English-Thai Dictionary
cure
N กระบวนการ ถนอมอาหาร kra-buan-kan-ta-nom-ar-han
cure
N การฟื้นฟู recovery kan-fuen-fu
cure
N การ แก้ไขปัญหา kan-kae-kai-pan-ha
cure
VI ถนอมอาหาร ta-nom-ar-han
cure
VI รักษา เยียวยา heal rak-sa
cure
VT ถนอมอาหาร preserve keep ta-nom-ar-han
cure
VT รักษา เยียวยา heal make well restore rak-sa
cure
VT สิ่ง ที่ ช่วย ฟื้นฟู ร่างกาย การรักษา sing-ti-chuai-fuen-fu-rang-kai
cure
VT แก้ไขปัญหา kae-kai-pan-ha
cure of
PHRV ทำให้ หยุด รัก tam-hai-yub-rak
cure of
PHRV ทำให้ เลิก นิสัย ของ tam-hai-loek-ni-sai-kong
cure of
PHRV รักษา เยียวยา heal of rak-sa
cure-all
N การรักษา ที่ เชื่อ ว่า ใช้ได้ กับ ทุก โรค panacea kan-rak-sa-ti-chuea-wa-chai-dai-kab-tuk-rok
cure-all
N ยา รักษา ได้ สารพัด โรค
cureless
ADJ ที่ ไม่ สามารถ รักษา ได้ immedicable incurable irremediable ti-mai-sa-mad-rak-sa-dai
curer
N ผู้ ดูแลรักษา phu-du-lae-rak-sa
curettage
N การขูด ชำระ แผล curage curettement
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CURE
n.[L., to cure, to take care, to prepare. ] 1. A healing; the act of healing; restoration to health from disease, and to soundness from a wound. We say, a medicine will effect a cure.
2. Remedy for disease; restorative; that which heals.
Colds, hunger, prisons, ills without a cure.
3. The employment of a curate; the care of souls; spiritual charge.
CURE
v.t.[L. See the Noun. ] 1. To heal, as a person diseased or a wounded limb; to restore to health, as the body, or to soundness, as a limb.
The child was cured from that very hour. Matthew 17:18.
2. To subdue, remove, destroy or put an end to; to heal, as a disease.
Christ gave his disciples power to cure diseases. Luke 9:1.
When the person and the disease are both mentioned, cure is followed by of before the disease. The physician cured the man of his fever.
3. To remedy; to remove an evil, and restore to a good state.
Patience will alleviate calamities, which cannot cure.
4. To dry; to prepare for preservation; as, to cure hay; or to prepare by salt, or in any manner, so as to prevent speedy putrefaction; as, to cure fish or beef.
CURED
pp. Healed; restored to health or soundness; removed, as a disease; remedied; dried, smoked, or otherwise prepared for preservation.
CURELESS
a.That cannot be cured or healed; incurable; not admitting of a remedy; as a cureless disorder; a cureless ill.
CURER
n.A healer; a physician; one who heals.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CURE
Cure (k, n. Etym: [OF, cure care, F., also, cure, healing, cure of souls, L. cura care, medical attendance, cure; perh. akin to cavere to pay heed, E. cution. Cure is not related to care. ]
1. Care, heed, or attention. [Obs. ] Of study took he most cure and most heed. Chaucer. Vicarages of greatcure, but small value. Fuller.
2. Spiritual charge; care of soul; the office of a parish priest or of a curate; hence, that which is committed to the charge of a parish priest or of a curate; a curacy; as, to resign a cure; to obtain a cure. The appropriator was the incumbent parson, and had the cure of the souls of the parishioners. Spelman.
3. Medical or hygienic care; remedial treatment of disease; a method of medical treatment; as, to use the water cure.
4. Act of healing or state of being healed; restoration to health from disease, or to soundness after injury. Past hope! pastcure! past help. Shak. I do cures to-day and to-morrow. Luke xii. 32.
5. Means of the removal of disease or evil; that which heals; a remedy; a restorative. Cold, hunger, prisons, ills without a cure. Dryden. The proper cure of such prejudices. Bp. Hurd.
CURE
Cure, v. t. [imp. & p.p. Cured (krd ); p. pr. & vb. n. Curing. ] Etym: [OF. curer to take care, to heal, F., only, to cleanse, L. curare to take care, to heal, fr. cura. See Cure, .]
1. To heal; to restore to health, soundness, or sanity; to make well; -- said of a patient. The child was cured from that very hour. Matt. xvii. 18.
2. To subdue or remove by remedial means; to remedy; to remove; to heal; -- said of a malady. To cure this deadly grief. Shak. Then he called his twelve disciples together, and gave them power. .. to cure diseases. Luke ix. 1.
3. To set free from (something injurious or blameworthy ), as from a bad habit. I never knew any man cured of inattention. Swift.
