How To Use Nursed In A Sentence

  • It might as well be closed, because in many American hospitals you're simply shooed from the windowsill after you've been nursed back to health (usually in 72 hours or less), and you're expected to "fly" on your own. Mark Lachs, M.D.: Care Transitions: The Hazards of Going In and Coming Out of the Hospital
  • She nursed the crying child on her lap.
  • Dalmius nursed the invigorating fire-drink from a horn-flask, ensconced in leather, e'en as his thin hands trembled.
  • In 1823 Saint-Simon attempted to kill himself but Rodrigues came to his rescue, nursed him back to health, and provided him with the necessary financial support to see out the rest of his life.
  • His wife nursed him through a dangerous illness.
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  • The injured males have now been nursed back to full health. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then I wandered from the fancies of others and formed affections and intimacies with the aerial creations of my own brain — but still clinging to reality I gave a name to these conceptions and nursed them in the hope of realization. Attached to Reading: Mary Shelley's Psychical Reality
  • But he had a mother who nursed him until he was two weeks and told him his skat didn't stink, so he doesn't understand that a South Chinese tiger-mother never praises, she only demands. Louis Bayard: A Tiger Mom Shares Her Secrets
  • Anderson restored the helicopter to intelligent control, brought back the power, and nursed us gently away from the trees.
  • Benn recounts how, as his own death sentence appeared to lift, he nursed Caroline through terminal breast cancer.
  • In some (but by no means all) species of marsupials, females develop a pouch or marsupium in which the young are nursed.
  • With the second baby, delivery went very smoothly, so I nursed from the beginning, and it took much longer for my husband to be able to have that same closeness, since the little guys spend almost all their time sleeping and eating at the beginning. » The Case Against Breast-Feeding Strocel.com
  • Her little all was indeed little, - a few chickens, some "spun-truck," a sheep that she had nursed from an orphaned lamb, a "cag" of apple-vinegar, and a bag of dried fruit, - but it had its value to the mountain lawyer; and when he realized that this was indeed "all" he drew the petition in consideration thereof, and appended the affidavits of Jubal Tynes and Dr. Patton. In the Tennessee mountains,
  • Tracking back in support of his besieged full-back, Arjen Robben seemed in control as he nursed the ball towards the end-line and used his superior size to hold off Messi.
  • He bandaged the man's wounds and carried him to an inn where he nursed him through the night.
  • Would that, for the sake of herself and her beautiful daughter ... would that for the sake of public morality, Mrs. Robinson were persuaded to dismiss the gloomy phantom of annihilation; to think seriously of a future rebribution; and to communicate to the world a recantation of errors that originated in levity, and have been nursed by pleasure. Editorial Notes to 'Letter to the Women of England'
  • He trained only lightly on Thursday as he nursed a corked glute muscle sustained last weekend.
  • The bitten limb should be nursed in the most comfortable position, but excessive elevation should be avoided.
  • And then, with his expression hardening, he turns to the other agenda, the real one, the one the Brotherhood has nursed along since 1928--including a long period of of ideological alliance with the Nazis--the agenda that its Palestinian branch is applying in Gaza. Bernard-Henri Lévy: Egypt: Year Zero
  • Colborne had "nursed" his regiment during the fight. Deeds that Won the Empire Historic Battle Scenes
  • All the years he was sick my mother had nursed him.
  • The pair "nursed" each other through the breakups they were both going through, and a month after Moder's divorce was finalized, he and America's Sweetheart sealed the deal during a backyard barbecue. Nicole Williams: Hottest Work Hookups
  • Here was I, a ballet girl who had taken a cold whose proportions simply towered over that nursed by the leading lady's self; and as I slipped and slid slushily homeward, I asked myself angrily what a fairy was to do with a handkerchief, -- and in heaven's name, what was that fairy to do without one. Stage Confidences
  • He lived in a hovel of an apartment, sold illegal software, hacked systems, and nursed a feeling of unease.
  • Dame Kepler employed a young advocate who for reasons of his own “nursed” the case so long that after five years had elapsed without any conclusion being reached another judge was appointed, who had himself suffered from the caustic tongue of the prosecutrix, and so was already prejudiced against her. Kepler
  • The passengers were sympathetic with one another, notwithstanding their recent factiousness, and were especially kind to a poor little brown baby, which they handed round and nursed by turns, but the heat, the filth, and the stench of the ship defied description. The Life of Sir Richard Burton
  • The pear cacti, which is nursed in greenhouses in the States, grows wild on the plains to a height Six Months in Mexico
  • As a senior member of the men's group that wandered in and out of the café all day, he nursed a kind of proprietary air about the place.
