How To Use Malady In A Sentence

  • While on the subject of that patient, although he does eventually say: Once believed to be rare, the malady, also called celiac sprue, is now recognized more frequently thanks to sophisticated diagnostic tests. the fact remains that fifteen years ago, when this poor lady began her medical misadventures, anyone who even thought of celiac disease would have been -- correctly -- laughed out of the conference room. "How Doctors Think": A Disappointment
  • Cancer has become the most threatening malady next to cardiovascular diseases.
  • -- But I had the impression that the author of the Spectator was afflicted with a dropsy, or some such inflated malady, to which persons of sedentary and bibacious habits are liable. The Poet at the Breakfast-Table
  • The clinician must look for tuberculosis, and confirm or exclude this treatable malady in any patient who presents with gastrointestinal disease.
  • Why, the old Peer, pox of his tough constitution, (for that malady would have helped him on,) has made shift by fire and brimstone, and the devil knows what, to force the gout to quit the counterscarp of his stomach, just as it had collected all its strength, in order to storm the citadel of his heart. Clarissa Harlowe
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  • My malady, which the doctors call a bilious fever, lingers, or rather it returns with each sudden change of weather, though I am thankful to say that the relapses have hitherto been much milder than the first attack; but they keep me weak and reduced, especially as I am obliged to observe a very low spare diet. Charlotte Brontë and Her Circle
  • All the rose bushes seem to be suffering from the same mysterious malady.
  • Suddenly the writer remembers the nameless malady of the poor — that mysterious disease which the rich share but cannot alleviate, which is too subtle for doctors, too incurable for Parliaments, too unpicturesque for philanthropy, too common even for sympathy. The Greatest Thing in the World And Other Addresses
  • Were it not cruel in these circumstances, here might be the place to insert an observation, gleaned long ago from the great _Clothes-Volume_, where it stands with quite other intent: 'Some time before Small-pox was extirpated,' says the Professor, 'there came a new malady of the spiritual sort on Europe: I mean the epidemic, now endemical, of Sartor Resartus, and On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History
  • Other remedies for this malady include green peas or sauerkraut juice.
  • Once people's thinking becomes rigid, book worship , divorced from reality, becomes a grave malady.
  • The annoying malady was handily repaired with surgery, leaving three small well-hidden punctures as the only evidence.
  • The United States is waking up from a serious malady.
  • The guests would be terribly kind, behaving as if she were all right or suffering an unidentified malady.
  • Malaria is a kind of serious malady.
  • Relapses of the malady, ineffectiveness of different drug regimens and even resistance to drugs are emerging.
  • If you allow a small sore like this to fester, it could become a major malady.
  • He gravely thought poetry a sort of disease ” a sort of fungus of the brain ” and held as a serious opinion, that nobody could be properly well who exercised it as an art ” which was true (he maintained) even of men ” he had studied the physiology of poets, 'quotha' ” but that for women, it was a mortal malady and incompatible with any common show of health under any circumstances. The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
  • Will development ever again be the beast of burden pulling the region out of economic malady?
  • For in that great malady which had so vexed her that she lay in her bed, she arose and did her to be borne from one place to another, and did spin a fine small cloth of which she made more than fifty corporas, and sent them in fair towels of silk into divers churches in divers places of Assisi. The Golden Legend, vol. 6
  • A famous and witty harlequin of France was overcome with hypochondriasm, and consulted a physician, who, after inquiring about his malady, told his miserable patient, that he knew of no other medicine for him than to take frequent doses of Carlin -- "I am Carlin himself," exclaimed the melancholy man, in despair. Literary Character of Men of Genius Drawn from Their Own Feelings and Confessions
  • Mrs. Lawrence, who had been suffering from the cruel malady known as a shamed and broken heart, sat by her husband, speaking words of cheer and tenderness. Betty at Fort Blizzard
  • Do you think living beyond our means is a modern malady?