4. To prepare for preservation or permanent keeping; to preserve, as by drying, salting, etc. ; as, to cure beef or fish; to cure hay.
CURE
CURE Cure, v. i.
1. To pay heed; to care; to give attention. [Obs. ]
2. To restore health; to effect a cure. Whose smile and frown, like to Achilles' spear, Is able with the change to kill and cure. Shak.
3. To become healed. One desperate grief cures with another's languish. Shak.
CURE
Cu `ré " (k `r "), n. Etym: [F., fr. LL. curatus. See Curate. ]
Defn: A curate; a pardon.
CUREALL
CUREALL Cure "*all ` (kr "l `), n.
Defn: A remedy for all diseases, o
CURELESS
CURELESS Cure "less, a.
Defn: Incapable of cure; incurable. With patience undergo A cureless ill, since fate will have it so. Dryden.
CURER
CURER Cur "er (-r ), n.
1. One who cures; a healer; a physician.
2. One who prepares beef, fish, etc. , for preservation by drying, salting, smoking, etc.
CURETTE
CURETTE Cu *rette " (k-rt "), n.Etym: [F., fr. curer to cleanse. ] (Med. )
Defn: A scoop or ring with either a blunt or a cutting edge, for removing substances from the walls of a cavity, as from the eye, ear, or womb.
New American Oxford Dictionary
cure
cure |kyo͝or ˈkjʊ (ə )r | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 relieve (a person or animal ) of the symptoms of a disease or condition: he was cured of the disease | figurative : centuries of science have not cured us of our superstitions. • eliminate (a disease, condition, or injury ) with medical treatment: this technology could be used to cure diabetes. • solve (a problem ): stopping foreign investment is no way to cure the fundamental problem. 2 preserve (meat, fish, tobacco, or an animal skin ) by various methods such as salting, drying, or smoking: some farmers cured their own bacon | (as adj. cured ) : home-cured ham. • harden (rubber, plastic, concrete, etc. ) after manufacture by a chemical process such as vulcanization. • [ no obj. ] undergo this process. ▶noun 1 a substance or treatment that cures a disease or condition: the search for a cure for the common cold. • restoration to health: he was beyond cure. • a solution to a problem: the cure is to improve the clutch operation. 2 the process of curing rubber, plastic, or other material. 3 a Christian minister's pastoral charge or area of responsibility for spiritual ministry: a benefice involving the cure of souls. • a parish. DERIVATIVES cur er noun ORIGIN Middle English (as a noun ): from Old French curer (verb ), cure (noun ), both from Latin curare ‘take care of, ’ from cura ‘care. ’ The original noun senses were ‘care, concern, responsibility, ’ in particular spiritual care (hence sense 3 of the noun ). In late Middle English the senses ‘medical care ’ and ‘successful medical treatment ’ arose, and hence ‘remedy. ’
curé
cu ré |kyo͝oˈrā, ˈkyo͝orˌā kjəˈreɪ | ▶noun a parish priest in a French-speaking country or region. ORIGIN French, from medieval Latin curatus (see curate 1 ).
cure-all
cure-all |ˈkjʊr ɔl | ▶noun a medicine or other remedy that will supposedly cure any ailment. • a solution to any problem: unfortunately, the new output circuitry is not a cure-all.
curettage
cu ret tage |ˌkyo͝orəˈtäZH ˌkjʊrəˈtɑʒ | ▶noun Surgery the use of a curette, esp. on the lining of the uterus. See dilation and curettage. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from French, from curette .
curette
cu rette |kyo͝oˈret kjʊˈrɛt | ▶noun a surgical instrument used to remove material by a scraping action, esp. from the uterus. ▶verb [ with obj. ] clean or scrape with a curette. ORIGIN mid 18th cent. (as a noun ): from French, from curer ‘cleanse, ’ from Latin curare (see cure ).
Oxford Dictionary
cure
cure |kjʊə, kjɔː | ▶verb [ with obj. ] 1 relieve (a person or animal ) of the symptoms of a disease or condition: he was cured of the disease. • eliminate (a disease or condition ) with medical treatment: this technology could be used to cure diabetes. • solve (a problem ): a bid to trace and cure the gearbox problems. 2 preserve (meat, fish, tobacco, or an animal skin ) by salting, drying, or smoking: (as adj., in combination -cured ) : home-cured ham. • harden (rubber, plastic, concrete, etc. ) after manufacture by a chemical process such as vulcanization. • [ no obj. ] undergo hardening by a chemical process. ▶noun 1 a substance or treatment that cures a disease or condition: the search for a cure for the common cold. • [ mass noun ] restoration to health: he was beyond cure. • a solution to a problem: the cure is to improve the clutch operation. 2 [ mass noun ] the process of curing rubber, plastic, or other material. 3 [ mass noun ] a Christian minister's pastoral charge or area of responsibility for spiritual ministry: a benefice involving the cure of souls. • [ count noun ] a parish. DERIVATIVES curer noun ORIGIN Middle English (as a noun ): from Old French curer (verb ), cure (noun ), both from Latin curare ‘take care of ’, from cura ‘care ’. The original noun senses were ‘care, concern, responsibility ’, in particular spiritual care (hence sense 3 of the noun ). In late Middle English the senses ‘medical care ’ and ‘successful medical treatment ’ arose, and hence ‘remedy ’.
