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accoucheur

NOUN
  1. a physician specializing in obstetrics

How To Use accoucheur In A Sentence

  • The professional accoucheur is unknown among Mahometans, who only engage midwives, these however being incredibly ignorant. Memoirs of an Arabian Princess
  • But we are certain of this, — that no one will raise a similar claim as against the herdsman, who is allowed on all hands to be the sole and only feeder and physician of his herd; he is also their match-maker and accoucheur; no one else knows that department of science. The Statesman
  • The only defect in hospital obstetrics from my standpoint was that the usual fees for labor and delivery rooms plus a few days in the hospital and an ambulance trip home left little or nothing with which the accoucheur might be paid.
  • A man who practiced as an accoucheur, owing to a mistake in his observation of the actual symptoms, inflicted on a patient terrible injuries from which she died.
  • In the month of November 1820 I found means to persuade the best accoucheur in Paris to play the part of Honorine
  • And midwifery, decency seems to allot to them, though I am afraid the word midwife, in our dictionaries, will soon give place to accoucheur, and one proof of the former delicacy of the sex be effaced from the language. A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
  • Whereafter, running down to the sea, I pulled up my sleeves, and, on returning, embarked upon my role, of accoucheur. Through Russia
  • Thomas R. Verny, MD, is a gifted psychiatrist, academic, writer, communicator, and accoucheur to prenatal and perinatal psychology.
  • By the same token, Colonel Robert Kenneth Wilson, MA, MB, Ch.B. (Cantab.), FRCS, a Harley Street gynaecologist, provided the ideal accoucheur for the picturesque monster.
  • Ergot also had a history of medical use—as a labor-inducing drug that, according to one nineteenth-century physician, “expedites lingering parturition and saves to the accoucheur a considerable portion of time.” MANUFACTURING DEPRESSION
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