释义 |
experience
ex·pe·ri·ence E0286000 (ĭk-spîr′ē-əns)n.1. The apprehension of an object, thought, or emotion through the senses or mind: a child's first experience of snow.2. a. Active participation in events or activities, leading to the accumulation of knowledge or skill: a lesson taught by experience; a carpenter with experience in roof repair.b. The knowledge or skill so derived.3. a. An event or a series of events participated in or lived through.b. The totality of such events in the past of an individual or group.tr.v. ex·per·i·enced, ex·per·i·enc·ing, ex·per·i·enc·es To participate in personally; undergo: experience a great adventure; experienced loneliness. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin experientia, from experiēns, experient-, present participle of experīrī, to try; see per- in Indo-European roots.] ex·pe′ri·enc·er n.experience (ɪkˈspɪərɪəns) n1. direct personal participation or observation; actual knowledge or contact: experience of prison life. 2. a particular incident, feeling, etc, that a person has undergone: an experience to remember. 3. accumulated knowledge, esp of practical matters: a man of experience. 4. a. the totality of characteristics, both past and present, that make up the particular quality of a person, place, or peopleb. the impact made on an individual by the culture of a people, nation, etc: the American experience. 5. (Philosophy) philosophy a. the content of a perception regarded as independent of whether the apparent object actually exists. Compare sense datumb. the faculty by which a person acquires knowledge of contingent facts about the world, as contrasted with reasonc. the totality of a person's perceptions, feelings, and memoriesvb (tr) 6. to participate in or undergo7. to be emotionally or aesthetically moved by; feel: to experience beauty. [C14: from Latin experientia, from experīrī to prove; related to Latin perīculum peril] exˈperienceable adjex•pe•ri•ence (ɪkˈspɪər i əns) n., v. -enced, -enc•ing. n. 1. something personally lived through or encountered: a frightening experience. 2. the observing, encountering, or undergoing of things generally as they occur in the course of time: to learn from experience. 3. knowledge or practical wisdom gained from what one has observed, encountered, or undergone: a person of experience. v.t. 4. to have experience of; feel: to experience pleasure. [1350–1400; Middle English < Latin experientia, derivative of experient-, s. of experiēns, past participle of experīrī to try, test; compare peril] ex•pe′ri•ence•a•ble, adj. ex•pe′ri•enc•er, n. experience, experiment, expert - Experience, experiment and expert derive from Latin experiri, "try."See also related terms for try.Experience See Also: KNOWLEDGE - Experience is … a kind of huge spider-web of the finest silken threads suspended in the chamber of consciousness, and catching every air-borne particle in its tissue —Henry James
- Experience is like medicine; some persons require larger doses of it than others, and do not like to take it pure, but a little disguised and better adapted to taste —Lord Acton
- Experience, like a pale musician, holds a dulcimer of patience in his hand —Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- Experience seems to be like the shining of a bright lantern. It suddenly makes clear in the mind what was already there, perhaps, but dim —Walter De La Mare
- A new element in her experience; like a chapter in a book —Henry Van Dyke
- The solitary and unshared experience dies of itself like the violations of love —Archibald MacLeish
- To most men, experience is like the stern light of a ship, which illumines only the track it has passed —Samuel Taylor Coleridge
experience experiment">experiment1. 'experience'If you have experience of something, you have seen it, done it, or felt it. Do you have any teaching experience?I've had no experience of running a business.An experience is something that happens to you or something that you do. Moving house can be a stressful experience.You say that someone has an experience. I had a strange experience last night.Be Careful! Don't say that someone 'makes an experience'. 2. 'experiment'Don't use 'experience' to refer to a scientific test that is carried out in order to discover or prove something. Use experiment. Laboratory experiments show that Vitamin D may slow cancer growth.Try it out in an experiment.You usually say that someone does, conducts, or carries out an experiment. We decided to do an experiment.Several experiments were conducted at the University of Zurich.Be Careful! Don't say that someone 'makes an experiment'. experience Past participle: experienced Gerund: experiencing
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experience | experience |
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I experience | you experience | he/she/it experiences | we experience | you experience | they experience |
