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1 вакцинация
1) General subject: vaccination2) Biology: vaccinization3) Medicine: bacterination, immunization, inoculation, (многократная) vaccinization4) Immunology: active prophylaxis, immunising inoculation, immunization (населения), vaccine treatment5) Genetic engineering: preventive immunization (введение в организм антигена с тем, чтобы индуцировать в нем выработку антител к возможному инфицирующему агенту)6) Makarov: immunizing inoculation, vaccine inoculation -
2 прививка
1. graft2. inoculation[lang name="Russian"]прививка, вакцинация — vaccine inoculation
3. engrafting[lang name="Russian"]копулировка, прививка седлом — saddle grafting
[lang name="Russian"]прививка черенком, аблактировка — veneer grafting
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3 прививка
1) General subject: engraftment, graff, graft, grafter, grafting, inoculation, jab (Br. Eng., informal - Macmillan Dictionary - an injection intended to stop yu from getting a desease: a flue jab), vaccination2) Biology: inoculation (прививкой)3) Medicine: immunization, implantation, prophylactic immunization, (от) vaccination (against)4) Botanical term: imp, ingrafting5) Sports: inocula6) Chemistry: inoculating7) Horticulture: graftage8) Patents: grafting (при патентовании новых сортов растений один из способов неполового размножения)9) Makarov: implantation (опухолевых клеток), vaccine inoculation10) Dog breeding: shot -
4 прививка
1. inoculation; vaccination; graftingпрививка, вакцинация — vaccine inoculation
копулировка, прививка седлом — saddle grafting
2. graft -
5 оспенная лимфа
1) Medicine: inoculation lymph2) Immunology: vaccine lymph
См. также в других словарях:
vaccine — [18] Vaccine was adapted from Latin vaccīnus, which means literally ‘of a cow’ (it was a derivative of vacca ‘cow’, source of French vache). It was used by the British physician Edward Jenner at the end of the 18th century in the terms vaccine… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
vaccine — [18] Vaccine was adapted from Latin vaccīnus, which means literally ‘of a cow’ (it was a derivative of vacca ‘cow’, source of French vache). It was used by the British physician Edward Jenner at the end of the 18th century in the terms vaccine… … Word origins
vaccine — [ vaksin ] n. f. • 1749; lat. méd. variola vaccina « variole de la vache » 1 ♦ Maladie infectieuse observée chez la vache (⇒ cow pox), le cheval, due à un virus morphologiquement identique au virus de la variole humaine, et dont l inoculation… … Encyclopédie Universelle
inoculation — [ inɔkylasjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1722, empr. angl.; 1580 « greffe »; lat. inoculatio → inoculer ♦ Méd. Introduction dans l organisme (d une substance contenant les germes d une maladie). Inoculation accidentelle, involontaire, par blessure, morsure,… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Inoculation — is the placement of something to where it will grow or reproduce, and is most commonly used in respect of the introduction of a serum, vaccine, or antigenic substance into the body of a human or animal, especially to produce or boost immunity to… … Wikipedia
Inoculation theory — was developed by social psychologist William J. McGuire in 1961 to explain more about how attitudes and beliefs change, and more importantly, how to keep original attitudes and beliefs consistent in the face of persuasion attempts. Inoculation… … Wikipedia
Vaccine injury — Classification and external resources ICD 10 T88.1, Y58 Y59 … Wikipedia
Vaccine controversies — James Gillray, The Cow Pock or the Wonderful Effects of the New Inoculation! (1802) A vaccine controversy is a dispute over the morality, ethics, effectiveness, or safety of vaccinations. Medical and scientific evidence surrounding vaccinations… … Wikipedia
Vaccine — For other uses, see Vaccine (disambiguation). A vaccine is a biological preparation that improves immunity to a particular disease. A vaccine typically contains an agent that resembles a disease causing microorganism, and is often made from… … Wikipedia
Vaccine controversy — A vaccine controversy is a dispute over the morality, ethics, effectiveness, or safety of vaccination. Medical opinion is that the benefits of preventing suffering and death from infectious diseases greatly outweigh the risks of adverse effects… … Wikipedia
vaccine — Originally, the live v. (vaccinia, cowpox) virus inoculated in the skin as prophylaxis against smallpox and obtained from the skin of calves inoculated with seed virus. Usage has extended the meaning to include essentially any preparation… … Medical dictionary