[
UK
/tˈaɪfɔɪd/
]
[ US /ˈtaɪfɔɪd/ ]
[ US /ˈtaɪfɔɪd/ ]
NOUN
- serious infection marked by intestinal inflammation and ulceration; caused by Salmonella typhosa ingested with food or water
How To Use typhoid In A Sentence
- In this course will be considered diphtheria, small-pox, the insect carriers of disease, typhoid fever, tuberculosis, and uncinariasis. The University of Virginia Record
- Straight into the bin this morning seeing as they're "toxic", i.e., hand decorated by typhoid Ramekin yesterday, probably in the prime of his contagiousness. So . . .
- Tularemia can present in ulceroglandular, glandular, oculoglandular, oropharyngeal, typhoidal, or pneumonic forms.
- He worked on typhoid fever and tuberculosis a disease he contracted himself.
- Coming as it did from cowsheds in London and from the surrounding countryside; it “proved," in the eyes of Charles Dickens Jr, "often the source of, or rather, perhaps, the means of spreading, serious epidemics of typhoid, diphtheria, and scarlatina.” Archive 2007-12-01
- If you are traveling to a country where typhoid is common, you should consider being vaccinated against typhoid. Typhoid
- Acute dysentery, typhoid fever and acute hepatitis were the next three most frequently reported diseases.
- Whether the fever is sthenic or asthenic at the period of its announcement, as the disease progresses the signs of depression become marked, and the patient rapidly sinks into a typhoid condition.
- He revealed that troops were given more than 20 jabs, including those for anthrax, cholera, diphtheria, hepatitis, plague, polio, tetanus, typhoid, yellow fever and tuberculosis.
- House flies are suspected of transmitting at least 65 human diseases such as typhoid fever, cholera, dysentery, tuberculosis, anthrax, leprosy, food poisoning, pinworms, hookworms, and some tapeworms.