  • Extensive training is provided for younger or newer staff members - an orientation time for them to learn, to grow and to change the way in which they may have nursed or doctored in the past.
  • She had long nursed a passion for Japanese art.
  • In the old days the disease was terrible, but survivable: farms were quarantined and the animals nursed.
  • Liberty — their liberty; an earth-born creature, nursed in the black mud of the Bastile moats and dungeons, and necessarily betraying many evidences of its unwholesome bringing-up — but the Inquisition used it in the name of Heaven. Pictures from Italy
  • She nursed her father through his final illness.
  • The remainder of my life at Oxford was of necessity lived at half-speed; and in this place I must commemorate, with a gratitude which the lapse of years has never chilled, the extraordinary kindness and tenderness with which my undergraduate friends tended and nursed me in that time of crippledom. [ Fifteen Chapters of Autobiography
  • Over the years, he'd nursed his son through all sorts of ailments, including sprains and broken bones.
  • It was something of a get-together with the ECC crowd (with whom I went and LARPed a week or two ago); and it was perfectly pleasant except for the raging headache I inadvertently nursed with a glass of cab-sav that tasted like paint thinner. Even so, Spring -- quickly come
  • She nursed her father through his final illness.
  • He still nursed his grievances, for pet grievances are not yet included in the tax on luxuries, but these were no longer suffragettes and lawyers, but slugs, "mawks," and More Tales of the Ridings
  • The Church had no answers and no cures and the monks in monasteries and the nuns who nursed those sick died along with everyone else. Horrors Prices | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • This Gori, "an incomparable man," writes Alfieri, "good, compassionate, and with all his austerity and ruggedness of virtue (_con tanta altezza e ferocia di sensi_) most gentle," appears literally to have nursed Alfieri in this period of moral sickness as one might nurse The Countess of Albany
  • Precious … I can SO relate! cath c said: having longterm nursed 3 kids … i totally get this post. beautiful, all consuming, completely tied to someone else's needs. snuggly, sweet and get this thing off of me! The Pioneer Woman - Full RSS Feed
  • Light birth BW pigs tend to nurse the posterior teats, which produce less milk than the anterior teats, which are nursed by heavier pigs.
  • He had nursed an ambition to lead his own big orchestra.
  • That flesh we had nursed from the first in all cleanness was given November 12th, 2006
  • A good few nurses who come here to work have some nursing experience, having nursed in hospitals abroad.
  • Being a Mohammedan, he had numerous wives, who with a number of children peeped from the doors of their apartments; but only one of his wives, quite a girl, the mother of an infant which he nursed with evident pride and many caresses during the whole time we stayed, was brought forward and introduced to us. Insulinde: Experiences of a Naturalist's Wife in the Eastern Archipelago
  • During his visit he had nursed a baby girl, who was deaf and had been born without eyes.
  • A former Cheshire businesswoman of the year, she has nursed an ambition to get into parliament for years and told the Yorkshire Post in a recent interview she had no intention of quitting.
  • His bold and free demeanour, his attachment to rich dress and decoration, his inaptitude to receive instruction, and his hardening himself against rebuke, were circumstances which induced the good old man, with more haste than charity, to set the forward page down as a vessel of wrath, and to presage that the youth nursed that pride and haughtiness of spirit which goes before ruin and destruction. The Abbot
  • Elizabeth showed Aaron her lilac bushes, which she'd planted herself and nursed until they were hearty and all abloom.
  • The old lady was helplessly bedridden but was nursed to health by this caring neighbour.
  • He bandaged the man's wounds and carried him to an inn where he nursed him through the night.
  • How the muse happened to visit him in this clay biggin, take a fancy to a clouterly peasant, and teach him strains of consummate beauty and elegance, must ever be a matter of wonder to all those, and they are not few, who hold that noble sentiments and heroic deeds are the exclusive portion of the gently nursed and the far descended. The Complete Works of Robert Burns: Containing his Poems, Songs, and Correspondence. With a New Life of the Poet, and Notices, Critical and Biographical by Allan Cunningham
  • A mother that has nursed a baby that long is apt to skip a year before breeding again, most likely because it takes a while to store up enough fat.
  • The film helped the already-close family "jell," says Mr. Tan, who recounts in the film how his mother with "movie star" looks nursed him back to health about 20 years ago when he fell ill in his final year of law school. Lights. Camera. Memories.
