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measle

/mee-zuhl/US // ˈmi zəl //

麻疹,测量,衡量

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : singular of measles.

Examples

  • Each year, the government administers vaccines against polio and measles to 55 million infants and pregnant women by visiting each home and making a list of who needs the shots.

  • The big question is whether SARS-CoV-2 will mutate more like measles, also a single strand RNA virus, which has not drifted very far from when the first vaccine was introduced in 1963.

  • The state sets requirements for vaccines for school children, including the measles, Hepatitis B and polio, among others.

  • Coronavirus vaccines are not mandatory, far different from 11 diseases like mumps and measles, which are obligatory for children to attend school.

  • A particular challenge with the coronavirus vaccine is not only targeting communities with appropriate messages but recognizing that, unlike with a measles or flu shot, the messages will have to shift in coming months.

  • Fly only waked once in the night, and asked in a drowsy tone, "Have I got a measle?"

  • The mutton measle is described under the heading of Tnia tenella.

  • Silk dresses break out into a measle-like rash of yellow spots.

  • In the measle form the parasite may occur in any organ of the body, but is mostly found in the muscles and subcutaneous tissue.

  • Retzius found them in the muscles, and they are described as examples of the ordinary hog-measle.