释义 |
curing
cure C0812000 (kyo͝or)n.1. a. A drug or course of medical treatment used to restore health: discovered a new cure for ulcers.b. Restoration of health; recovery from disease: the likelihood of cure.c. Something that corrects or relieves a harmful or disturbing situation: The cats proved to be a good cure for our mouse problem.2. Ecclesiastical Spiritual charge or care, as of a priest for a congregation.3. The office or duties of a curate.4. The act or process of preserving a product.v. cured, cur·ing, cures v.tr.1. a. To cause to be free of a disease or unhealthy condition: medicine that cured the patient of gout.b. To cause to be free of, to lose interest in, or to stop doing something: a remark that cured me of the illusion that I might be a good singer; a bad reaction that cured him of the desire to smoke cigars; a visit to the dentist that cured her of eating sweets.2. To eliminate (a disease, for example) from the body by medical or other treatment; cause recovery from: new antibiotics to cure infections.3. To remove or remedy (something harmful or disturbing): cure a social evil.4. To preserve (meat, for example), as by salting, smoking, or aging.5. To prepare, preserve, or finish (a substance) by a chemical or physical process.6. To vulcanize (rubber).v.intr.1. To effect a cure or recovery: a drug that cures without side effects.2. To be prepared, preserved, or finished by a chemical or physical process: hams curing in the smokehouse. [Middle English, from Old French, medical treatment, from Latin cūra, from Archaic Latin coisa-.] cure′less adj.cur′er n.
cu·ré C0812100 (kyo͝o-rā′, kyo͝or′ā′)n. A parish priest, especially in a French-speaking community. [French, from Old French, from Medieval Latin cūrātus; see curate1.]curing (ˈkjʊərɪŋ) n (Cookery) the process of preserving foodhealing, curing - Healing is a process in which an organism's health is restored; curing is a method that promotes healing.See also related terms for healing.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | curing - the process of becoming hard or solid by cooling or drying or crystallization; "the hardening of concrete"; "he tested the set of the glue"solidification, solidifying, hardening, setcongealment, congelation - the process of congealing; solidification by (or as if by) freezingnatural action, natural process, action, activity - a process existing in or produced by nature (rather than by the intent of human beings); "the action of natural forces"; "volcanic activity"plastination - a process involving fixation and dehydration and forced impregnation and hardening of biological tissues; water and lipids are replaced by curable polymers (silicone or epoxy or polyester) that are subsequently hardened; "the plastination of specimens is valuable for research and teaching" | TranslationsIdiomsSeecurecuring
curing: see fish curingfish curing. Methods of curing fish by drying, salting, smoking, and pickling, or by combinations of these processes have been employed since ancient times. On sailing vessels fish were usually salted down immediately to prevent spoilage; the swifter boats of today commonly ..... Click the link for more information. .curing[′kyu̇r·iŋ] (chemical engineering) A process in which polymers or oligomers are chemically cross-linked to form polymer networks. (civil engineering) A process for bringing freshly placed concrete to required strength and quality by maintaining the humidity and temperature at specified levels for a given period of time. Also known as seasoning. (science and technology) Any one of various processes whereby a product is preserved, perfected, or readied for use. curingMaintaining the humidity and temperature of freshly placed concrete during some definite period following placing, casting, or finishing to assure satisfactory hydration of the cementitious materials and proper hardening of the concrete.curing
cur·ing (kyūr'ing), 1. The act of accomplishing a cure. 2. A process by which something is prepared for use, as by heating, aging, etc. Cell biology The loss of a plasmid from a bacterial culture or of a dormant—lysogenized—virus inserted in a bacterial genome Food science A process of improving a meat’s flavor, colour, tenderness, or shelf life with smoke, spices, and/or chemicals Materials science A process in which a semisolid thermosetting plastic or resin is transformed into a solid by applying heat Medical practice The removing of all traces of a disease Molecular biology A treatment that promotes the loss of a resident prophage or plasmid from a cell—e.g., acridine orange is sometimes used to cure bacteria of a plasmid Vox populi Making a finished product out of a raw material using heat or chemicals—e.g., tanned leather or vulcanised rubbercuring Medical practice The removing of all traces of a disease. See Cure. curing technique for eliminating PLASMIDS from their host cells, by using agents such as ethidium bromide.cur·ing (kyūr'ing) 1. The act of accomplishing a cure. 2. A process by which something is prepared for use, as by heating or aging. Patient discussion about curingQ. What is the best natural cure for migraines? Every day I hear something else... would love it if you can share your experience...I'm sick of chemicals:)A. stay off any products that have a any kind of a caffine content, including chocolate. try this for 3wks, ypu should notice a difference Q. Cn barret esophagous be cured? I was diagnosed with barretts esophagus several years ago, and so far keeps on the routine follow up. I met some other guy with same condition and he told after his doctor prescribed him with some anti-reflux meds, in the last endoscopy they found normal esophagus, and that he thinks he's now cured. Is that possible?A. Anti-reflux treatment may lower the risk of cancer a little, but it won't cure it, so there's still a need for refular follow-up. Q. What is the cure for psoriatic arthritis? I know someone with psoriatic arthritis. What is the cure? Please don't waste my time with anecdotal evidence from anonymous people who drink expensive imported juice and claim to be healed. What treatments and cures are available? What science is behind the remedies?A. First off, has your friend actually had a biopsy done on the skin to positively confirm the diagnosis? I was diagnosed with the same thing years ago. I then sought a second opinion from a dermatologist who did a biopsy. It wasn't psoriatic arthritis at all. It was Lichen Planus. If however, it is Psoriatic Arthritis, then I would highly recommend either a Rheumatologist, or a Homeopath/Naturopath. Personally, I prefer the Homeopathic approach. There are no man-made chemicals involved, which our bodies are not designed to assimilate. Introducing an artificial chemical to the human body often times creates an alternate imbalance somewhere else, with its own set of problems.
More discussions about curingFinancialSeeCurecuring Related to curing: Curing of concreteSynonyms for curingnoun the process of becoming hard or solid by cooling or drying or crystallizationSynonyms- solidification
- solidifying
- hardening
- set
Related Words- congealment
- congelation
- natural action
- natural process
- action
- activity
- plastination
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