a means of healing or restoring to health; remedy.
a method or course of remedial treatment, as for disease.
successful remedial treatment; restoration to health.
a means of correcting or relieving anything that is troublesome or detrimental: to seek a cure for inflation.
the act or a method of preserving meat, fish, etc., by smoking, salting, or the like.
spiritual or religious charge of the people in a certain district.
the office or district of a curate or parish priest.
verb (used with object),cured,cur·ing.
to restore to health.
to relieve or rid of something detrimental, as an illness or a bad habit.
to prepare (meat, fish, etc.) for preservation by salting, drying, etc.
to promote hardening of (fresh concrete or mortar), as by keeping it damp.
to process (rubber, tobacco, etc.) as by fermentation or aging.
verb (used without object),cured,cur·ing.
to effect a cure.
to become cured.
Origin of cure
1250–1300; (v.) Middle English curen<Middle French curer<Latin cūrāre to take care of, derivative of cūra care; (noun) Middle English <Old French cure<Latin cūra
SYNONYMS FOR cure
2 remedy, restorative, specific, antidote.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR cure ON THESAURUS.COM
synonym study for cure
9. Cure,heal,remedy imply making well, whole, or right. Cure is applied to the eradication of disease or sickness: to cure a headache.Heal suggests the making whole of wounds, sores, etc.: to heal a burn.Remedy applies especially to making wrongs right: to remedy a mistake.
An MSNBC producer quit her job in the middle of a pandemic last month, calling the cable news industry “a cancer” without a cure.
American Fringes: How the Media Makes it Worse|Nick Fouriezos|September 7, 2020|Ozy
For example, if you have cancer, God forbid, if there is a cure, you would pay a lot for that cure.
Will a Covid-19 Vaccine Change the Future of Medical Research? (Ep. 430)|Stephen J. Dubner|August 27, 2020|Freakonomics
From its research, AGT believes a cure is attainable and is now taking the significant step of testing in humans.
FDA approves human trial for treatment to cure HIV|Lou Chibbaro Jr.|August 17, 2020|Washington Blade
An approach for developing cures for genetic diseases is gene editing, a technique that makes changes directly to DNA.
A bacterial toxin enables the first mitochondrial gene editor|Jack J. Lee|July 13, 2020|Science News
Each specialist has a unique set of skills—medic, scientist, researcher—and gameplay involves splitting time between treating infections and gathering the resources you need to invent a cure.
Best cooperative board games for when you want to work together|PopSci Commerce Team|July 9, 2020|Popular Science
In 2007 he said he had discovered a cure for AIDS using natural herbs.
The Shadowy U.S. Veteran Who Tried to Overthrow a Country|Jacob Siegel|January 6, 2015|DAILY BEAST
The transfusions are not a cure, but are a second line of defense for the body.
Blood Is Ebola’s Weapon and Weakness|Abby Haglage|October 26, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Regrow limbs, cure cancer, or rock a killer outfit à la Milla Jovovich in The Fifth Element.
I Want My Damn Hoverboard! 12 Movie Inventions That Should Exist|Rich Goldstein|October 25, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Right off the bat, the “Doing Our Bit for the Cure” campaign seemed peculiar.
The Misogynistic Companies Jumping On The Breast Cancer Bandwagon|Emily Shire|October 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Rather than going to government-run clinics, many chose traditional herbalists, some of whom claimed to know the cure.
In Sierra Leone, the Plague Is Closing in Around Us|Ned Eustace|October 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
They also appear to have successfully applied it to the cure of diseases.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. 327|Various
Even the powers of magic were tried in vain to effect his cure.
Paris from the Earliest Period to the Present Day; Volume 1|William Walton
But it was the only cure for the evil that consumed his life.
Adela Cathcart, Vol. 2|George MacDonald
It was his way of saying that that was the only cure for that particular kind of man.
Young Lives|Richard Le Gallienne
No remedy can be had for this affliction, and I have never known it to cure spontaneously.
The Matron's Manual of Midwifery, and the Diseases of Women During Pregnancy and in Childbed|Frederick Hollick
British Dictionary definitions for cure (1 of 2)
cure
/ (kjʊə) /
verb
(tr)to get rid of (an ailment, fault, or problem); heal
(tr)to restore to health or good condition
(intr)to bring about a cure
(tr)to preserve (meat, fish, etc) by salting, smoking, etc
(tr)
to treat or finish (a substance) by chemical or physical means
to vulcanize (rubber)
to allow (a polymer) to set often using heat or pressure
(tr)to assist the hardening of (concrete, mortar, etc) by keeping it moist
noun
a return to health, esp after specific treatment
any course of medical therapy, esp one proved effective in combating a disease
a means of restoring health or improving a condition, situation, etc
the spiritual and pastoral charge of a parishthe cure of souls
a process or method of preserving meat, fish, etc, by salting, pickling, or smoking
Derived forms of cure
cureless, adjectivecurer, noun
Word Origin for cure
(n) C13: from Old French, from Latin cūra care; in ecclesiastical sense, from Medieval Latin cūra spiritual charge; (vb) C14: from Old French curer, from Latin cūrāre to attend to, heal, from cūra care