c'est du ressort d'un autre service► come up intransitive verba. monter• do you come up to York often? est-ce que vous montez souvent à York ?c. [plant] sortird. [sun] se levere. ( = arise) être soulevéa. ( = reach up to) arriver àb. ( = equal) répondre à• his work has not come up to our expectations son travail n'a pas répondu à notre attente► come up with inseparable transitive verb* * *[kʌm] 1.2. 3.come, come! — allons, allons!
1) ( arrive) [person, day, success, fame] venir; [bus, letter, news, rains, winter, war] arriverto come by — ( take) prendre [bus, taxi, plane]
I came on foot/by bike — je suis venu à pied/à bicyclette
to come down — descendre [stairs, street]
to come up — monter [stairs, street]
to come from — venir de [airport, hospital]
to come into — entrer dans [house, room]
to come past — [car, person] passer
to come through — [person] passer par [town centre, tunnel]; [water, object] traverser [window etc]
to come to — venir à [school, telephone]
come Christmas/summer — à Noël/en été
2) ( approach) s'approcherto come and see/help somebody — venir voir/aider quelqu'un
to come to somebody for — venir demander [quelque chose] à quelqu'un [money, advice]
I could see it coming — ( of accident) je le voyais venir
to come close ou near to doing — faillir faire
3) (call, visit) [dustman, postman] passer; [cleaner] venir4) ( attend) venirto come to — venir à [meeting, party]
5) ( reach)to come to —
to come up/down to — [water] venir jusqu'à; [dress, curtain] arriver à
6) ( happen)7) ( begin)to come to believe/hate — finir par croire/détester
8) ( originate)to come from — [person] être originaire de, venir de [city, country]; [word, legend] venir de [country, language]; [substance] provenir de [raw material]; [coins, stamps] provenir de [place]; [smell, sound] venir de [place]
to come from France — [fruit, painting] provenir de France; [person] être français/-e
9) ( be available)to come in — exister en [sizes, colours]
10) ( tackle)to come to — aborder [problem, subject]
11) ( develop)12) ( be situated) venirto come after — suivre, venir après
to come before — (in time, list, queue) précéder; ( in importance) passer avant
to come first/last — arriver premier/dernier
13) ( be due)he had it coming (to him) — (colloq) ça lui pendait au nez
they got what was coming to them — (colloq) ils ont fini par avoir ce qu'ils méritaient
14) ( be a question of)when it comes to something/to doing — lorsqu'il s'agit de quelque chose/de faire
•Phrasal Verbs:- come at- come by- come in- come off- come on- come out- come to- come up••come again? — (colloq) pardon?
come to that ou if it comes to that, you may be right — en fait, tu as peut-être raison
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36 diagnose
diagnose [ˈdaɪəgnəʊz]* * *['daɪəgnəʊz], US [ˌdaɪəg'nəʊs]transitive verb1) Medicine diagnostiquer2) gen identifier -
37 fake
fake [feɪk]1. nounfaux m2. adjective* * *[feɪk] 1.1) (jewel, work of art etc) faux m2) ( person) imposteur m2.adjective [fur, gem, passport] faux/fausse; [flower] artificiel/-ielle; [smile] feint3.it's fake wood/granite — c'est de l'imitation bois/granit
transitive verb1) contrefaire [signature, document]; falsifier [results]; feindre [emotion, illness]2) US Sport -
38 intractable
intractable [ɪnˈtræktəbl][problem] insoluble ; [illness] réfractaire (à tout traitement) ; [child] difficile ; [opponent] irréductible* * *[ɪn'træktəbl]adjective [person] intraitable; [opinion] inflexible; [illness, problem] rebelle -
39 mental
mental [ˈmentl]1. adjectivea. ( = not physical) mental2. compounds* * *['mentl]1) Medicine [handicap, illness, patient] mental; [hospital, institution] psychiatrique; [ward] de psychiatrie2) ( of the mind) [ability, effort, energy] intellectuel/-elle; [process, age] mental3) ( in one's head) [arithmetic, picture] mental4) (colloq) ( mad) fou/folle, malade (colloq) -
40 over
over [ˈəʊvər]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb2. adjective3. preposition4. noun5. modifier━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverb► to have sb over ( = invite) inviter qn chez soib. ( = there) làc. ( = above) dessusd. (with adverb/preposition)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When followed by an adverb or a preposition, over is not usually translated.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━e. ( = more) plusf. ( = in succession) he did it five times over il l'a fait cinq fois de suite• William played the same tune over and over again William a joué le même air je ne sais combien de fois• I got bored doing the same thing over and over again je m'ennuyais à refaire toujours la même choseg. ( = remaining) there are three over il en reste troish. (on two-way radio) over! à vous !• over and out! terminé !2. adjective( = finished) after the war was over après la guerre3. preposition━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When over occurs in a set combination, eg over the moon, an advantage over, look up the noun. When over is used with a verb such as jump, trip, step, look up the verb.