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miscarriage

/mis-kar-ij; for 1 also mis-kar-ij/US // mɪsˈkær ɪdʒ; for 1 also ˈmɪsˌkær ɪdʒ //UK // (mɪsˈkærɪdʒ) //

流产,小产,误判,误判的情况

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the expulsion of a fetus before it is viable, especially between the third and seventh months of pregnancy; spontaneous abortion.Compare abortion.
    • : failure to attain the just, right, or desired result: a miscarriage of justice.
    • : failure of something sent, as a letter, to reach its destination.
    • : Chiefly British. transportation of goods not in accordance with the contract of shipment.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • She’s still taken aback by some of the “very dangerous” messaging the Duggars promoted, such as their statements that Michelle’s use of birth control caused a miscarriage.

  • “It would be a gross miscarriage of justice to eliminate the jobs of dedicated public employees for no reason other than a sensationalized newspaper story,” Mike Eliason, an industry council lobbyist, said in testimony to lawmakers.

  • In the pain of our loss, my husband and I discovered that in a room of 100 women, 10 to 20 of them will have suffered from miscarriage.

  • By the fourth episode, Denise and Alicia are divorced after the weight of suffering a miscarriage exacerbates already existing strain on their marriage.

  • Her ex Ames, who detransitioned after they broke up, is now expecting a child with his boss Katrina, a cisgender woman who has recently suffered a miscarriage.

  • I was at MacDowell three days after the miscarriage and tried to write that piece.

  • One pregnant woman reported that she suffered a miscarriage after she was kicked by a Border Patrol agent.

  • But after nearly a year of trying and a miscarriage, she is still not pregnant.

  • Will we reach a time when only poor women have to worry about miscarriage?

  • “No one knows this—I had a miscarriage for those weeks that I took off,” she said.

  • He seemed to fear the miscarriage of some project which he had been contemplating since he had left his mother's house.

  • This miscarriage of justice sent dismay into the hearts of his parents.

  • To this kind of carelessness and indifference I attribute the miscarriage of many of the plants left here by Captain Cook.

  • The utter miscarriage of Germany's plans is, indeed, a fine tribute to Great Britain.

  • He could not doubt that Lady Durham's last miscarriage was due to her husband's brutality.