| 释义 | 
		Definition of framboesia in English: framboesia(US frambesia) noun framˈbiːzɪəˌfræmˈbiʒ(i)ə another term for yaws  Example sentencesExamples -  Around the world, yaws is known by many different names, including pian, patek, parangi, buoba, frambesia tropica, granuloma tropicum and polypapilloma tropicum.
 -  Yaws (frambesia) is found in humid equatorial countries, where transmission is favored by scanty clothing and skin trauma.
 -  The most prevalent disease in Rotuma is undoubtedly yaws, or framboesia, known generally under the Fijian name of coko, though I also heard the Polynesian name, tona, applied.
 -  These nonvenereal diseases are yaws (framboesia), pinta, and bejel.
 -  Because the bumps of yaws look like berries, the disease is also called frambesia from the French ‘framboise,’ meaning ‘raspberry.’
 -  There are several varieties of this disease, variously known as framboesia, pian, verrugas, and crab-yaws.
 -  The first lesion goes most of the time unnoticed and the typical cutaneous finding is a sore also called frambesia which is an itching, granulating and oozing ulcer with a thin scab at the top.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: modern Latin, from French framboise 'raspberry', so named because of the red swellings caused by the disease, likened to raspberries.    Definition of frambesia in US English: frambesianounˌfræmˈbiʒ(i)əˌframˈbēZH(ē)ə another term for yaws  Example sentencesExamples -  Because the bumps of yaws look like berries, the disease is also called frambesia from the French ‘framboise,’ meaning ‘raspberry.’
 -  The most prevalent disease in Rotuma is undoubtedly yaws, or framboesia, known generally under the Fijian name of coko, though I also heard the Polynesian name, tona, applied.
 -  Yaws (frambesia) is found in humid equatorial countries, where transmission is favored by scanty clothing and skin trauma.
 -  There are several varieties of this disease, variously known as framboesia, pian, verrugas, and crab-yaws.
 -  Around the world, yaws is known by many different names, including pian, patek, parangi, buoba, frambesia tropica, granuloma tropicum and polypapilloma tropicum.
 -  The first lesion goes most of the time unnoticed and the typical cutaneous finding is a sore also called frambesia which is an itching, granulating and oozing ulcer with a thin scab at the top.
 -  These nonvenereal diseases are yaws (framboesia), pinta, and bejel.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: modern Latin, from French framboise ‘raspberry’, so named because of the red swellings caused by the disease, likened to raspberries.     |