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polio

/poh-lee-oh/US // ˈpoʊ liˌoʊ //UK // (ˈpəʊlɪəʊ) //

小儿麻痹症,脊髓灰质炎,小儿麻痹,痹症

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : poliomyelitis.

Examples

  • I feel anger, too, that BIPOCs will continue to die because of the legacies of medical racism, that children in Pakistan will die of polio despite an effective vaccine.

  • Most of these outbreaks — which have been responsible for more polio cases in the last few years than the remaining type of wild poliovirus — are linked to vaccine virus type 2.

  • McConnell, 78 and a polio survivor, encouraged Americans to continue wearing masks and practice social distancing as currently recommended by federal health officials.

  • In Herat, they hoped to get Saidgul vaccinated against polio, since clinics in their district had shut down without warning due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

  • When a vaccine becomes available, this polio group will likely help out as well.

  • Last year, a polio outbreak in Deir ez-Zor raised concerns throughout the region about the spread of an epidemic.

  • Then Cutter Laboratories in Berkeley, California, made a bad batch of vaccine, and 40,000 children were sickened with polio.

  • After she battled polio and learned to walk again, the doctors told her she would be a cripple her entire life.

  • Fifty-eight children took part in a trial into polio and diptheria vaccines in December 1960.

  • Either way, part of the tragedy and poignancy of polio is its preferential spread to babies and toddlers.

  • So far, none of the contagious infections except polio and the common cold had made the jump.

  • Wood up thar, you Polio—hang on to the safety valve—guess she'll crawl off on her paddles.

  • Nagtakihud siya tungud sa pulyu, He limps because he had polio.

  • Nalúlid siya kay gitakbúyag pulyu, He was crippled after his bout with polio.

  • She walked with a barely noticeable limp—polio in childhood, Mann recalled from the record.