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I experienced | you experienced | he/she/it experienced | we experienced | you experienced | they experienced |
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I am experiencing | you are experiencing | he/she/it is experiencing | we are experiencing | you are experiencing | they are experiencing |
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I have experienced | you have experienced | he/she/it has experienced | we have experienced | you have experienced | they have experienced |
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I was experiencing | you were experiencing | he/she/it was experiencing | we were experiencing | you were experiencing | they were experiencing |
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I had experienced | you had experienced | he/she/it had experienced | we had experienced | you had experienced | they had experienced |
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I will experience | you will experience | he/she/it will experience | we will experience | you will experience | they will experience |
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I will have experienced | you will have experienced | he/she/it will have experienced | we will have experienced | you will have experienced | they will have experienced |
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I will be experiencing | you will be experiencing | he/she/it will be experiencing | we will be experiencing | you will be experiencing | they will be experiencing |
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I have been experiencing | you have been experiencing | he/she/it has been experiencing | we have been experiencing | you have been experiencing | they have been experiencing |
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I will have been experiencing | you will have been experiencing | he/she/it will have been experiencing | we will have been experiencing | you will have been experiencing | they will have been experiencing |
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I had been experiencing | you had been experiencing | he/she/it had been experiencing | we had been experiencing | you had been experiencing | they had been experiencing |
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I would experience | you would experience | he/she/it would experience | we would experience | you would experience | they would experience |
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I would have experienced | you would have experienced | he/she/it would have experienced | we would have experienced | you would have experienced | they would have experienced | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | experience - the accumulation of knowledge or skill that results from direct participation in events or activities; "a man of experience"; "experience is the best teacher"familiarisation, familiarization - the experience of becoming familiar with somethingwoodcraft - skill and experience in matters relating to the woods (as hunting or fishing or camping)education - knowledge acquired by learning and instruction; "it was clear that he had a very broad education"inexperience, rawness - lack of experience and the knowledge and understanding derived from experience; "procedural inexperience created difficulties"; "their poor behavior was due to the rawness of the troops" | | 2. | experience - the content of direct observation or participation in an event; "he had a religious experience"; "he recalled the experience vividly"cognitive content, mental object, content - the sum or range of what has been perceived, discovered, or learnedreality, world - all of your experiences that determine how things appear to you; "his world was shattered"; "we live in different worlds"; "for them demons were as much a part of reality as trees were"living, life - the experience of being alive; the course of human events and activities; "he could no longer cope with the complexities of life"re-experiencing, reliving - a recurrence of a prior experience; "the reliving of a strong emotion can be therapeutic"reminder - an experience that causes you to remember something | | 3. | experience - an event as apprehended; "a surprising experience"; "that painful experience certainly got our attention"high point - the most enjoyable part of a given experience; "the trumpet solo was the high point of the concert"happening, natural event, occurrence, occurrent - an event that happensappalling - an experience that appalls; "is it better to view the appalling or merely hear of it?"augury, foretoken, preindication, sign - an event that is experienced as indicating important things to come; "he hoped it was an augury"; "it was a sign from God"flashing, flash - a short vivid experience; "a flash of emotion swept over him"; "the flashings of pain were a warning"good time, blast - a highly pleasurable