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metastasise

VERB
  1. spread throughout the body
    the cancer had metastasized and the patient could not be saved

How To Use metastasise In A Sentence

  • In addition, the cancer was no more likely to metastasise in women who had had a lumpectomy than in women who had had a mastectomy.
  • They can metastasise to other organs in the body, but it can take years before they start to become problematic. Undefined
  • VEGF is the key driver of tumour angiogenesis - a fundamental process required for a tumour to grow and to spread (metastasise) to other parts of the body. WebWire | Recent Headlines
  • The problems happen when a small malignancy is ignored and allowed to metastasise due to neglect. Msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines
  • Gulags in history tend to metastasise, becoming ever larger and more secretive, ever more deadly and formalised. Naomi Wolf: Ten Steps To Close Down an Open Society
  • But, at the same time, the cancers are helped to metastasise by a culture that too often glorifies delinquency, misogyny, drugdealing and violence.
  • Democracy by its very nature both hosts and is vulnerable to a limitless range of counter-narratives, ranging from tiny political movements to global meta-narratives which, in being given freedom to thrive, may at any time metastasise into the illness that kills the host. AN ECONOMIC WONDERLAND: DERIVATIVE CASTLES BUILT ON SAND
  • Lobular carcinoma is more likely to metastasise to the gastrointestinal tract. BioMed Central - Latest articles
  • Johnny gets angry texts from a spurned lover - but these nasty signs never metastasise dramatically into a situation that confronts or challenges Johnny. The Guardian World News
  • Ivul is an eccentric, and exasperating in some ways, but I found something powerfully and unexpectedly real about the story's central conceit: that a single calamitous event, wounding a young man's pride, can metastasise into a family tragedy. Ivul
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