  • I just pray her malady is painful and that she suffers excruciating pain on her way out. Barbara Bush released from hospital
  • We keep in touch, I always inquire about him, he is a devotee of Khwajah Gharib Nawaz the Holy Saint of Ajmer ..now if you call his malady a disease than the first person to infect him with the poison was his uncle who gagged him and sodomized him when his family was away..he has not forgotten that and weeps each time he talks of this persecution ..this assault on his body and soul. Archive 2009-07-01
  • It may sound like a dental malady, but cavitation is a powerful natural force, a bombardment of microscopic bubbles that breaks down some of the hardest materials on earth.
  • All the rose bushes seem to be suffering from the same mysterious malady.
  • At the time, the malady was called hyaline membrane disease because glassy membranes were found in autopsies of infants who had gasped for breath and quickly died. NYT > Home Page
  • And the APA – the organization responsible for medically determining matters such as this. bitblt says: except the malady is self-declared and there is no known case, Think Progress » Portugal’s parliament approves same-sex marriage.
  • Prominent doctors are enlisted to publicly affirm the malady's ubiquity.
  • Many advisers recommend against oil ETFs, which suffer from a market malady known as "contango. Mining the Scarcity Boom
  • Such of us as associate their earliest recollections of the name with the annual cask of wine will read with interest that though the wine, thanks to the oidium or some malady of that sort, is a thing of the past, the spot retains many other charms ample to justify a trip to its shores by a more roundabout way than the slow and direct or costly and circuitous routes laid down by Mr. Benjamin. Lippincott's Magazine, Vol. 22, September, 1878
  • I suspected, though, that Donald had more than a touch of hypochondria, a malady from which a number of our relatives suffered.
  • I'm sure if someone else was in his position, especially playing and / or losing against a qualifier, the trainer would have been called pronto for some trumped up malady. Tennis-X.com :: Xtreme Tennis News
  • (The toothache was the only malady to which Tom had ever been subject.) "Euclid, my lad; why, what's that?" said Mr. Tulliver. The Ontario Readers: Fourth Book
  • Nay, said King Mark, I will not have ado with you, for cause have ye none to me; for all the misease that Sir Tristram hath was for a letter that he found; for as to me I did to him no displeasure, and God knoweth I am full sorry for his disease and malady. Le Morte d'Arthur: Sir Thomas Malory's book of King Arthur and of his noble knights of the Round table
  • Back in the days when women often came down with a mysterious malady called the vapors, a cup of chamomile tea was often prescribed to relieve female anxiety. Earl Mindell’s New Herb Bible
  • Once when they were all together, “Pray, Doctor, ” cried he, “how is it you call the malady our friend is labouring under? Chapter X. Book VIII
  • This malady is liable to distort the fingers and knees, and is usually called gout or rheumatism; the former of which is liable to disable the fingers by chalk-stones, and thence to have somewhat a similar appearance. Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • Until now, the latest information on chronic wasting disease suggested that the malady is passed only via direct contact between deer. Wasting Disease News Flash: Deer can get disease from the dirt
  • The boy is suffering from some strange malady.
  • This malady is a cervical vertebral instability characterized by malformation of the lower spine.
  • Theology, "-- was principally composed during the period in which he was subject to attacks of that terribly malady, nephralgia. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 121, November, 1867
  • The Olo regard dreamlessness as a very serious malady, on the same order as aphasia or paralysis. TROPIC OF NIGHT
  • “Verily, this my malady is mortal and the shaft of death hath executed that which Allah Almighty decreed against me: this is the last of my days in the world here and the first of my days in the world hereafter.” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • In humans, eating meat products contaminated with the illness is linked to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a rare and fatal malady.
  • The Olo regard dreamlessness as a very serious malady, on the same order as aphasia or paralysis. TROPIC OF NIGHT
  • The Olo regard dreamlessness as a very serious malady, on the same order as aphasia or paralysis. TROPIC OF NIGHT
  • Then is there a serious malady that demands immediate attention?
  • During this compulsatory voyage, he describes himself as affected with the most horrible sea sickness; and here his representation of a person labouring under that detestable malady was so accurate, that I almost fancied myself again in the cockpit of the Actæon, and all the terrors of the voyage across the Journal of a Visit to Constantinople and Some of the Greek Islands in the Spring and Summer of 1833
  • All the rose bushes seem to be suffering from the same mysterious malady.
