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infection
[ in-fek-shuhn ]
noun
- an infecting agency or influence.
- an infectious disease:
Is this infection very dangerous?
- the condition of suffering an infection.
- corruption of another's opinions, beliefs, moral principles, etc.; moral contamination.
- an influence or impulse passing from one to another and affecting feeling or action.
- Grammar. (in Celtic languages) assimilation in which a vowel is influenced by a following vowel or semivowel; umlaut.
infection
/ 瑟苍藞蹿蓻办蕛蓹苍 /
noun
- invasion of the body by pathogenic microorganisms
- the resulting condition in the tissues
- an infectious disease
- the act of infecting or state of being infected
- an agent or influence that infects
- persuasion or corruption, as by ideas, perverse influences, etc
infection
- The invasion of the body of a human or an animal by a pathogen such as a bacterium, fungus, or virus. Infections can be localized, as in pharyngitis , or widespread as in sepsis , and are often accompanied by fever and an increased number of white blood cells. Individuals with immunodeficiency syndromes are predisposed to certain infections.
- See also infectious disease
infection
- Invasion of the body or a body part by a pathogenic organism, which multiplies and produces harmful effects on the body's tissues.
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 苍辞苍顎卛苍路蹿别肠顎僼颈辞苍 noun
- 辫辞蝉迟顎卛苍路蹿别肠顎僼颈辞苍 adjective
- 辫谤别顎卛苍路蹿别肠顎僼颈辞苍 noun
- 谤别顎卛苍路蹿别肠顎僼颈辞苍 noun
- 蝉耻产顎卛苍路蹿别肠顎僼颈辞苍 noun
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of infection1
Example Sentences
And only female mosquitoes bite, so unleashing males doesn鈥檛 lead to transmission of diseases such as dengue, a potentially fatal viral infection.
The scientists are testing the vaccine as a regular shot and as an intranasal spray with the idea of stopping the virus in the respiratory tract before it causes a broad infection.
Using drugs with, caring for or having sexual contact with an infected person are also common means of infection, according to the U.S.
Keratopigmentation is not to be confused with scleral tattooing, which involves tattooing the white part of the eye and carries a risk for infection and vision loss.
The new gene therapy works by modifying the patient's own cells to help them create the missing protein needed to help the body fight infection.
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