pandemic

suomi-englanti sanakirja

pandemic englannista suomeksi

  1. pandeeminen, laajalle levinnyt

  2. pandemia

  1. pandeeminen

  2. pandemia

pandemic englanniksi

  1. Of a disease: epidemic over a wide geographical area and affecting a large proportion of the population; also, of or pertaining to a disease of this nature.

  2. (synonyms)

    (antonyms)

    (ux)

  3. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for William Thackeray,(nb...)|year=1672?|pages=1–2|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/BIUSante_38152/page/n9/mode/1up|oclc=81325032|passage=Among diſeaſes, ſome do more generally haunt a Country, by reaſon of a certain property in the air, produced through a particular influence of the climat; and the fuming of malign ſtreams out of the earth; whence ſuch diſeaſes are termed ''Endemick'' or ''Pandemick'': Others, though they are general, do only rage at a certain ſeaſon of the year, and are therefore called ''Epidemick''; ...|footer=(small).|brackets=on

  4. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for Newbery|John Newbery,(nb...)|year=1754|page=41|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=akFWAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA41|oclc=642229646|passage=''Diſeaſes'' are likewise (smallcaps) and (smallcaps). ... The ''pandemic'' affect the ''People in general'' at one and the ſame Time, without Regard to ''Sex'', ''Age'', ''Condition'', or ''Temperament''; ſuch as ''peſtilential Diſeaſes''.

  5. (quote-book)

  6. General, widespread.

  7. (quote-journal) London: Churchill. review|journal=Review (London)|The Monthly Review|location=London|publisher=G. Henderson,(nb...)|month=May|year=1844|volume=II (New and Improved Series)|pages=70–71|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=UJIeAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA70|oclc=977712396|passage=A former age insisted upon the efficacy of scarlet curtains and red broad-cloth in small-pox—a succeeding age thinks it has proved the practice superstitious,—or they refer to it ''fancy''. Now that said ''fancy'' is an element in the constitution of man, possibly more powerful in its effects upon the cure or aggravation of disease, than all the drugs in all the chemists' laboratories in all the towns of the world. For it is universal and not partial, pandemic and not solitary.

  8. (quote-book), ... and the specimens under investigation will emerge as (IPAchar), (IPAchar), and (IPAchar), the last-mentioned driven by an early pandemic tendency to change into (IPAchar) as, inherently, the designation of a female.

  9. A pandemic disease; a disease that affects a wide geographical area and a large proportion of the population.

  10. (quote-journal)|date=5 September 1832|volume=VII|issue=4|page=53|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=5co9AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA53|oclc=191121705|passage=Those diseases which have some strong resemblance in their general characters, and attack many individuals in a large extent of country at about the same time, are commonly called ''epidemics''. If all, or about all the inhabitants of a country be similarly attacked, at or near the same time, with a particular complaint, it is more properly called a ''pandemic''.

  11. (quote-journal)

  12. (quote-journal) looks at the natural world from yet another angle: the search for the next human pandemic, what epidemiologists call "the next big one."

  13. (quote-web)

  14. {{quote-av

  15. (alternative case form of), the earthly aspect of the Greek goddess of beauty and love Aphrodite and her Roman counterpart Venus, as contrasted with the heavenly aspect known as (w): earthly, physical, sensual.

  16. (quote-book)|series=The Mary Flexner Lectures on the Humanities|seriesvolume=1965|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1967|oclc=783497266|location2=Oxford, Oxfordshire|publisher2=Oxford University Press|year2=2000|edition2=new|page2=76|pageurl2=https://books.google.com/books?id=KNTnCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA76|isbn2=978-0-19-513612-8|passage=The meeting of (mythology)|Venus with Phoebe distinguishes her roles: the business of Venus in her pandemic form is to ensure the immortality of the kinds. Her Garden has the voluptuousness necessary to ensure this, and this is 'the first seminarie / Of all things that are borne to live and die / According to their kindes.' Quoting from (w)'s ''(w)''.

  17. (l)