or exciting experience; "we had a good time at the party"; "celebrating after the game was a blast"loss - the experience of losing a loved one; "he sympathized on the loss of their grandfather"near-death experience - the experience of being close to death but survivingordeal - a severe or trying experienceout-of-body experience - the dissociative experience of observing yourself from an external perspective as though your mind or soul had left and was observing your bodytaste - a brief experience of something; "he got a taste of life on the wild side"; "she enjoyed her brief taste of independence"time - a person's experience on a particular occasion; "he had a time holding back the tears"; "they had a good time together"head trip, trip - an exciting or stimulating experiencevision - a religious or mystical experience of a supernatural appearance; "he had a vision of the Virgin Mary" | Verb | 1. | experience - go or live through; "We had many trials to go through"; "he saw action in Viet Nam"go through, seeexperience, know, live - have firsthand knowledge of states, situations, emotions, or sensations; "I know the feeling!"; "have you ever known hunger?"; "I have lived a kind of hell when I was a drug addict"; "The holocaust survivors have lived a nightmare"; "I lived through two divorces"undergo - pass through; "The chemical undergoes a sudden change"; "The fluid undergoes shear"; "undergo a strange sensation"suffer, endure - undergo or be subjected to; "He suffered the penalty"; "Many saints suffered martyrdom"suffer, meet - undergo or suffer; "meet a violent death"; "suffer a terrible fate"feel - undergo passive experience of:"We felt the effects of inflation"; "her fingers felt their way through the string quartet"; "she felt his contempt of her"enjoy - have for one's benefit; "The industry enjoyed a boom"witness, see, find - perceive or be contemporaneous with; "We found Republicans winning the offices"; "You'll see a lot of cheating in this school"; "The 1960's saw the rebellion of the younger generation against established traditions"; "I want to see results"come - experience orgasm; "she could not come because she was too upset" | | 2. | experience - have firsthand knowledge of states, situations, emotions, or sensations; "I know the feeling!"; "have you ever known hunger?"; "I have lived a kind of hell when I was a drug addict"; "The holocaust survivors have lived a nightmare"; "I lived through two divorces"know, livetaste - experience briefly; "The ex-slave tasted freedom shortly before she died"live over, relive - experience again, often in the imagination; "He relived the horrors of war"experience, go through, see - go or live through; "We had many trials to go through"; "he saw action in Viet Nam" | | 3. | experience - go through (mental or physical states or experiences); "get an idea"; "experience vertigo"; "get nauseous"; "receive injuries"; "have a feeling"have, receive, getsuffer, sustain, have, get - undergo (as of injuries and illnesses); "She suffered a fracture in the accident"; "He had an insulin shock after eating three candy bars"; "She got a bruise on her leg"; "He got his arm broken in the scuffle"undergo - pass through; "The chemical undergoes a sudden change"; "The fluid undergoes shear"; "undergo a strange sensation"take - experience or feel or submit to; "Take a test"; "Take the plunge"horripilate - have one's hair stand on end and get goosebumps; "I horripilate when I see violence on television" | | 4. | experience - undergo an emotional sensation or be in a particular state of mind; "She felt resentful"; "He felt regret"feelincline - feel favorably disposed or willing; "She inclines to the view that people should be allowed to expres their religious beliefs"recapture - experience anew; "She could not recapture that feeling of happiness"pride, plume, congratulate - be proud of; "He prides himself on making it into law school"smoulder, smolder - have strong suppressed feelingsharbor, nurse, entertain, harbour, hold - maintain (a theory, thoughts, or feelings); "bear a grudge"; "entertain interesting notions"; "harbor a resentment"cool off - feel less enamoured of something or somebodysee red, anger - become angry; "He angers easily"chafe - feel extreme irritation or anger; "He was chafing at her suggestion that he stay at home while she went on a vacation"suffer - experience (emotional) pain; "Every time her husband gets drunk, she suffers"fume - be mad, angry, or furiousregret, rue, repent - feel remorse for; feel sorry for; be contrite aboutsadden - come to feel sadjoy, rejoice - feel happiness or joysympathise, sympathize - share the feelings of; understand the sentiments ofpride oneself, take pride - feel proud of; "She took great pride in her sons"burn - feel strong emotion, especially anger or passion; "She was burning with anger"; "He was burning to try out his new skies"die - feel indifferent towards; "She died to worldly things and eventually entered a monastery"fly high - be elated; "He was flying high during the summer months"glow, radiate, beam, shine - experience a feeling of well-being or happiness, as from good health or an intense emotion; "She was beaming with joy"; "Her face radiated with happiness"glow - be exuberant or high-spirited; "Make the people's hearts glow" | | 5. | experience - undergo; "The stocks had a fast run-up"havechange - undergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original nature; "She changed completely as she grew older"; "The weather changed last night"encounter, receive, meet - experience as a reaction; "My proposal met with much opposition" |