  • That, in addition to the ordinary manifestations of insensibility to pain, rigidity, and what is called clairvoyance, the patients affected with the more intense conditions of the malady have at all times exhibited a marvellous command of languages; The International Monthly Magazine - Volume V - No II
  • I would have, quite literally, looked like I had just escaped from the special ed class, and the ice cream truck driver would have wondered what sort of brain malady I suffered from as I happily handed over my wadded-up dollar bills. Apparently, I Have An Opinion On Sports - Who Knew?
  • Paracelsus goes farther, and will have his physician [2848] predestinated to this man's cure, this malady; and time of cure, the scheme of each geniture inspected, gathering of herbs, of administering astrologically observed; in which Thurnesserus and some iatromathematical professors, are too superstitious in my judgment. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • _subsultus_ -- that involuntary twitching and cramp in the muscles of the limbs and abdomen which often characterizes this form of the opium malady, by degrees gets lulled as under a charm, and it may not even be necessary to repeat the dose in two and a half hours to remove it so entirely that the patient gets ten or fifteen minutes of refreshing sleep. The Opium Habit
  • He believes her in a consumption; and has brought a physician of his intimate ac-quaintance to visit her: but she, and we all are con vinced, that medicine will not reach her case: and she affected to be startled at his supposing she was in so bad a way, on purpose, as she owned, to avoid his kind importunity to take advice in a malady that nothing but time and patience can cure. Sir Charles Grandison
  • This strange malady, resembling the _couvade_ among certain savage nations, ordinarily lasted five days and four nights, but on this occasion the Ulstermen were prostrate from the beginning of November till the beginning of February. The Ancient Irish Epic Tale Táin Bó Cúalnge
  • Descriptions of the malady from the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries relate the horror of its effects: the terrible sores and swellings, often extending into the mouth and throat, and leaving the body covered with scabs that turned from red to black; severe fever; pain in the bones so intense that patients "screamed day and night without respite, envying the dead themselves"; and, often early death. Pestilence and Headcolds: Encountering Illness in Colonial Mexico
  • The root of contemporary (as distinguished from "modern") malady is the implication of the masses (in a sense, all of us -- no matter how personally blameless) in the "sexual revolution". Ideology and the destruction of body and soul
  • Thinking of their oily flesh, and the cruel malady that now swept the colony, Neil fixed his eyes on the trestle table outside the kitchen. RUSHING TO PARADISE
  • Maybe mad cow disease is the malady I have - perfect that a Hindu would get it.
  • Then, out of the clear blue, I got hit with a bothersome respiratory and gastric malady that laid me down.
  • There is sure to be much of that malady still in his family. MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
  • _ -- It is known that a very curious and fatal disease called pellagra is prevalent to a considerable degree at the present time in the United States, and it is not going too far to say that all of those best capable of judging are of the opinion that the malady is the result of eating just such corn as we know kills horses. Health on the Farm A Manual of Rural Sanitation and Hygiene
  • Then there is the mysterious malady called brain fever, which always attacks the heroine after a crisis, but which is unknown under that name to the textbooks.
  • I conceive him to indicate that the realistic method of a conscientious transcription of all the visible, and a repetition of all the audible, is mainly accountable for our present branfulness, and that prolongation of the vasty and the noisy, out of which, as from an undrained fen, steams the malady of sameness, our modern malady. The Egoist
  • He was Prince John, the youngest son of George V, born in 1905 and afflicted with the dreaded malady of kings - epilepsy.
  • I've been stricken with some kind of long-term gastrointestinal malady, which I know is not giardia, because the giardia medicine didn't work. Alone Time
  • When Nora was still a toddler, Woody began to succumb to Huntington's Disease, the hereditary malady that killed his mother.
  • As this malady is occasioned sometimes by an introsusception of a part of the intestine into another part of it, especially in children, could holding them up by their heels for a second or two of time be of service after venesection? Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • Of this malady, known in medical science by the term diapedesis, there have been examples recorded in both ancient and modern times. Smith's Bible Dictionary
  • Nearly every calamity and malady known to humankind has a saint to look after it.
  • Left untreated, the abscesses suppurate ; the pus cannot escape from the body, and the malady spreads throughout the organism.
