| incur | incurable |
|---|---|
| IPD | idiopathic Parkinson disease; idiopathic protracted diarrhea; immediate pigment darkening; increase ... |
| incurable | A person diseased beyond cure. 1. Not capable of being cured; beyond the power of skill or medicine to remedy; as, an incurable disease. "A scirrh is not absolutely incurable." (Arbuthnot) 2. Not admitting or capable of remedy or correction; irremediable; remediless; as, incurable evils. "Rancorous and incurable hostility." (Burke) "They were laboring under a profound, and, as it might have seemed, an almost incurable ignorance." (Sir J. Stephen) Synonym: Irremediable, remediless, irrecoverable, irretrievable, irreparable, hopeless. Origin: F. Incurable, L. Incurabilis. See In- not, and Curable. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
|---|
| incurable |
incapable of being cured; "an incurable disease"; "an incurable addiction to smoking" a person whose disease is incurable unalterable in disposition or habits; "an incurable optimist"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
|
|---|---|
| incurable |
(in
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspz...
|
| incurable |
A part of depreciation where it is not economical to correct the condition, and if corrected, the cost of correcting the condition exceeds the value.
Ãâó: apps.co.pinal.az.us/Assessor/Glossary/index.asp
|
| incurable | a person whose disease is incurable |
|---|---|
| incurable | unalterable in disposition or habits |
| incurable | being such that a cure is impossible |
| incurable | without hope of cure |
| incurable | incapability of being cured or healed |
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|