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"dysentery" Definitions
  1. an infection of the bowels that causes severe diarrhoea with loss of blood
"dysentery" Antonyms

127 Sentences With "dysentery"

How to use dysentery in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dysentery" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dysentery". Mastering all the usages of "dysentery" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Spoiler: the mouth feel is giardia, the flavor is dysentery.
That incubates deadly diseases, including cholera, dysentery, typhoid and polio.
He caught dysentery backpacking through Asia, and had a pet eel.
All this polluted water spreads diseases such as cholera, dysentery and typhoid.
Rating: Jusuf got dysentery but recovered beautifully with a base tan to boot!
A few of them died from a combination of dysentery, starvation, and malaria.
On his travels across the world he has been struck down with dysentery.
The food — rice, potato stew and boiled roots — gave him diarrhea and dysentery.
He died of dysentery or pneumonia, not in battle, like in The King.
Many of the displaced were suffering from respiratory infections, diarrhoea and dysentery, he said.
Now you can die of dysentery without the need for any fancy computers or smartphones.
Garlic was once the go-to remedy during epidemics liked typhus, dysentery, cholera, and influenza.
Later, on the battlefield of a Prussian war with France, he contracted diphtheria and dysentery.
The pale mare, aka bloody flux, is actually what those in Mereen refer to as dysentery.
When does Donald Trump start letting his verbal dysentery spray out all over the world again?
It turned out to be an effective treatment for dysentery, one the Tongwe still use today.
In August of that same year, Henry V died of dysentery at the age of 36.
Who would want to see a movie in which Henry, two years later, dies of dysentery?
The Oregon Trail now has the potential to educate a new generation on the dangers of dysentery.
Assuming they haven't all died of dysentery, that is, given the absolute state of Novigrad's poorer quarters.
Over the course of his internment, he was beaten, tortured, starved, and battled recurring bouts of dysentery.
Captain John Billings, Bergdahl's platoon leader, said he and another soldier contracted dysentery during the search operations.
Other sources have suggested that North Korea can produce pathogens such as cholera, the plague, and dysentery.
Shigella flexneri Shigellosis (or Shigella dysentery) is passed on by direct or indirect contact with human faeces.
Doctors eventually found an amoeba in his liver, left over from a bout of dysentery in Vietnam.
He died two years later, of dysentery, while trying to find the source of the Niger River.
The entire crop failed again in 1847, and huge numbers of people fell prey to typhoid and dysentery.
Just ask any US student who learned what dysentery was from the early video game The Oregon Trail.
And improperly stored water is often mishandled, increasing the rates of cholera, dysentery and other water-borne diseases.
Urban economies slow because of power outages, weak sales and increased health problems such as diarrhea and dysentery.
You're not going to die of dysentery, but it might just find a way to kill your vote.
That can contaminate food and water supplies, which consequently raises people's risk of diseases like cholera and dysentery.
"By the end of the four-day workshop, we all came down with amoebic dysentery," recalled Dr. Harvell.
Hitch up your oxen and watch for dysentery as Fault Line Theater produces this play by Bekah Brunstetter.
That's because these strains produce a biotoxin called Shiga originally discovered in the bacterium that most often causes dysentery.
In a similar vein, warm camel dung has been employed in some parts of the world to treat dysentery.
A tiny amount of dysentery, for example, could make someone sick, especially if that person's immune system is compromised.
The version that most '80s kids remember was developed in 1985, with pixelated graphics, dysentery, and plenty of oxen.
Not only are these nocturnal pests nearly indestructible, they're also known to spread diseases like dysentery, plague, and leprosy.
Yes, poop is loaded with bacteria—which includes shigella, a group of bacteria that can cause diarrhea and dysentery.
As many as half a million children are thought to die every year from enteric diseases, including cholera and dysentery.
Although I didn't know it at the time, I was already sick with dysentery from training in the polluted water.
He and his father Shlomo were later herded to Buchenwald, another Nazi death camp, where his father succumbed to dysentery.
The lack of safe drinking water or basic sanitation means that dysentery, fever, and other diseases are on the rise.
Burn smarter fuels and never look directly into the fire, so as not to raise the ghost of Dysentery Dan.