experiencenoun1. knowledge, understanding, practice, skill, evidence, trial, contact, expertise, know-how (informal), proof, involvement, exposure, observation, participation, familiarity, practical knowledge He lacks experience of international rugby.2. event, affair, incident, happening, test, trial, encounter, episode, adventure, ordeal, occurrence It was an experience I would not like to go through again.verb1. undergo, have, know, feel, try, meet, face, suffer, taste, go through, observe, sample, encounter, sustain, perceive, endure, participate in, run into, live through, behold, come up against, apprehend, become familiar with couples who have experienced the trauma of divorceQuotations "Trust one who has gone through it" [Virgil Aeneid] "Experience is not what happens to a man. It is what a man does with what happens to him" [Aldous Huxley Texts and Pretexts] "Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes" [Oscar Wilde Lady Windermere's Fan] "All experience is an arch to build upon" [Henry Brooks Adams The Education of Henry Adams]Proverbs "Experience is the mother of wisdom" "Experience is the best teacher"Quotations "Nothing ever becomes real till it is experienced" "-Even a Proverb is no proverb to you till your Life has illustrated it" [John Keats letter to George and Georgiana Keats]experiencenounPersonal knowledge derived from participation or observation:acquaintance, familiarity.verb1. To participate in or partake of personally:feel, go through, have, know, meet (with), see, suffer, taste (of), undergo.Archaic: prove.Idiom: run up against.2. To be physically aware of through the senses:feel, have.3. To undergo an emotional reaction:feel, have, know, savor, taste.Translationsexperience (ikˈspiəriəns) noun1. (knowledge, skill or wisdom gained through) practice in some activity, or the doing of something. Learn by experience – don't make the same mistake again; Has she had experience in teaching? 經驗 经验2. an event that affects or involves a person etc. The earthquake was a terrible experience. 經歷 经历 verb to have experience of; to feel. I have never before experienced such rudeness! 體驗,感受 感受exˈperienced adjective having gained knowledge from experience; skilled. an experienced mountaineer. 有經驗的 有经验的experience
harrowing experienceAn experience that is frightening, chilling, or disturbing, either due to an implied or actual element of danger, or from being physically or emotionally unpleasant. With so much traffic, cycling in this city can be a harrowing experience. Walking through that graveyard last night was quite the harrowing experience. The film is very good, but it's a bit of a harrowing experience; it doesn't shy away from intense subject matter.See also: experiencejarring experienceAn experience that creates an acute sense of shock, confusion, or bewilderment. That car accident was such a jarring experience, I don't know if I'll be able to sleep for days. You need better use of transitional sentences in your paper. Jumping from point to point like that will be a jarring experience for the reader.See also: experience, jarchalk (something) up to experienceTo regard a bad situation, action, or outcome as a learning experience rather than dwelling on its negative impact. I know you're upset about failing your exam, but just chalk it up to experience and try harder next time!See also: chalk, experience, upexperience is the mother of wisdomMost wisdom is gained by experiencing different things (compared to acquiring knowledge through schooling or other means). A few years ago, I couldn't even get behind the wheel without having panic attacks, but, with practice, I'm much calmer and can drive with no problems. Experience is the mother of wisdom after all.See also: experience, mother, of, wisdomexperience is the best teacherMost wisdom is gained by experiencing different things (compared to acquiring knowledge through schooling or other means). A few years ago, I couldn't even get behind the wheel without having panic attacks, but, with practice, I'm much calmer and can drive with no problems. Experience is the best teacher after all.See also: experience, teacherexperience is the father of wisdomMost wisdom is gained by experiencing different things (compared to