  • He is rescued by a wagon train and nursed back to health. The Sun
  • He nursed the flowers in his garden and fertilized them regularly
  • Anita felt the heat beat on her cheek and nursed the flames until they seemed to pulsate as angrily as the hoarded resentment within her. DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION
  • Bill Styron certainly never had a reputation of being a drunkard—in fact it was a standing joke among friends like Willie Morris and Irwin Shaw that he "nursed" his drinks, while the rest of us guzzled. A Roaring Literary Lion
  • My generation didn't have to calm our babies after feeding; we nursed them to sleep, which takes less time than bouncing, wrapping, shushing, and pacifying.
  • Tommy climbed back on board and nursed the car back to the pits, losing several laps.
  • She emigrated to England back in the 1940s and nursed in a Manchester hospital during the War years.
  • In some (but by no means all) species of marsupials, females develop a pouch or marsupium in which the young are nursed.
  • She nursed her dying husband for months.
  • She nursed the mentally unstable mathematician through half a lifetime of delusional daymares.
  • She is the first who has redeemed the name of sutler from the suspicion of worthlessness, mercenary baseness and plunder, and I trust that England will not forget the one who nursed her sick and who sought out her wounded to aid and succor them and who performed the last office for some of her illustrious dead. World’s Great Men of Color
  • Archaeologists say they have unearthed Lupercale - the sacred cave where, according to legend, a she-wolf nursed the twin founders of Rome and where the city itself was born.
  • During all the nine weeks he was being barrier nursed in an isolation ward.
  • The one time we tried this, he was disorientated and reacted so violently that we decided it was in his best interest to be nursed at home.
  • And when the long-awaited idea finally comes, it gets gratefully nursed like a drink by a penniless toper unable to pay for a refill.
  • It's the older woman he has his eye on, having nursed a long and gallant tendresse for her all the while he's been away.
  • The total abstainer class was not "nursed" or favored to produce How to Live Rules for Healthful Living Based on Modern Science
  • Anderson restored the helicopter to intelligent control, brought back the power, and nursed us gently away from the trees.
  • They had built huts in uninhabited places, or made a twisted bower of strong green creepers, and lived their primitive paradisal life wanting nothing but each other; sometimes, through accidents and illness, they had nursed each other, with such unwearied tenderness that death himself had to withdraw, defeated by love. Martin Pippin in the Apple Orchard
  • She was shot through the window of her home as she nursed her baby boy.
  • By employing wooden palings, building channels to divert rainwater and cultivating indigenous vegetation, the engineers claim to have demonstrated that Mother Nature can be nursed with ‘ecological therapy.’
  • His wife nursed him through a dangerous illness.
  • At a bacchanalian soiree thrown by students from Johns Hopkins University, for example, Kate nursed one glass of wine the entire evening. William and Kate
  • Day after day, I nursed the wound, looking forward to healing, but pus continued to drain from the incision site, helped by the wick that I had thoughtfully inserted.
  • The negative controls used were spleens and thymi from non-GFPtg-nursed B6 mice, and the positive controls used were spleens and thymi from GFPtg mice. *, p FACS analysis interestingly and clearly showed that CD4+ cells preferentially migrated to the spleen ( PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • Caine watched as the last few stragglers nursed their drinks.
  • He nursed me, dosing me with aspirin, sponging me off to keep the fever down.
  • Anita felt the heat beat on her cheek and nursed the flames until they seemed to pulsate as angrily as the hoarded resentment within her. DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION
  • Remember a tabby named Buster Kitten, whom our giant mutant mountain poodle Beau nursed for way too long (Buster would suck on a dreadlock on Beau's neck, never ceased to amaze me). Can't We All Be Friends?
  • They were helping the teenage son get into a community college while they nursed his sister through a long surgical convalescence.
  • Many Democratic voters have nursed feelings of anger and disenfranchisement for the past four years.
  • And she's always loved to be cuddled and nursed and made a fuss of by her parents.
  • Miraculously, they floated ashore, were nursed by a she-wolf, and then reared by a shepherd.
  • We found them there, bound up their broken legs and bruised backs, and nursed them quite well again in one corner of the froggery that we called the hospital. The Story Hour
  • For years he had nursed a grievance against his former employer.
  • A young mother nursed her infant in a plastic chair not far from animal cages.
  • She nursed me through my long illness.
  • In the old days the disease was terrible, but survivable: farms were quarantined and the animals nursed.
  • I recently spoke with a mother of twins who nursed night and day and started bleeding 5 1/2 months post-partum.
  • Day after day, I nursed the wound, looking forward to healing, but pus continued to drain from the incision site, helped by the wick that I had thoughtfully inserted.
