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1 Nurse
v. trans.Suckle: P. τιτθεύειν, θηλάζειν (or mid.); see Suckle.Bring up, rear: P. and V. τρέφειν (or mid.), ἐκτρέφειν.Turn over and over in thought: Ar. and V. βουκολεῖν (or mid.).——————subs.Be a nurse, v.: P. τιτθεύειν.Generally: P. and V. τροφός, ὁ, or ἡ, τροφεύς, ὁ, or ἡ.In voc., good nurse: Ar. and V. μαῖα.One who waits on the sick: P. θεραπευτής, ὁ.A slave who attends on boys: P. and V. παιδαγωγός, ὁ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Nurse
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2 nurse
[nə:s] 1. noun1) (a person who looks after sick or injured people in hospital: She wants to be a nurse.) νοσοκόμος,νοσοκόμα2) (a person, usually a woman, who looks after small children: The children have gone out with their nurse.) παραμάνα2. verb1) (to look after sick or injured people, especially in a hospital: He was nursed back to health.) φροντίζω,νοσηλεύω2) (to give (a baby) milk from the breast.) θηλάζω3) (to hold with care: She was nursing a kitten.) κρατώ με προσοχή4) (to have or encourage (feelings eg of anger or hope) in oneself.) τρέφω,καλλιεργώ•- nursery- nursing
- nursemaid
- nurseryman
- nursery rhyme
- nursery school
- nursing-home -
3 nurse
1) βάγια2) νοσοκόμα -
4 Wet nurse
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Wet nurse
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5 wet-nurse
noun (a woman employed to breast-feed someone else's baby.) τροφός -
6 amah
1) (in Eastern Countries, a native female servant.)2) (a baby's nurse, especially a wet-nurse.) -
7 able
['eibl]1) (having enough strength, knowledge etc to do something: He was able to open the door; He will come if he is able.) που έχει την ικανότητα ή δυνατότητα2) (clever and skilful; capable: a very able nurse.) ικανός3) (legally competent: able to vote.)•- ably -
8 auxiliary
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9 cap
[kæp]1) (a hat with a peak: a chauffeur's cap.) πηλήκιο2) (a covering for the head, not with a peak: a swimming cap; a nurse's cap.) σκούφια3) (a cover or top (of a bottle, pen etc): Replace the cap after you've finished with the pen.) καπάκι, πώμα, βούλωμα, τάπα•- capped -
10 care for
1) (to look after (someone): The nurse will care for you.) φροντίζω2) (to be fond of: I don't care for him enough to marry him.) μου αρέσει -
11 live in
(to have one's home at, away from, the place where one works: All the hotel staff live in; The nurse chose to live out.) διαμένω στο χώρο εργασίας / εκτός χώρου εργασίας -
12 matron
['meitrən]1) (a senior nurse in charge of a hospital.) προϊσταμένη2) (a dignified married woman: Her behaviour shocked all the middle-class matrons in the neighbourhood.) δέσποινα,κυρά•- matronly -
13 midwife
plural - midwives; noun(a person (usually a trained nurse) who helps at the birth of children.) μαμή -
14 nanny
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15 nursemaid
noun (a nurse who looks after small children.) παραμάνα -
16 nursing
noun (the profession of a nurse who cares for the sick.) επάγγελμα νοσοκόμου -
17 sister
['sistə] 1. noun1) (the title given to a female child to describe her relationship to the other children of her parents: She's my sister; my father's sister.) αδερφή2) (a type of senior nurse: She's a sister on Ward 5.) αδελφή,νοσοκόμα3) (a female member of a religious group.) αδελφή,μοναχή4) (a female fellow member of any group: We must fight for equal opportunities, sisters!) αδελφή,συντρόφισσα2. adjective(closely similar in design, function etc: sister ships.) αδελφός -
18 student
['stju:dənt]1) (an undergraduate or graduate studying for a degree at a university etc: university students; a medical student; ( also adjective) She is a student nurse/teacher.) μαθητής/ φοιτητής, σπουδαστής2) ((especially American) a boy or girl at school.) μαθητής3) (a person studying a particular thing: a student of politics.) σπουδαστής, μελετητής -
19 theatre
['Ɵiətə]1) (a place where plays, operas etc are publicly performed.) θέατρο2) (plays in general; any theatre: Are you going to the theatre tonight?) θέατρο3) ((also operating-theatre) a room in a hospital where surgical operations are performed: Take the patient to the theatre; ( also adjective) a theatre nurse.) χειρουργείο, αμφιθέατρο•- theatrically
- theatricality
- theatricals
- the theatre -
20 thermometer
[Ɵə'momitə](an instrument (usually a thin, glass tube with eg mercury in it) used for measuring temperature, especially body temperature: The nurse took his temperature with a thermometer.) θερμόμετρο
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См. также в других словарях:
nurse — nurse … Dictionnaire des rimes
Nurse — (n[^u]rs), n. [OE. nourse, nurice, norice, OF. nurrice, norrice, nourrice, F. nourrice, fr. L. nutricia nurse, prop., fem. of nutricius that nourishes; akin to nutrix, icis, nurse, fr. nutrire to nourish. See {Nourish}, and cf. {Nutritious}.] 1.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Nurse 3D — Concept art Directed by Doug Aarniokoski Produced by Marc Bienstock … Wikipedia
nurse — [ nɶrs ] n. f. • 1896; « nourrice anglaise » 1855; mot angl. « infirmière », du fr. nourrice ♦ Domestique (anglaise à l origine) qui s occupe exclusivement des soins à donner aux enfants, dans les familles riches. ⇒ bonne (d enfants), 3. garde,… … Encyclopédie Universelle
nurse — [nʉrs] n. [ME norse < OFr norice < LL nutricia < L nutricius, that suckles or nourishes < nutrix (gen. nutricis), wet nurse < nutrire, to nourish < IE * (s)neu , var. of base * (s)nā , to flow > NATANT, Sans snāuti, (she)… … English World dictionary
nurse — [n] person who tends to sick, cares for someone assistant, attendant, baby sitter, caretaker, foster parent, medic, minder, nurse practitioner, practical nurse, registered nurse, RN, sitter, therapist, wet nurse; concepts 357,414 nurse [v1] care… … New thesaurus
Nurse — Nurse, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Nursed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Nursing}.] 1. To nourish; to cherish; to foster; as: (a) To nourish at the breast; to suckle; to feed and tend, as an infant. (b) To take care of or tend, as a sick person or an invalid; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
nurse — vb Nurse, nurture, foster, cherish, cultivate are comparable especially when they mean to give the care neces sary to the growth, development, or continued welfare or existence of someone or something. Nurse basically implies close care of and… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Nurse — [nəːs], Sir (seit 1999) Paul M., britischer Zell und Molekularbiologe, * Norfolk 25. 1. 1949; arbeitet seit 1996 als Generaldirektor des Imperial Cancer Research Fund und Leiter des Zellzykluslabors in London; Nurse identifizierte eine der… … Universal-Lexikon
nurse — 1. Voz tomada del inglés nurse, que se usa ocasionalmente en español con el significado de ‘niñera extranjera’: «Al principio contaron con la ayuda de diferentes nurses, pero ninguna daba en la tecla» (Penerini Aventura [Arg. 1999]). Se admite su … Diccionario panhispánico de dudas
Nurse — [nœrs, engl. nə:s] die; , Plur. s [ nə:siz] u. n [ nœrsn̩] <aus engl. nurse, dies über (alt)fr. nourrice aus spätlat. nutricia »Amme« zu lat. nutrire, vgl. ↑nutrieren> (veraltet) Kinderpflegerin … Das große Fremdwörterbuch