curé
curé |ˈkjʊəreɪ, French kyʀe | ▶noun a parish priest in a French-speaking country. ORIGIN French, from medieval Latin curatus (see curate 1 ).
cure-all
cure-all ▶noun a medicine or other remedy that will supposedly cure any ailment. • a solution to any problem.
curettage
curettage |kjʊəˈrɛtɪdʒ, ˌkjʊərɪˈtɑːʒ | ▶noun [ mass noun ] Surgery the use of a curette, especially on the lining of the uterus. See dilatation and curettage. ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from French, from curette .
curette
curette |kjʊəˈrɛt | ▶noun a small surgical instrument used to remove material by a scraping action, especially from the uterus. ▶verb [ with obj. ] clean or scrape with a curette. ORIGIN mid 18th cent. (as a noun ): from French, from curer ‘cleanse ’, from Latin curare (see cure ).
American Oxford Thesaurus
cure
cure verb 1 after a long course of treatment, he was cured: heal, restore to health, make well /better; archaic cleanse. 2 economic equality cannot cure all social ills: rectify, remedy, put /set right, right, fix, mend, repair, heal, make better; solve, sort out, be the answer /solution to; eliminate, end, put an end to. 3 the farmers cured their own bacon: preserve, smoke, salt, dry, pickle. ▶noun 1 a cure for cancer: remedy, medicine, medication, medicament, antidote, antiserum; treatment, therapy; archaic physic. 2 interest rate cuts are not the cure for the problem: solution, answer, antidote, nostrum, panacea, cure-all; informal quick fix, magic bullet, silver bullet.
cure-all
cure-all noun aloe has amazing healing properties, but it is not a cure-all: panacea, cure for all ills, sovereign remedy, heal-all, nostrum; informal magic bullet, silver bullet.
Oxford Thesaurus
cure
cure verb 1 Casey had been cured, but he needed to convalesce: heal, restore to health, make well, make better, restore, rehabilitate, treat successfully; archaic cleanse. 2 the belief that economic equality could cure all social ills: rectify, remedy, put right, set right, right, set to rights, fix, mend, repair, heal, make better, ameliorate, alleviate, ease; solve, sort out, be the answer /solution to; eliminate, do away with, end, put an end to, remove, counteract, correct. ANTONYMS exacerbate, aggravate. 3 some farmers cured their own bacon: preserve, smoke, salt, dry, kipper, pickle. ▶noun 1 a cure for cancer: remedy, curative, medicine, medication, medicament, restorative, corrective, antidote, antiserum; (course of ) treatment, therapy, healing, alleviation; nostrum, panacea, cure-all; archaic physic, specific. 2 he was beyond cure: healing, restoration to health. 3 interest rate cuts are not the cure for the problem: solution, answer, antidote, nostrum, panacea, cure-all, magic formula; informal quick fix, magic bullet.
cure-all
cure-all noun panacea, universal cure, cure for all ills, universal remedy, sovereign remedy, heal-all, nostrum, elixir, wonder drug, perfect solution, magic formula, magic bullet; rare catholicon, diacatholicon, panpharmacon.
Duden Dictionary
Curé
Cu ré Substantiv, maskulin , der |kyˈreː |der Curé; Genitiv: des Curés, Plural: die Curés französisch curé, zu: cure = Sorge < lateinisch cura katholischer Pfarrer in Frankreich
Curettage
Cu ret ta ge Substantiv, feminin , die |kyrɛˈtaːʒə österreichisch meist …ʃ | Kürettage
French Dictionary
cure
cure n. f. nom féminin Traitement médical. : Il était épuisé et il a fait une cure de sommeil. LOCUTION N ’avoir cure de. Ne pas se soucier de. : Il n ’avait cure de tondre sa pelouse.
curé
curé n. m. nom masculin Prêtre à la tête d ’une paroisse. Note Typographique Comme les titres administratifs, les titres religieux s ’écrivent généralement avec une minuscule. L ’abbé, l ’archevêque, le cardinal, l ’évêque, le pape. Cependant, ces titres s ’écrivent avec une majuscule lorsqu ’ils remplacent un nom de personne. Le Curé sera présent à la réunion.