acquiring knowledge through schooling or other means). A few years ago, I couldn't even get behind the wheel without having panic attacks, but, with practice, I'm much calmer and can drive with no problems. Experience is the father of wisdom after all.See also: experience, father, of, wisdomexperience is the teacher of foolsFoolish people only learn from personal experience, rather than witnessing others' mistakes. After watching Alex's failed attempt at the experiment, I realized what we were doing wrong. Experience is the teacher of fools.See also: experience, fool, of, teacherput (something) down to experienceTo regard a bad situation, action, or outcome as a learning experience rather than dwelling on its negative impact. I know you're upset about failing your exam, but just put it down to experience and study harder next time.See also: down, experience, putspeak from experienceTo talk (about something) having had prior experience and thus a more credible or worthwhile viewpoint. I'm speaking from experience when I tell you that a robust investment portfolio is absolutely critical to achieve the kind of pension you desire. A: "Sarah said to have a lawyer look over the contract to make sure it's all above board." B: "Well, I know she speaks from experience, so I would listen to her."See also: experience, speakgrowth experienceAn experience that helps or allows one to change and mature. That painful break-up was ultimately a growth experience—now, I only date people who truly care about me.See also: experience, growthlearning experienceAn experiences that teaches one something. I didn't love that job, but it was a good learning experience and showed me that I need to work in a different field.See also: experience, learningExperience is the best teacher.Prov. You will learn more from things that happen to you in real life than you will from hearing about or studying things that happen to other people. I don't care how many books you read about how to run a business; experience is the best teacher. The nurse believed that experience was the best teacher when it came to developing a bedside manner, so she made sure that all her students spent a lot of time with patients.See also: experience, teacherExperience is the father of wisdom, and Experience is the mother of wisdom.Prov. The more that happens to you, the more you will learn. I never understood why supervisors got so frustrated with me until I became a supervisor and got frustrated with my subordinates. Experience was definitely the mother of wisdom, in my case.See also: experience, father, of, wisdomExperience is the teacher of fools.Prov. Only fools do not learn after seeing other people's mistakes and insist on repeating them. Father: You should spend more time studying and less time having fun with your friends. If I had been a better student when I was your age, I'd have a better job now. Son: Oh, come on, Dad. School's worthless. Father: Don't make the same mistake I did! Experience is the teacher of fools.See also: experience, fool, of, teachergrowth experience and growth opportunity; learning experienceEuph. an unpleasant experience. This job has been a growth experience for me. I've learned so much. Jim said that his trip to Mexico turned out to be a real learning experience.See also: experience, growthput something down to experience or chalk something up to experience COMMON If you chalk a failure or bad experience up to experience or put it down to experience, you do not get very upset about it because you will learn from it in the future. I was disappointed not to win, but I've just got to chalk it up to experience and go on. They could have parted friends and put the whole incident down to experience.See also: down, experience, put, somethingput something down to exˈperience (also chalk it up to exˈperience especially American English ) accept a failure, loss, etc. as being something that you can learn from: When her second novel was rejected by the publisher, she put it down to experience and began another one.See also: down, experience, put, somethingexperience
experience, living through events and the impression on a person or animal of events. In epistemology, a distinction is made between things known inductively, from experience, and those known deductively or theoretically, from a priori principles. The ancients, under the influence of Plato and of Euclidean geometry, tended to prize deductive or theoretical knowledge above that gained through experience. Their influence was dominant through the Renaissance. With the rise of modern empirical science the preference was reversed. Immanuel Kant's critical epistemology, however, emphasized the dependence of all experience on the mediation of the intelligence. Modern thought has tended to agree with Kant; accordingly, discussion has centered on what, if anything, can be said to be immediately experience, and how this experience may be