ADJ • प्रकोप • संक्रामक |
epidemical meaning in Hindi
epidemical sentence in HindiExamples
More: Next- Plagues and Epidemical Diseases : 2.
- The Rev . Hooker died during an " epidemical sickness " in 1647, at the age of 61.
- And he was impressed by the good health of the inhabitants :'There is no epidemical disease that prevails here.
- Three years after that, an epidemical fever was raging in the country, he was again persuaded that he could also cure that.
- The term " autobiography ", for example, was used by Southey in 1809 in the " Quarterly Review ", in which he predicted an " epidemical rage for autobiography ", which indeed has continued to the present day.
- On 28 July 1770 he had reports " from the Polish Frontiers . . . of a raging Epidemical Distemper, which carryes of Numbers of People, & feared it may turn into the Plague, which God forbid, otherwise the poor Country of Poland, would be worse than ever.
- During this time, Jasper became well acquianted with the Resolution's guest passenger, Doctor Claude Belgon ( a scientist, assigned to to the ship, in order to discover whether certain altitudes of oxygen provided a cure, for the epidemical Magnetic Plague ), and assisted him with a number of experiments.
- John Gerard ( 1597 ) said that " It maketh a man to pisse well . " While Nicholas Culpeper stated that, " . . . it preserves the liver and bodies of men from the danger of epidemical diseases, and from witchcraft also " and " . . . this is a precious herb, well worth keeping in your house . " He also states that Betony is Aries.
- Souham had opened the town sluices, which slowly inundated the fields connecting York to Freytag and filled British trenches on the dunes with two feet of water . " The inundations increasing daily, rendered the ground, on which the British encamped, a perfect swamp ", and soon " An epidemical disorder called the " Dunkirk Fever ", soon broke out amongst the troops, increased daily, and carried off the soldiers rapidly ".
- I beg your pardon for saying I would see you again, and rest your most humble and obedient servant . " And in a letter written to John Locke in reply to one of his about the second edition of his book, and dated the 15th of October 1693, Newton wrote : " The last, winter, by sleeping too often by my fire, I got an ill habit of sleeping; and a distemper, which this summer has been epidemical, put me farther out of order, so that when I wrote to you, I had not slept an hour a night for a fortnight together, and for five days together not a wink.