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. ( = on top of) surb. ( = above) au-dessus dec. ( = across) de l'autre côté ded. ( = during) over the summer pendant l'étéf. ( = more than) plus de• spending has gone up by 7% over and above inflation les dépenses ont augmenté de 7 %, hors inflation• over and above the fact that... sans compter que...h. ( = while having) they chatted over a cup of coffee ils ont bavardé autour d'une tasse de caféi. ( = recovered from)► to be over sth [+ illness, bad experience] s'être remis de qch4. noun5. modifier* * *Note: over is used after many verbs in English ( change over, fall over, lean over etc). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (change, fall, lean etc)over is often used with another preposition in English (to, in, on) without altering the meaning. In this case over is usually not translated in French: to be over in France = être en France; to swim over to somebody = nager vers quelqu'unover is often used with nouns in English when talking about superiority ( control over etc) or when giving the cause of something ( concern over, worries over etc). For translations, consult the appropriate noun entry (control, concern, worry etc)over is often used as a prefix in verb combinations ( overeat), adjective combinations ( overconfident) and noun combinations ( overcoat). These combinations are treated as headwords in the dictionary['əʊvə(r)] 1.1) ( across the top of) par-dessusover here/there — par ici/là
3) ( above) au-dessus de4) (covering, surrounding) gen sur5) ( physically higher than)6) ( more than) plus detemperatures over 40° — des températures supérieures à 40°
7) ( in the course of)8) ( recovered from)to be over — s'être remis de [illness, operation]
9) ( by means of)10) ( everywhere)2.over and above prepositional phrase3.adjective, adverb2) ( finished)to be over — [term, meeting] être terminé; [war] être fini
3) ( more)4) ( remaining)5) (to one's house, country)to invite ou ask somebody over — inviter quelqu'un
6) Radio, Television7) ( showing repetition)I had to do it over — US j'ai dû recommencer
I've told you over and over (again)... — je t'ai dit je ne sais combien de fois...
8) GB ( excessively)
См. также в других словарях:
Illness — (sometimes referred to as ill health or ail) can be defined as a state of poor health. It is sometimes considered a synonym for disease. [DorlandsDict|four/000052397|illness] Others maintain that fine distinctions exist.cite journal |author=Emson … Wikipedia
Illness — Ill ness, n. [From {Ill}.] 1. The condition of being ill, evil, or bad; badness; unfavorableness. [Obs.] The illness of the weather. Locke. [1913 Webster] 2. Disease; indisposition; malady; disorder of health; sickness; as, a short or a severe… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
illness — I noun affliction, ailing, ailment, complaint, defect, disability, disease, disorder, infirmity, malady, prostration, sickness associated concepts: mental illness, terminal illness, Unemployment Compensation, Workers Compensation Law II index … Law dictionary
illness — (n.) disease, sickness, 1680s, from ILL (Cf. ill) + NESS (Cf. ness). Earlier it meant bad moral quality (c.1500) … Etymology dictionary
illness — [n] disease; bad health affliction, ailing, ailment, attack, breakdown, bug*, collapse, complaint, confinement, convalescence, disability, diseasedness, disorder, disturbance, dose, failing health, fit, flu, ill health, indisposition, infirmity,… … New thesaurus
illness — ► NOUN ▪ a disease or period of sickness … English terms dictionary
illness — [il′nis] n. 1. the condition of being ill, or in poor health; sickness; disease 2. Obs. wickedness … English World dictionary
illness — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ deadly, fatal, incurable, terminal ▪ catastrophic (AmE, law), critical, dangerous, debilitating, devastating … Collocations dictionary
illness — ill|ness W3S2 [ˈılnıs] n [U and C] a disease of the body or mind, or the condition of being ill ▪ She had all the normal childhood illnesses . ▪ I d been told I d been suffering from various illnesses . ▪ Her mother was just recovering from an… … Dictionary of contemporary English
illness */*/*/ — UK [ˈɪlnəs] / US noun Word forms illness : singular illness plural illnesses Other ways of saying illness: disease a serious illness that usually lasts a long time, often one that affects a particular part of the body: tropical diseases ♦ She has … English dictionary
illness*/*/*/ — [ˈɪlnəs] noun 1) [U] the state of feeling ill or having a disease He missed five days of school because of illness.[/ex] 2) [C] a particular disease, or a period of being ill a serious illness[/ex] • Other ways of saying illness ■ bug (informal)… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English