Roman herbalists used the drug to combat dysentery, even as they warned against the "chilled extremities" and "laboured breath" of overdosing.
Outbreaks of dysentery and super-cholera followed, and the last UN estimate I saw numbered deaths in the tens of thousands.
Nineties kids will remember trying to make the harrowing journey across the American West without contracting dysentery or losing any cattle.
Poor sanitation is linked to transmission of diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea, dysentery, hepatitis A, typhoid and polio, the WHO says.
When fecal matter makes it into drinking water, it spreads cholera, dysentery and even polio, continuing the cycle of disease and poverty.
The United Nations estimates that half the population defecates outside - putting people at risk of cholera, diarrhea, dysentery, hepatitis A and typhoid.
In 1916, with polio's cause still vague, the city responded as it had to dysentery, typhoid and tuberculosis: Officials fiercely emphasized cleanliness.
Ultimately, they arrived at kibbutzim in Mandatory Palestine in 1943, racked by malnutrition, typhus, dysentery, loss of family and loss of self.
Many people make regressive assumptions about human feces, on the grounds that eating them can cause such minor illnesses as cholera and dysentery.
Why had He caused old men to fall down from dysentery on forced marches, when they might have died peacefully in their beds?
"Through kindness, small gifts and love he assisted some men through the pain of amputation and the indignities of dysentery," Dr. Price said.
After brief periods in Uganda and Kenya, he was sent back to England at 12 when he suffered a bout of amebic dysentery.
Other plans were too audacious, or slightly mad: a group of French Communists were driven from the wilds of Texas by ineptitude and dysentery.
He earned immeasurable wealth before becoming a (let's be honest, Armada crushing aside, fairly average) military commander, and ultimately shat himself to death with dysentery.
When the long-awaited second advance guard showed up—now just twenty-two men—they found their comrades malnourished, snakebit, and half-dead with dysentery.
A woman comforts her husband suffering from severe diarrhea at a dysentery clinic run by Medical Teams International in Kutupalong camp, Bangladesh, on Oct. 6.
In Matlab, a part of Bangladesh with good data, deaths from diarrhoea and dysentery have dropped by about 2703% since the early 1990s (see chart).
It's great for making sure a restaurant you want to eat in won't give you dysentery, but less so for identifying adventures or local secrets.
The children who died, most of them weakened by long-term malnutrition and dehydration, had succumbed to diseases like pneumonia and dysentery, the commission said.
A robber kills 12 bank workers in Tokyo by posing as a doctor and telling them to take dysentery medicine, which is actually poison containing cyanide.
For example, in 1900, 21625 Americans per 2900,220006 died of typhoid and paratyphoid, eight per 2202,2628 died of malaria, and 28500 per 6900,2628 died of dysentery.
I think I didn't eat something too long and I got super sick, where I was like vomiting and having dysentery for like 12 hours straight.
" An activist later claimed, "We have shigella because we wash our hands" and that the state-supplied filters to protect residents from lead were causing "dysentery.
In countries without established plumbing or sanitation systems, flies may harbor pathogens from human waste and pass on deadlier diseases like cholera, vibriosis, or dysentery, Nayduch says.
Le Druillenec lost half his body weight during his imprisonment and suffered the aftereffects of dysentery, scabies, malnutrition, and septicaemia for almost a year after his release.
He suffered dysentery for most of his captivity, and cleaned feces off his hands with his own urine so that he could eat enough bread to survive.
The family settles in a rural village, which is struggling with a dysentery epidemic until an army of flesh-eating ants invades and starts devouring everything in sight.
Now there I was, except I was steering an American-made Ford, not a rickety wagon prone to absconding wheels, and death by dysentery wasn't a significant concern.
A lack of access to clean water and sanitation is resulting in children dying from diarrhea and the transmission of diseases including cholera, dysentery, hepatitis A and typhoid.
The analysis also revealed disturbing spikes in the levels of fecal coliform bacteria; a marker for diseases like cholera, dysentery, hepatitis A and typhoid, to name but a few.
Even on the journey over to Macau it would have been rife with dysentery and all kinds of sickness and hardly any food, so that hunger was really important.