  • These ideologies, so fanatically nursed, are best described as spectacularly ass-backwards (to borrow an appalling, phlegmatic phrase). Qanta Ahmed, MD: The Adventures of Itamar Marcus and the Hamas Bunny: Palestine at Play
  • Babies are nursed by their mothers until two to four years of age.
  • On the down side, I have proved to myself that citrus really do need to be nursed through heatwaves.
  • He lived in a hovel of an apartment, sold illegal software, hacked systems, and nursed a feeling of unease.
  • It seems like yesterday that he was the wakeful baby who nursed incessantly and rarely slept through the night.
  • Well, the tinsel is being put away, lights are being torn down, eggnog hangovers are being nursed, and entire legions of families are sitting around the table, eating breakfast in awkward silence after the drunken revelations from the night before. Holiday Review: Christmas | Heretical Ideas Magazine
  • Our caves are not like her castle, and when we pluck fruit from the trees we have nursed so carefully in crevices, away from the wind, we have to climb their rough and horrid trunks.
  • Clothes, covers, and hat help to maintain body temperature of newborns when they are nursed in an open cot
  • For she had nursed at the breast of nature, -- in forfeit of a mother, -- and she loved the old trees and the creeping green things with a passionate love; and the dim murmur of growing life was a gladness to her ears, and the damp earth-smells were sweet to her nostrils. CHAPTER 2
  • The farmery, or infirmary, where sick monks were nursed during illness, was a separate building, having its own kitchen, refectory, and chapel. English Villages
  • Perhaps the Conservatives could issue a portmanteau apology for any other unscrupulous rightwing notions they may have nursed while Labour were lucky enough to be in charge? Will modern-day politicians never stop saying sorry? | Catherine Bennett
  • After age 40, the changes in the breasts become more pronounced, as fatty tissue begins to replace the supportive, fibrous tissue known as the stroma, and skin starts to sag more — regardless of whether a woman has had kids, and nursed them, or not. Mommy Wants Her Body Back
  • James's executor was Alice James, the wife of Henry's older brother, the philosopher William James, and the woman who had nursed him with sedulous care through his last illness. The Afterlife of the Lion
  • Dalmius nursed the invigorating fire-drink from a horn-flask, ensconced in leather, e'en as his thin hands trembled.
  • At the end of my experiment, I sat back and nursed a battered palate with a bottle of Spanish cava in an attempt to drive out the demons which had possessed my mouth a short time ago.
  • The baby was nursing / being nursed at its mother's breast.
  • AN orphaned foal nursed back to health with the help of a teddy bear still sleeps with it after three years. The Sun
  • This was how he remembered her, rather than as the cancer-pained rag doll he had nursed until her death.
  • At the end, he nursed Lilly and cleaned up after her without minding.
  • Since then it has benefited from a series of owners who loved the place and carefully nursed it back to life. Times, Sunday Times
  • At an early hour the next morning they were again on the bosom of the river, the engine having again been cleaned and "nursed" as the engineer described it for the day. The Boy Scouts on the Yukon
  • Powell nursed a deep fear of public speaking and was terrified when she was required to give a class presentation.
  • He was in a Hospice in Perth at the end and was nursed with great care and tenderness until he died but he was only 58 and should have lived much longer had he not been exposed to asbestos back beginning in about 1959.
  • She had also nursed her father, also a sufferer from a terminal illness. Times, Sunday Times
  • First Stevie, a boy, and after I had nursed him for a decent interval, Amy, a girl.
  • After Ray's operation, Mrs Stallard nursed him back to health .
  • His wife nursed him through a dangerous illness.
  • Shot, gassed and riddled with shrapnel, Tu's father comes back from the Great War a cot-case who has to be nursed on the tribal lands by his wife Ma through his fits and moods until he finally succumbs to his injuries at the age of 39.
  • I've woken at dawn to a sleeping village, nursed a mug of coffee in the chill of the open cockpit, watched a moorhen scutter across the smoking water, heard church bells chime the hour and felt—as it's so easy to do on the canals—at one with England. The Best Way Through England Is Wet
  • She nursed a desire to become an actress in Bollywood films.
  • First Stevie, a boy, and after I had nursed him for a decent interval, Amy, a girl.
  • She nursed the sick boy back to health.
  • The cub nursed at her breast with as little fear as the young child newly born she had left behind at home.
  • For two days and two nights it was more like angina pectoris, as I have heard it described; but this went off, and the complaint ran into its ancient pattern, thank God, and kept me only very ill, with violent cough all night long; my poor Robert, who nursed me like an angel, prevented from sleeping for full three weeks. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  • She nursed the sick boy back to health.