cure-
cure- élément Les mots composés avec l ’élément cure- s ’écrivent avec un trait d ’union. Au pluriel, cure-, qui est un verbe, demeure invariable, tandis que le second élément est au pluriel. : Des cure-oreilles.
cure-dents
cure-dents ou cure-dent n. m. (pl. cure-dents ) nom masculin Petit instrument servant à nettoyer les dents. : Un cure-dents de bois.
curée
curée n. f. nom féminin 1 Partie de la bête donnée aux chiens après la chasse. 2 Partage éhonté de profits, d ’avantages, etc. , que l ’on se dispute.
cure-ongles
cure-ongles ou cure-ongle n. m. (pl. cure-ongles ) nom masculin Instrument pointu servant à nettoyer les ongles.
cure-oreille
cure-oreille n. m. (pl. cure-oreilles ) nom masculin Instrument servant à nettoyer l ’intérieur de l ’oreille.
cure-pipes
cure-pipes ou cure-pipe n. m. (pl. cure-pipes ) nom masculin Instrument pour nettoyer les pipes.
curer
curer v. tr. , pronom. verbe transitif Nettoyer. : Curer un fossé. verbe pronominal Nettoyer une partie du corps. : Se curer les ongles. Note Grammaticale À la forme pronominale, le participe passé de ce verbe s ’accorde en genre et en nombre avec le complément direct si celui-ci le précède. Les ongles qu ’elle s ’est curés. Le participe passé reste invariable si le complément direct suit le verbe. Ils s ’étaient curé les oreilles. S ’il n ’y a pas de complément direct, le participe passé s ’accorde avec le sujet du verbe. Ces puits se sont curés avec difficulté. aimer
curetage
curetage ou curettage n. m. nom masculin médecine Opération qui consiste à nettoyer une cavité naturelle avec une curette.
cureter
cureter v. tr. verbe transitif médecine Pratiquer un curetage. appeler Conjugaison Redoublement du t devant un e muet. Je curette, je curetterai, mais je curetais.
curette
curette n. f. nom féminin Instrument chirurgical en forme de cuillère.
Spanish Dictionary
cureña
cureña nombre femenino 1 mil Armazón compuesta de dos tablones fuertemente unidos y colocados sobre ruedas, sobre la cual se monta el cañón de artillería .2 Palo de la ballesta .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
cure
cure /kjʊə r /〖語源は 「心配 注意 (care )」〗動詞 ~s /-z /; ~d /-d /; curing /kjʊ́ ə rɪŋ /他動詞 1 〈医者 薬などが 〉〈病気 けが 〉を治療する , 治す ; 〈人 〉を回復 [全快 ]させる ; 〖cure A of B 〗A 〈人 〉のB 〈病気 けが 〉を治療する (→heal )▸ cure patients [cancer ]患者 [癌 (がん )]を治療する ▸ The doctor cured her of her disease. ≒She was cured of her disease by the doctor .医者は彼女の病気を治した 2 〈人 物 事が 〉〈問題 悪癖 不安など 〉を取り除く , 終わらせる , 解決する ; 〖cure A of B 〗A 〈人 〉のB 〈悪癖 不安など 〉を取り除く ▸ cure problems [anxieties ]問題を取り除く [不安を解決する ]▸ cure him of smoking 彼の喫煙をやめさせる 3 〖通例be ~d 〗〈肉 魚などが 〉 (塩漬け 乾燥 薫製などにより )保存処理される ; 〈タバコ 動物の皮などが 〉加工処理される .4 〈ゴム 〉を加硫する .自動詞 〈医者 薬が 〉病気を治す ; 〈病気が 〉治る .名詞 複 ~s /-z /C 1 【病気などの 】治療 ; 治療薬 [法 ] «for » ; 治癒, 回復 ▸ very effective cures for cancer 癌に大変有効な治療法 ▸ take the cure ⦅米 やや古 ⦆療養する ; 道楽をやめる 2 【問題 悪癖 不安などに対する 】解決策 , 対策 , 救済 [矯正 ]法 (solution ) «for » ▸ There is no miracle cure for unemployment .失業問題に対する特効薬はない 3 〘宗 〙魂の救済 ; (魂を救済する )牧師職 , 聖職 ; 教会区 .4 (肉 魚などの )保存 (法 ).5 (ゴムの )加硫, 硫化 .
cure
cu r é /kjuréɪ |kjʊ́əreɪ /〖<フランス 〗名詞 C 教区牧師 .
cure-all
cure-all /kjʊ́ ə rɔ̀ːl /名詞 C 万能薬 (panacea ); 万能な解決策 (!しばしば否定文で ) .
curettage
cu ret tage /kjʊ̀rətɑ́ːʒ |kju (ə )rétɪdʒ /名詞 U 〘医 〙掻爬 (そうは ), 人工妊娠中絶 .