Because of its proximity to a lake shore marsh, roads and sidewalks were submerged in mud, spreading illnesses like typhoid fever, dysentery, and even a deadly outbreak of cholera.
Once these basics were proven, the knowledge piled up quickly; by 1884, typhoid, tuberculosis, cholera, dysentery, malaria, tetanus, pneumonia and other common bacterial illnesses were connected to their unique microbes.
And yet a recent stool analysis conducted by researchers at Cambridge found that despite these efforts tapeworm, ringworm, whipworm, and dysentery-causing bacteria persisted in the bodies of ancient Romans.
"We try to be as authentic as we can without getting dysentery," Mr. Brennan said of his unit, several of whom were frying bacon and brewing coffee over a fire.
According a housefly fact sheet prepared by Penn State's Department of Entomology, flies were already known to transmit more than 60 diseases to humans, including dysentery, cholera, anthrax, and tuberculosis. Why?
Now, with reproductive technology, surrogacy, and feminism, ye olde naming conventions feel irrelevant, but, unsurprisingly, society has failed to progress much past the days of dying from dysentery on the Oregon Trail.
Mr Miles estimates that 30,000 people died, many of them succumbing to malaria, scurvy and dysentery, during the initial construction, while others were torn apart by packs of wolves in broad daylight.
The first bacteria to be deposited in the NCTC was a strain of dysentery-causing Shigella flexneri that was isolated in 1915 from a soldier in the trenches of World War One.
Much like this ongoing outbreak in the DRC, initially Ebola was not suspected when the patients sought care for an illness that could understandably be confused with malaria, dysentery, cholera, or others.
Henry and his team traveled to the now-crumbling, vine-choked prison cell in Saipan where they believe Earhart spent her final two years before dying in 1939, possibly from malaria or dysentery.
Six weeks later he was dead of acute dysentery, one of more than 50,000 who perished there and one of the millions of victims commemorated on Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, on Thursday.
At the time, viruses and bacterial contamination in drinking water were causing repeated epidemics of water-related diseases, including cholera, dysentery, typhoid and more, which killed tens of thousands of people every year.
Of these, 673 million defecate in fields, rivers or gutters, which makes them and their communities more vulnerable to diseases and conditions like cholera, diarrhea, typhoid, dysentery, polio, hepatitis A and childhood stunting.
Lack of soap and clean water leads to communicable diseases such as cholera and dysentery, and it's estimated that diarrhea linked to poor sanitation kills almost 300,000 children younger than five every year.
We were also warned by our superiors to avoid drinking water from the wells and eating local food at all costs, as dysentery and other intestinal maladies were a real threat to us.
There probably were fewer deaths by exotic cancers during the Old Testament epoch, when people likely succumbed to war, starvation, dysentery, malaria, poxes, and minor infections that festered and then hit the bloodstream.
This morning alone I lost two oxen during a river crossing, a thief stole some of our rations during the night, and my loved ones were slowly wiped out by dysentery, cholera, and typhoid.
It was first isolated from the poop of one lucky World War I soldier who, unlike the others in his trench, wasn't affected by an outbreak of heavy, bloody diarrhea, caused by bacterial dysentery.
Pressman Toys has created a card game version of the dysentery-plagued classic The Oregon Trail that includes all the terrible diseases, maladies, and calamities that wiped out your pioneer family time after time.
It's a brutally addictive game that asks players to walk through the hardscrabble life of a fictional pioneer family as they go on a punishing journey from Missouri to Oregon—snakes, dysentery, and all.
Here's a look at the shenanigans from the perspective of the away team's Kevin Shakelford and Matt Magill: And the home team's Trevor Williams: The boys should feel lucky if they don't contract Dysentery.
In that newsworthy event last August, also from Irkutsk, a state-run foster home had too little money to provide adequate treatment for its young charges, three of whom died during a dysentery epidemic.
Portuguese sailors learned to build ships that could plunge into the uncharted Atlantic in search of winds to carry them around Africa's southern tip, all the while dying in droves from dysentery, scurvy and thirst.
Especially when Trump's cavalier foreign policy is analogous to always fording the river on the Oregon Trail – it works for a while, but somewhere past Missouri, the horses drown and your family dies of dysentery.