conditioned by social factors affecting the social milieu or by perceptual processes themselves.Experience sensory empirical knowledge of reality based on practical activity; the fusion of knowledge, abilities, and skills. In the history of philosophy the empiricist and sensationalist views, which assert that experience is the only source of knowledge, have been widely held. Proponents of idealist empiricism, such as Berkeley and Hume, restricted experience to the sum of sensations and perceptions and denied that it was rooted in objective external reality. The materialist empiricists (for example, F. Bacon, Hobbes, Locke, Diderot, and Helvetius) proceeded from the assumption that the material world is the source of experience. “We know from the history of philosophy that the interpretation of the concept ‘experience’ divided the classical materialists from the idealists” (V. I. Lenin, Poln. sobr. sock, 5th ed., vol. 18, p. 153). In contrast to the empiricists, the rationalists (Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz) argued that logical thought could not be based on experience, which provides unclear, confused knowledge that may lead to error. In their view, reason had the power to arrive at truth directly, bypassing the empirical and sensory level of cognition. In pre-Marxist philosophy the problem of experience was most deeply analyzed in German classical philosophy. Kant criticized the rationalist proposition of intellectual intuition, as well as the attempts of the sensationalists to derive general concepts from simple aggregates of sensory data. In Kant’s opinion, the human intellect is equipped with a priori (pre-experiential) forms of reasoning, through which sensory impressions are synthesized. Thus, the active role of the knower was emphasized. Hegel studied cognition as a developing, multilevel process. In this view, experience derives from the movement of consciousness, which sets goals for itself. Hegel believed that, insofar as the result attained through action fails to correspond fully to the intended goal, one’s views concerning an object are transformed by the comparison of what was desired with what was achieved, and new knowledge of an object emerges. This process constitutes experience. Subjective idealist theories, many of which overemphasized the concept of experience in their epistemology, became common in 20th-century bourgeois philosophy. It was argued that the monistic views of materialists and idealists should be replaced by a more perfect, “neutral” monism, which would remove the categories of mind and matter from philosophical parlance, replacing them with the category of “pure experience” (Machism). Lenin’s work Materialism and Empiriocriticism revealed the untenability of such theories, which, in essence, continued the line of thought established by Berkeley and Hume (ibid.). Among the many subjective idealist interpretations of experience are pragmatism and instrumentalism, which view experience as an “instrumental” aspect of making use of objects. Existentialism, another subjective idealist interpretation, regards experience as the inner world of the subject’s immediate experiences. Neopositivism interprets experience as the different states of consciousness of the subject and dismisses as a false issue the problem of whether objective external reality is the source of experience. In contrast to idealism and unlike contemplative metaphysical materialism, dialectical materialism believes that experience stems from objective reality. Experience is also thought of as a process in which human beings act upon the external world in order to change it; because of this human activity, in the form of knowledge and skills, experience is also viewed as an interaction between subject and object. The concept of experience essentially coincides with the category of practice, especially experiment and observation, on the basis of which experience takes shape as the result of cognition, including the totality of historically formed knowledge. The accumulation and transmission of experience from generation to generation are essential features of social development. Experience is objectivized in objects and language, in cultural values. As the practical activity of human beings and the result of that activity, experience reflects the degree to which people at a given stage of historical development have mastered the objective laws of nature, society, and thought. Marxism-Leninism is the scientific generalization and explanation of the experience of revolutionary struggle by the working class and all the toilers for their social emancipation, for the construction of socialism and communism, and for the development of science and culture. V. G. PANOV experience Philosophya. the content of a perception regarded as independent of whether the apparent object actually exists b. the faculty by which a person acquires knowledge of contingent facts about the world, as contrasted with reason c. the totality of a person's perceptions, feelings, and memories experience
