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infectious

/in-fek-shuhs/US // ɪnˈfɛk ʃəs //UK // (ɪnˈfɛkʃəs) //

感染性,感染性的,传染性,传染性的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : communicable by infection, as from one person to another or from one part of the body to another: infectious diseases.
    • : causing or communicating infection.
    • : tending to spread from one to another: infectious laughter.
    • : Law. capable of contaminating with illegality; exposing to seizure or forfeiture.
    • : Obsolete. diseased.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • If you’re sleeping in a bed with them, sharing your home with them, and so on, you already have a decent risk of swapping the virus, or really any other infectious disease.

  • Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease doctor and a professor of medicine at the University of California San Francisco, said the focus on transmission in the context of Covid-19 vaccines can be misleading when comparing them to other vaccines.

  • That could pose a problem even for vaccinated adults, says Mobeen Rathore, an infectious disease specialist and epidemiologist at the University of Florida College of Medicine.

  • As we learn how to address current and future pandemics, it is worth understanding what we learned from the great infectious disease fights of the past.

  • That’s especially true now as new, more infectious coronavirus variants await — putting us at risk of an even bigger surge than the one we saw during the holiday season if we ease up.

  • For most infectious, the amount is 100 or even 1,000 times that.

  • Although bats may have creeped us out for centuries, their links to emerging infectious diseases are much more recent.

  • In Malaysia and Bangladesh, a devastating infectious neurological disease emerged just a few years after Hendra.

  • The only existing study, printed in the Journal of Infectious Diseases in 1999, leaves scientists with the same questions.

  • Adam Lausing, an infectious disease researcher at the University of Michigan, emphasized that Ebola is not a respiratory disease.

  • The last movement had the infectious gayety that Mozart's things often have, with a magnificent cadenza by himself.

  • The infectious diseases in which leukocytosis is absent (p. 160) often cause a slight decrease of leukocytes.

  • (b) Acute infectious diseases, especially rheumatism and typhoid fever.

  • Predominance of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (pus-corpuscles) points to an acute infectious process (Fig. 117).

  • The usual cause of acute infectious conjunctivitis, especially in cities, seems to be the Koch-Weeks bacillus.