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Alzheimers

NOUN
  1. a progressive form of presenile dementia that is similar to senile dementia except that it usually starts in the 40s or 50s; first symptoms are impaired memory which is followed by impaired thought and speech and finally complete helplessness

How To Use Alzheimers In A Sentence

  • That first Cornucopia, looks like a diverticulated intestine, or the sliced off piece of the brain from someone with alzheimers. Wrecktopia of Cornucopias
  • He's older than Reagan was when he ran, and we now know that Reagan's delightfully optimistic daffiness was probably the result of early symptoms of Alzheimers. Hullabaloo
  • Now I read that being old and infirm is no bar to voting Obama, not even having advanced Alzheimers is a bar. Archive 2008-11-01
  • It's the strain of caring for a parent with Alzheimers disease.
  • It's the strain of caring for a parent with Alzheimers disease.
  • Many of the op-ed columnists glibly excoriating him now will have the pleasure in the future of dealing with a parent with Alzheimers.
  • There's no rhyme or reason why a gnarled grandmother is called arthritic and yet her husband has Alzheimers. Kim Stagliano: Why is Ohio Retarded but Connecticut Isn't?
  • After he came down with Alzheimers, it became de rigeur for all members of the GOP to be at least as brain-dead as their idol, so now the equivalent of a do-it-to-yourself lobotomy is required of all Republican candidates for high office. Matthew Yglesias » Jindal Speech
  • I mean, he was the fall guy for Ronald Reagan's Iran-Contra debacle, and you've got to be pretty dumb to get out-politicked by an Alzheimers sufferer. -
  • As I pointed out in a September 26th post, at least one physician sees signs of ‘presenile dementia,’ a precursor to Alzheimers.
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