ex·pe·ri·ence (ek-spēr'ē-ens), The feeling of emotions and sensations, as opposed to thinking; involvement in what is happening rather than abstract reflection on an event or interpersonal encounter. [L. experientia, fr. experior, to try] experience Decision-making The set of skills acquired through the repeated performance of a particular activity or operation, which in turn, implies competence in performing the task of interestex·pe·ri·ence (ek-spēr'ē-ĕns) The feeling of emotions and sensations, as opposed to thinking; involvement in what is happening rather than abstract reflection on an event or interpersonal encounter. [L. experientia, fr. experior, to try]experience1. To encounter something personally or undergo an event.2. The knowledge or wisdom obtained from one's own observations.Patient discussion about experienceQ. Has anyone have any experience with this? I’m 15 years old male and having acid reflux. I have tried lot of meds but nothing is effective and I did not get any remedy. I came across something which says Chinese herbalists can help or even cure it. Has anyone have any experience with this? If you think it is a good idea? Please answer and I will be really grateful!A. hey, waylon. if you want to try chinese medicine, go for it, as long as you understand clearly how does that medication treat you. in acid reflux condition, some notes you need to remember are: - you need to eat regularly - you need to reduce your stress - avoid some foods like: acid foods, coffee, spicy foods and maybe you can try -if you want- consume daily yogurt with apple cider vinegar. apple cider vinegar is believed to be able to help gastric problem. Q. Can anyone here share with me your experiences….? hey, hi to all…..Very recently I came to know about amniocentesis. With this we can see the baby`s gender..Can anyone here share with me your experiences….?A. No my dear amniocentesis is not used to find baby`s gender rather its ultrasound for it. Amniocentesis is used to detect any genetic problems such as Down’s syndrome or any other chromosomal abnormalities but not gender of the child. Even infection of the amniotic fluid is checked during amniocentesis. They are also used to check the maturity of the baby`s lungs. Yes it is done under the guidance of an ultrasound. If anyone wants to check for gender they have to go for an ultrasound. Q. Could anyone share your experience here? your attention here please…..One of my friend is pregnant and after a long and multiple diagnosis she has been confirmed positive for breast cancer. She is badly depressed and is much worried about the child and the effect it will have during pre/post birth. She wants the child to be healthy and normal. Could anyone share your experience here?A. A)It shows the love and affection the mother has towards the expectant baby. It is good that her breast cancer is diagnosed because it is difficult when one is pregnant. Breast cancer will not harm baby at all, what harms the baby are some of the treatments for breast cancer - and these depend on how advanced the cancer may be. If at early stage her lump will be removed or have surgery for the affected area. The chemotherapy treatment or the medications will be carried after your 1st trimester. This will reduce the harm a baby can get. On advanced stages of cancer, due to radiation treatment and chemotherapy involved with surgery makes the situation tough and makes the survival difficult for mother and baby or even both. So it depends on the stage of your cancer, which you must ask the treating doctor. In early stage of cancer the survival of both mother and baby is possible.Better check her cancer stage. I wish her speedy recovery and safe delivery. More discussions about experienceSee EXPC See EXPCexperience Related to experience: experienced, thesaurusSynonyms for experiencenoun knowledgeSynonyms- knowledge
- understanding
- practice
- skill
- evidence
- trial
- contact
- expertise
- know-how
- proof
- involvement
- exposure
- observation
- participation
- familiarity
- practical knowledge
noun eventSynonyms- event
- affair
- incident
- happening
- test
- trial
- encounter
- episode
- adventure
- ordeal
- occurrence
verb undergoSynonyms- undergo
- have
- know
- feel
- try
- meet
- face
- suffer
- taste
- go through
- observe
- sample
- encounter
- sustain
- perceive
- endure
- participate in
- run into
- live through
- behold
- come up against
- apprehend
- become familiar with
Synonyms for experiencenoun personal knowledge derived from participation or observationSynonymsverb to participate in or partake of personallySynonyms- feel
- go through
- have
- know
- meet
- see
- suffer
- taste
- undergo
- prove
verb to be physically aware of through the sensesSynonymsverb to undergo an emotional reactionSynonyms |