What is the meaning of CURED. Phrases containing CURED
See meanings and uses of CURED!CURED
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Haddock cured in peat smoke, originally at Findon (pron. fin"an), Scotland. the name is also applied to other kinds of smoked haddock.
CURED
v. t.
To pick the cured leaves from the stalks of (tobacco) and tie them into "hands"; to remove the midrib from (tobacco leaves).
a.
Not capable of being cured; beyond the power of skill or medicine to remedy; as, an incurable disease.
n.
The art of curing, founded on resemblances; the theory and its practice that disease is cured (tuto, cito, et jucunde) by remedies which produce on a healthy person effects similar to the symptoms of the complaint under which the patient suffers, the remedies being usually administered in minute doses. This system was founded by Dr. Samuel Hahnemann, and is opposed to allopathy, or heteropathy.
a.
Capable of being healed or cured; susceptible of remedy.
a.
Capable of being medicated; admitting of being cured or healed.
imp. & p. p.
of Cure
v. i.
To be cured; to recover.
n.
The thigh of any animal; especially, the thigh of a hog cured by salting and smoking.
n.
The side of a hog salted and cured; a side of bacon.
a.
Capable of being remedied or cured.
n.
Codfish cured in a particular manner, so as to be of a superior quality.
n.
A salmon split open, salted, and dried or smoked; -- so called because salmon after spawning were usually so cured, not being good when fresh.
v. t.
Capable of being cured; admitting remedy.
n.
Grass cut and cured for fodder.
n.
The leaves of the plant prepared for smoking, chewing, etc., by being dried, cured, and manufactured in various ways.
v. i.
To regain health after sickness; to grow well; to be restored or cured; hence, to regain a former state or condition after misfortune, alarm, etc.; -- often followed by of or from; as, to recover from a state of poverty; to recover from fright.
n.
A building where meat or fish is cured by subjecting it to a dense smoke.
n. pl.
Herring taken and cured or smoked near Quoddy Head, Maine, or near the entrance of Passamaquoddy Ray.
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