How To Use Quinsy In A Sentence

  • Diminish inflammation. Resume from flu or quinsy. Release and calm down.
  • It was a nightmare, especially when I developed quinsy, a type of abscess, in my right tonsil.
  • Well I was looking it up and I found out on the Net that suppurative tonsillitis is also known as... quinsy THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
  • It is a good symptom when swelling on the outside of the neck seizes a person very ill of quinsy, for the disease is turned outwardly. Aphorisms
  • The name Prunella (which belongs more rightly to another herb) has been given to the Sanicle, perhaps, through its having been originally known as Brunella, Brownwort, both because of the brown colour of its spikes, and from its being supposed to cure the disease called in Germany _die braune_, a kind of quinsy; on the doctrine of signatures, because the corolla resembles a throat with swollen glands. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
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  • Does chronic quinsy have Chinese traditional medicine to administer a law?
  • If it be quinsy or any other of the pleuritic affections, purge with electuaries; but if the patient be weaker, or if you abstract more blood, you may administer a clyster every third day, until he be out of danger, and enjoin total abstinence if necessary. On Regimen In Acute Diseases
  • Penicillin V may reduce the development of streptococcal sequelae, such as quinsy, scarlet fever, or impetigo
  • They adhered to the policy for almost a year, during which they observed an unprecedented rise in the number of patients with quinsy (diagnosis confirmed on admission to hospital).
  • He was sick with quinsy, a severe throat infection, and malaria. Dream State
  • Troubled by quinsy for his entire life, he often sacrificed his own health to build the organization.
  • Next day, I was in my surgery, listening patiently to an elderly lady from the village, some relation to the soup cook, who was rather garrulously detailing her daughter-in-law's bout with the morbid sore throat that theoretically had something to do with her current complaint of quinsy, though I couldn't at the moment see the connection. Sick Cycle Carousel
  • For the Church of the Badia of Florence he made a very beautiful S. Jerome; and he began a Deposition from the Cross for the high-altar of the Friars of the Nunziata, but only finished the figures in the upper half of the picture, for, being overcome by a most cruel fever and by that contraction of the throat that is commonly known as quinsy, he died in a few days at the age of forty-five. Lives of the Most Eminent Painters Sculptors and Architects Vol. 04 (of 10), Filippino Lippi to Domenico Puligo
  • The woman affected with quinsy, who lodged in the house of Aristion: her complaint began in the tongue; speech inarticulate; tongue red and parched. Of The Epidemics
  • Quinsy is called cynanche, from the Greek words, _kuon_, a dog, and _ancho_, to strangle, because the distressed patient is compelled by the swollen state of his highly inflamed throat, to gasp with his mouth open like a choking dog. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • Nobody ever gets shingles or quinsy, or mumps in a novel.
  • A new study from Holland, published in this week's issue, has confirmed that antibiotics protect against quinsy.
  • Does chronic quinsy have Chinese traditional medicine administer a law?
  • Confidence is unshaken; -- for, on December 30_th_, _Sunday_, Captain de Camp is reported a "glorious oriental brick," -- he having kindly prescribed all sorts of good things for his invalid friend, without the slightest regard to expense; and, moreover, broken Brown's quinsy by administering an extraordinary anecdote, or "crammer," that scarcely any one could Christmas Comes but Once A Year Showing What Mr. Brown Did, Thought, and Intended to Do, during that Festive Season.
  • Diminish inflammation. Resume from flu or quinsy. Release and calm down.
  • Our trial was not designed to study whether penicillin would prevent quinsy or peritonsillar cellulitis.
  • Well I was looking it up and I found out on the Net that suppurative tonsillitis is also known as... quinsy THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE
  • It is a good sign when swelling and redness on the breast seize a person very ill of quinsy, for in this case the disease is diverted outwardly. Aphorisms
  • I examined him flat on the bed: the pharynx was a little red, but there was no quinsy or obvious swelling, and no cervical lymphadenopathy.
  • (_Asperula cynanchica_), so called from the Greek _cynanche_, which means quinsy, because an excellent gargle may be made from this herb for the troublesome throat affection here specified, and for any severe sore throat. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • There was a child of my own, and he but a year and a-half old, and he got a quinsy and a choking in the throat and I was holding him in my arms beside the fire, and all in a minute he died. Later Articles and Reviews
  • If it be quinsy or any other of the pleuritic affections, purge with electuaries; but if the patient be weaker, or if you abstract more blood, you may administer a clyster every third day, until he be out of danger, and enjoin total abstinence if necessary. On Regimen In Acute Diseases
  • Sanicle is used as a gargle in sore throat, quinsy, and whenever an astringent gargle is required.
  • He'd had the quinsy and swollen glands when he was young, he told me, and it had left him with a weak throat, and a hesitating, whispering fashion of speech. Sole Music
  • Persons who escape an attack of quinsy, and when the disease is turned upon the lungs, die in seven days; or if they pass these they become affected with empyema. Aphorisms

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