ACUTE vs AGUE: NOUN
- A mark (') placed above a vowel to indicate pronunciation
- An acute accent.
- An intermittent fever, attended by alternate cold and hot fits.
- A chill, or state of shaking, as with cold.
- An enlargement of the spleen produced by ague.
- A solution of the arsenite of potassa used for ague.
- A fit of the ague.
- A spell or charm against ague.
- The sassafras, -- sometimes so called from the use of its root formerly, in cases of ague.
- Malaria.
- The cold fit or rigor of the intermittent fever.
- An acute fever.
- Chilliness; a chill not resulting from disease.
- Intermittent fever; a malarial fever characterized by regularly returning paroxysms, each in well-developed forms, consisting of three stages marked by successive fits, cold or shivering (the chill), hot or burning, and sweating; chills and fever.
- An acute or violent fever.
- A chill or fit of shivering.
- A febrile condition in which there are alternating periods of chills, fever, and sweating. Used chiefly in reference to the fevers associated with malaria.
- A mark (') placed above a vowel to indicate pronunciation
- Successive stages of chills and fever that is a symptom of malaria
- A fit of shivering
- A fit of shivering or shaking
ACUTE vs AGUE: ADJECTIVE
- Having nice discernment; perceiving or using minute distinctions; penetrating; clever; shrewd; -- opposed to dull or stupid
- High, or shrill, in respect to some other sound; -- opposed to grave or low.
- An angle less than a right angle.
- Having an acute angle.
- Narrowly pointed; sharp.
- High in pitch; shrill.
- Afflicted by a disease exhibiting a rapid onset followed by a short, severe course.
- Having a rapid onset and following a short but severe course.
- Of great importance or consequence; critical.
- Extremely sharp or severe; intense.
- Keenly perceptive or discerning: : sharp.
- Reacting readily to stimuli or impressions; sensitive.
- Ending in a sharp point
- Extremely sharp or intense
- Of critical importance and consequence
- Having or experiencing a rapid onset and short but severe course
- Of an angle; less than 90 degrees
- Attended with symptoms of some degree of severity, and coming speedily to a crisis; -- opposed to chronic.
- Having or demonstrating ability to recognize or draw fine distinctions
- Sensitive
- Short, quick.
- Of a triangle, having all three interior angles measuring less than 90 degrees.
- Urgent.
- With the sides meeting directly to form a pointed acute angle at the apex, base, or both.
- Of an abnormal condition of recent or sudden onset, in contrast to delayed onset; this sense does not imply severity (unlike the common usage).
- Of a short-lived condition, in contrast to a chronic condition; this sense also does not imply severity.
- Having an acute accent.
- N/A
ACUTE vs AGUE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To give an acute sound to.
- To strike with an ague, or with a cold fit.
ACUTE vs AGUE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Sharp at the end; ending in a sharp point or angle: opposed to blunt or obtuse.
- To render acute in tone.
- Manifesting intellectual keenness or penetration; marked or characterized by quickness of perception or nice discernment: applied to mental endowments and operations: as, acute faculties or arguments.
- Having nice or quick sensibility; susceptible of slight impressions; having power to feel or perceive small or distant objects or effects: as, a man of acute eyesight, hearing, or feeling.
- Keen; sharp; intense; poignant: said of pain, pleasure, etc.
- Less than 90 degrees
- Of an angle
- Sharp or penetrating in intellect; possessing keenness of insight or perception; exercising nice discernment or discrimination: opposed to dull or stupid: as, “the acute and ingenious author,” Locke.
- High in pitch; shrill: said of sound: opposed to grave. See acute accent, below.
- In pathology, attended with more or less violent symptoms and coming speedily to a crisis: applied to a disease: as, an acute pleurisy: distinguished from subacute and chronic.
- A mark (′ ) used to denote accentual stress, and also for other purposes. To denote stress in English, it is now generally placed after the accented syllable, as in this dictionary, but sometimes over the vowel of that syllable. The latter is done regularly in such Greek words as take this accent, and in all Spanish words the accentuation of which varies from the standard rule. In some languages it is used only to determine the quality or length of vowel-sounds, as on e in French (as in été), and on all the vowels in Hungarian; and in Polish and other Slavic languages it is also placed over some of the consonants to mark variations of their sounds. For other uses, see accent, n.