  • Whatever her true malady, one thing was perfectly clear: whether her swoon was the press's fault or not, the Michiko-bashing era is over. Imperial Swoon
  • Hieronymus Mercurialis, in his chapter of melancholy, cites it for an especial cause of this malady, [1482] priapismus, satyriasis, &c. Haliabbas, 5. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Perhaps I have finally succumbed to the famous French malady known as ‘heavy legs’ or jambes lourdes which I hitherto assumed to be a fictitious complaint. Sex
  • And if he live until his last day, scarcely then may he shrive himself or then remember his sins, or repent of them, because of the grievous malady about to cause his death.
  • Regular physical malady we diagnose the ailment and develop a course of treatment.
  • a malady in which inflamed pouches called diverticula form on the colon's wall - in November. Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local
  • More importantly, elf schot is clearly a hyponym of maladye - that is, its meaning must fall within the semantic range of maladye - so cannot denote a projectile.
  • The captain and his mate enjoyed their supper, while Carne in the distance bore the pangs of a malady called bulimus, that is to say, a giant's ravening for victuals, without a babe's power of receiving them. Springhaven : a Tale of the Great War
  • They suggest spraying a fungicide containing benomyl or triforine to combat this common malady that disfigures begonias.
  • He or he, or whosoever then labours of this malady, by all means let him get some trusty friend, [3427] Semper habens Pylademque aliquem qui curet Orestem, a Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Bloodletting is not to be used, except the patient's body be very full of blood, and that it be derived from the liver and spleen to the stomach and his vessels, then [4379] to draw it back, to cut the inner vein of either arm, some say the salvatella, and if the malady be continuate, [4380] to open a vein in the forehead. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Wine is bad for infants, in that it tends to excite this malady, and red wine is worse than white, especially when taken undiluted; and most things that tend to induce flatulency are also bad, and constipation too is prejudicial. The History of Animals
  • The difficulty in guaranteed pending trial has been the chronic malady that puzzles China criminal lawsuit, whose disorder and unsuitability in application has been the focus of society.
  • Anyhow, love is an incurable malady, like those diathetic states in which rheumatism affords the sufferer a brief respite only to be replaced by epileptiform headaches. The Captive
  • All the rose bushes seem to be suffering from the same mysterious malady.
  • In the two villages of Upper and Lower Innai there has been an outbreak of a malady much dreaded by the Japanese, called kak’ke, which, in the last seven months, has carried off 100 persons out of a population of about 1500, and the local doctors have been aided by two sent from the Medical School at Kubota. Unbeaten Tracks in Japan
  • All the rose bushes seem to be suffering from the same mysterious malady.
  • Christ, coming into the world to be its physician, sent his gospel as the great medicine, the panpharmacon; there is in it a remedy for every malady. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • Hence, our hero decided to seek out technicians and soothsayers, wizards and computer persons who could solve the puzzle of this malady affecting the mighty computer.
  • It is this same malady that underlies the diverse problems facing us today.
  • Bartmann was similarly exhibited in Paris during 1815, and died there at the end of that year from an ‘inflammatory and eruptive malady’.
  • This malady becomes even more serious since Gujarat is just one limb of the body called India.
  • The malady especially attacks the inner angle of the eye, destroys the entrance of the lachrymal duct, and from there the lupous tubercles appear on the connective tissue. Prof. Koch's Method to Cure Tuberculosis Popularly Treated
  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is a new name for an old malady.
  • Charcot had affirmed the power, not only of physical traumatism, but even of psychic lesions -- of moral shocks -- to provoke its manifestations, but his sole contribution to the psychology of this psychic malady, -- and this was borrowed from the Nancy school, -- lay in the one word "suggestibility"; the nature and mechanism of this psychic process he left wholly unexplained. Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 1 The Evolution of Modesty; The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity; Auto-Erotism
  • The reformer must identify the cause of the malady before attempting treatment.
  • And when her imagination became occasionally darkened by that gloom which she termed her malady, nothing could be more impressive than the tone of deep and touching piety which mingled with and elevated her melancholy into a cheerful solemnity of spirit, that swayed by its pensive dignity the habits and affections of her whole family. Jane Sinclair; Or, The Fawn Of Springvale The Works of William Carleton, Volume Two
  • The walls had a leprous aspect, and were covered with seams and scars, like a visage disfigured by some horrible malady; a repulsive moisture exuded from them.
