malady 的定义
plural mal·a·dies.
- any disorder or disease of the body, especially one that is chronic or deepseated.
- any undesirable or disordered condition: social maladies; a malady of the spirit.
malady 近义词
disease
更多malady例句
- There is even a link between the malady of negative partisanship and America’s ongoing struggle with vaccine hesitancy.
- Doctors have reported an increase in all sorts of foot maladies — in part because so many of us have been spending so much time barefoot.
- In Europe, doctors prescribed sour milk to treat intestinal maladies.
- In a Politico op-ed adapted from the book last week, Boehner describes how birtherism and other maladies infected his party, and in audio leaked from his audiobook recording sessions he directs vulgar insults at Cruz.
- That formula is approved for tropical maladies and requires a prescription.
- But as one deadly malady loses steam, another may be exploding: hunger.
- Some places (like Syria) are prone to this malady, and others (like America) are not.
- Nobody would hold up the single outpost of Moo Cluck Moo as a cure for the malady of low wages.
- Cystic Fibrosis, a genetic malady, dooms its sufferers to a short and burdened life.
- But the burnout described in this and so many other articles is not really a malady.
- Rheumatism was the one malady that sometimes affected mother Martha's health.
- In all of these the clinical facts, as well as the progress of the malady, were carefully studied and recorded.
- He as well as Brisset was called in consultation regarding a very serious malady afflicting Raphael de Valentin.
- All this time, however, his malady was gaining ground; he slept badly, and his appetite failed him.
- "But I do not observe any symptoms of that malady developing themselves at present," added the doctor.