- Keen may be the most objective of these words. An acute answer is one that shows penetration into the subject; a keen answer unites with acuteness a certain amount of sarcasm, or antagonism to the person addressed; a shrewd answer is one that combines remarkable acuteness with wisdom as to what it is practically best to say.
- Shrewd differs from acute and keen by having an element of practical sagacity or astuteness. Only keen has the idea of eagerness: as, he was keen in pursuit. See astute and sharp.
- Extremely sharp or severe
- To cause a shivering in; strike with a cold fit.
ACUTE vs AGUE: RELATED WORDS
- Acuate, Discriminating, Pointed, Keen, Knifelike, Piercing, Incisive, Penetrative, Penetrating, Perceptive, Ague, Sharp, Intense, Critical, Subacute
- Dropsy, Feverishness, Scrofula, Blackwater fever, Catarrh, Tertian, Quartan, Chill, Shivers, Fantastique, Chills, Fever, Chills and fever, Acute accent, Acute
ACUTE vs AGUE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Acuate, Discriminating, Pointed, Keen, Knifelike, Piercing, Incisive, Penetrative, Penetrating, Perceptive, Ague, Sharp, Intense, Critical, Subacute
- Grippe, Ail, Breakbone fever, Scrofula, Blackwater fever, Catarrh, Tertian, Quartan, Chill, Shivers, Fantastique, Chills, Fever, Acute accent, Acute
ACUTE vs AGUE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- AKI is sometimes called acute kidney failure or acute renal failure.
- Designations like Acute Care Hospital, Short Term Acute Care, Long Term Care, Long Term Acute Care, Senior Nursing Facility, etc.
- Clemmons medical campus related to joint replacement procedures at its new acute inpatient surgical and acute care services.
- Acute conditions, such as postanesthesia effects from surgery or diagnostic tests, occur predominantly in the acute care setting.
- Acute decline in renal function, inflammation, and cardiovascular risk after an acute coronary syndrome.
- The cause of death is acute pulmonary oedema from acute altitude sickness.
- She was referred as acute abdomen with probable diagnosis acute cholecystitis.
- Cambridge Dictionary Ways to be acute Synonym Discussion of acute.
- Acute Care: Nursing Care Plan For Acute Abdominal Pain If Your articles Acute.
- Diagnostic Imaging services should be colocated on the Acute Floor with EM, Acute Medicine and other acute care specialties.
- The next minute you have got chills and ague fur fear some one will guess it.
- Hemorrhage Paralysis, General Debility, Neuralgia, Diseases of the Liver or Asthma, Kidneys, Fever and Ague.
- My ague was now become so violent that it got the better of me altogether.
- Fulfill this include AGUE, AAHS, AERO, and so on affiliated with Hasbro word.
- Old West were also plagued by lung aliments, rheumatism, ague, and malaria.
- Of all words with the e and U: AGUE AUNE BEAU.
- Tilly to tremble as if she had an ague fit.
- Got the ague and was cared for by Dr.
- As that same ague which hath made you lean.
- Cures riai ache, Stiff Neck, Ague, ooe night.
ACUTE vs AGUE: QUESTIONS
- What is Adem (acute disseminated encephalomyelitis)?
- What is acute kidney failure (acute renal failure)?
- Is acute undifferentiated leukemia biologically distinct from acute myeloid leukemia?
- What causes acute kidney injury (AKI) after acute type B aortic dissection?
- What is another name for acute acute multifocal pigment epitheliopathy (APMPPE)?
- What is the pathophysiology of acute acute arterial insufficiency (AI)?
- Is acute rheumatic fever associated with acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis?
- Are acute day hospitals effective in treating acute psychiatric disorders?
- What causes acute myringitis with acute otitis externa?
- Where are HyperHyper-acute and acute stroke services delivered?
- N/A