  • One can become inflicted with this malady by being bitten by zombie.
  • Its age was centuries old, he deduced; and it was holed in several places, as if it had been bled or trepanned for malady.
  • It fortuned one year that she fell sick of an exceeding sickness and came nigh upon death, werefore she made a vow that, if she recovered from her malady, she would make the pilgrimage to a certain monastery, situate in such an island, which was high in repute among the Franks, who used to make vows to it and look for a blessing therefrom. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Mr. Bruce was also a man who had somewhat of the spirit of discerning future events, and did prophetically speak of several things that afterward came to pass, yea, and divers persons distracted (says an author [52]) and those who were past recovery with the epileptical disease, or falling sickness, were brought to Mr. Bruce, and were, after prayer by him in their behalf, fully restored from that malady. Biographia Scoticana (Scots Worthies) A Brief Historical Account of the Lives, Characters, and Memorable Transactions of the Most Eminent Scots Worthies
  • After some months when it became clear that my malady wasn't disappearing like a good virus, this burden fell on my husband.
  • You might think that question a bit apocalyptic - we're only talking about litter, after all - but I see the problem as symptomatic of a wider malady.
  • He had heard of his extraordinary powers of curing almost every description of malady peculiar to the human frame, and without another word slunk out of the room. The Evil Eye; Or, The Black Spector The Works of William Carleton, Volume One
  • Why spend a lot of money hunting down the cause of an incurable malady when it isn't going to make any difference in the outcome?
  • Yet it appears by a subsequent letter, that the grievances of which the General complained so bitterly, were not cured even by the presence of the Chevalier; that those who had made a pretext of his absence to complain and despond, desponded still, and that, in fact, the malady was so deep-seated as to be incurable. Memoirs of the Jacobites of 1715 and 1745. Volume I.
  • He said as lightly as he could," If boredom is a malady, then I was growing ill, yes. VALENTINE PONTIFEX
  • Quoting the ‘Ashtangahrudaya,’ the acharya says the malady is nothing but divine retribution for the sins the patient had committed in his past life.
  • 103 His malady increased, and after a dysentery which continued three days, he expired in the palace of Ravenna, in the thirty-third, or, if we compute from the invasion of Italy, in the thirty-seventh year of his reign. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Mathiolus, in his fifth book of Medicinal Epistles, reckons up scorzonera, [4131] not against poison only, falling sickness, and such as are vertiginous, but to this malady; the root of it taken by itself expels sorrow, causeth mirth and lightness of heart. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • I found my Vivien full sick, and a weariful and ugsome time had I with her ere she recovered of her malady. In Convent Walls The Story of the Despensers
  • The captain and his mate enjoyed their supper, while Carne in the distance bore the pangs of a malady called bulimus, that is to say, a giant’s ravening for victuals, without a babe’s power of receiving them. Springhaven
  • However, with the results of our experiments with the scion's blood sample, it is possible that a cure may be devised for this malady.
  • A number of year ago I had a malady that was diagnosed as osteoma of the jaw, that is, a bone tumor on my jaw. The Power of Positive Thinking
  • We have done a study of mucoid degeneration of the meniscus; in brief, this malady is an excessive accumulation of mucopolysaccharides in the meniscal tissue.
  • Now, he labored under a very singular malady, -- not that I ever knew it at the time, -- a kind of luxation of the lower jaw, which, when it came on, happened somehow to press upon some vital nerve or other, and left him perfectly paralyzed till it was restored to its proper place. Charles O'Malley — Volume 1
  • As his malady increased, he would call a confessor, and, pouring into the father's credulous ear a tale of woes, sorrows, superstition and humbug, he would make the convent a donation of _all his estates in South America_, and pray for a remission of his sins! Captain Canot or, Twenty Years of an African Slaver
  • Disenchantment of life, or "Weltschmerz," became a fashionable malady. A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year Volume Two (of Three)
  • That thence comes then this malady, madness, apoplexies, lethargies, &c. it may not be denied. Anatomy of Melancholy

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