  • During her first and second years at medical school Patrice nursed her own mother, who had terminal breast cancer.
  • She comforted her Mother, and faithfully nursed her Father to his last breath; nay she saved him and the house, with great presence of mind, on a sudden inburst of French soldiers. The Life of Friedrich Schiller Comprehending an Examination of His Works
  • A century later, some French subjects believed that a general social reform would result if mothers nursed their own babies, rather than sending them out to wet nurses.
  • Last year, her husband nursed her through four months of treatments for cancer.
  • I nursed a secret longing to explore such places but the only reason I was ever allowed to climb another man's fence was if there was no bush handy to address a roadside bathroom emergency.
  • The father was faithful and grateful: the son knows no law but his own humor; detests the ugly dwarf who has nursed him; chafes furiously under his claims for some return for his tender care; and is, in short, a totally unmoral person, a born anarchist, the ideal of Bakoonin, an anticipation of the "overman" of The Perfect Wagnerite, Commentary on the Ring
  • She nursed her husband devotedly through his last illness.
  • In Scotland, a conservative view by anaesthetists prevented patients with epidural anaesthesia / analgesia being nursed outside of high dependency units.
  • It is in this way that what is known as libidinous blood is nursed as well among those who are strictly virtuous, in the ordinary meaning of the term, as among those who are promiscuous in their intercourse. Plain Facts for Old and Young
  • Sandra, whose parents, Alan and Violet Beattie still live at Langton Park, nursed in the Mater Hospital, Dublin before doing agency nursing in Naas.
  • Goya may have expected to die, but under Arrieta's care, he was nursed back to health and lived another eight years.
  • I've woken at dawn to a sleeping village, nursed a mug of coffee in the chill of the open cockpit, watched a moorhen scutter across the smoking water, heard church bells chime the hour and felt—as it's so easy to do on the canals—at one with England. The Best Way Through England Is Wet
  • She nursed her daughter back to health.
  • An angel came down from heaven and nursed his wounds.
  • He was removed to what they call the helpless ward, where he was well nursed and attended. Poor Jack
  • When I sang to her last night she wrapped all four legs around my arm and "nursed" and then nipped me when I stopped. Archive 2006-01-01
  • Since then it has benefited from a series of owners who loved the place and carefully nursed it back to life. Times, Sunday Times
  • The ancient Romans believed that the first lily grew from milk spilt from the breasts of the goddess Juno as she nursed the infant Hercules.
  • When I nursed in a clinic near Bombay, a small girl, shielding all her leprous sores, crept inside the door.
  • He nursed the car up the steep hill.
  • He nursed the company through a difficult period.
  • His three long-term lovers included a designer of boats, whom he nursed through a long illness. Times, Sunday Times
  • He nursed his cold with Chinese herbs
  • She had long nursed a passion for Japanese art.
  • He nursed his injured back by lying in bed several hours every afternoon
  • She nursed the sick boy back to health.
  • Since then it has benefited from a series of owners who loved the place and carefully nursed it back to life. Times, Sunday Times
  • Farther along, a young black haired woman in a pink blouse nursed a baby in the shade.
  • She nursed her dying husband for months.
  • He took care for her never to be left alone while he travelled, and in her last years he nursed her with great devotion.
  • It seems like yesterday that he was the wakeful baby who nursed incessantly and rarely slept through the night.
  • Shortly after arriving, she had rescued a tiny chipmunk, which had fallen out of a tree; improvised an incubator; and lovingly nursed it with milk administered with an eyedropper. A Covert Affair
  • To this end she visited, and 'nursed' and trained and commanded -- and with good results. The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men"
  • One matter in especial, which I deemed should stand me in the greatest stead, I purchased for gold of the pottinger at Tours, the same who had nursed me after my wound. A Monk of Fife
  • Sister Helen was a small woman with a bit of a hooked nose and bright blue eyes, the same who had nursed Carl's mother at the end.
  • She is the first who has redeemed the name of "sutler" from the suspicion of worthlessness, mercenary baseness, and plunder; and I trust that England will not forget one who nursed her sick, who sought out her wounded to aid and succour them, and who performed the last offices for some of her illustrious dead. Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands
  • Durrell's cover story was good - he'd had a chance to speak to the newfound friend who had 'nursed' him - but there was one central and potentially disastrous flaw. Neurosurgical Intervention For Beginners
  • A loggerhead turtle, which has been carefully nursed back to health in a leading aquarium, yesterday took off for Spain where she may soon find romance.
  • For days, Miss Nellie nursed a feeling of neglect.

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