Recently, he has been embroiled in embarrassing scandals, such as an outbreak of dysentery at schools served by his catering business, which has been the subject of investigations backed by the anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny.
During his trial, former detainees accused him of beatings, depriving them of food and medicine, overworking them, refusing to heat their cells and forcing them to drink dirty water from the Danube, leading to widespread dysentery.
After the prisoners were taken by train to another camp, Buchenwald, Mr. Wiesel watched his father succumb to dysentery and starvation and shamefully confessed that he had wished to be relieved of the burden of sustaining him.
He recalled to PEOPLE, "they treated me pretty badly," revealing further that he was suffering from dysentery and was being beaten every two hours in order to get him to sign confessions and make audio recordings trashing America.
For those of you who are wondering how our determined team finally died in the game, they all expired in typical Oregon Trail fashion: measles, dysentery, and, in the case of Gunther, our fearless wagon leader, a fever.
The DNA of deadly strains of plague, dysentery and cholera were also decoded in what the researchers said was an effort to better understand some of the world's most dangerous diseases and develop new ways to fight them.
"The risk of things like diarrhea, dysentery, mosquito-borne diseases like dengue, malaria, and others are going to be a huge risk to the population," Tony Stewart of the World Health Organization in Cox's Bazar said in a statement.
The museum, the Yan'an Revolution Memorial Hall, is a hulking edifice built 10 years ago that commemorates the Communist Party's perseverance in the face of scarce food and diseases, like dysentery, that killed because of the lack of penicillin.
Adjacent to her was a guy called a "poo man" who would examine people's excrement to decipher what was wrong with them (though to be honest the answer was probably almost always "extreme dysentery from eating whole uncooked rat kings").
Undernourished prisoners, frostbitten in winter and feasted on by flies in summer as they felled wood, died at a rate of up to 8 percent at camps in the area from disease, dysentery and other problems stemming from their bad conditions.
The IRC delivers critical basic health services—including primary, reproductive and community health care; nutrition screening and referral; and emergency referral—to internally displaced people and conflict-affected communities that face acute health problems such as tuberculosis, dysentery and influenza.
After King Edward I died of dysentery on his way to fight Bruce, the Prince of Wales inherited the throne and became King Edward II. The leaders survived, but many other men died, like the youngest man in Bruce's army.
Since April, some 940,768 people in Yemen have been infected with cholera, a water-borne disease, in the world's worst epidemic in a single year that has killed at least 2,200, and cases of dysentery are being reported, she said.
Bert died of dysentery in Hanoi while Bernard had been in ill health for some 17 years, with a disease of the very organs he spent his whole career studying, the pancreas and the liver, ironically leading to his slow demise.
Jackson, who survived diseases like smallpox, malaria, dysentery, rheumatism and dropsy and endured physical disability most of his adult life after being shot in the chest during a duel, was just shy of Mr. Trump in stature, standing 1003-foot-1.
NAIROBI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - At least half a million survivors of a powerful cyclone in southeast Africa are at risk of fatal diseases, from cholera and dysentery to malaria, aid workers warned on Thursday, as rescue teams struggled to reach flood-hit communities.
Piers Mitchell, of Cambridge's Archaeology and Anthropology Department, reveals that Romans were plagued by mites and fleas, were stuffed full of roundworm and whipworm, routinely got dysentery after ingesting the protozoan Entamoeba histolytica, and generally had a miserable time—despite their celebrated plumbing.
The amount of pathogens that can dwell in that sludge is mind-boggling: those responsible for hepatitis A and B, cholera, campylobacter, dysentery and salmonella, plus intestinal worms that you don't even have to ingest to get sick – you can inhale them.
"After I refused to go home, they treated me pretty badly," recalled McCain, who by then had begun suffering from dysentery and was being beaten every two hours in order to get him to sign confessions and make audio recording trashing America.
During the 28503th century, the United States pioneered and built water-treatment and delivery systems that provide nearly all Americans with safe water and sanitation, and eliminated cholera, dysentery and other water-related diseases still prevalent in other parts of the world.
While away in France on yet another campaign to address some of the French territories still loyal to Charles VI, Henry V died in 1422 of battlefield dysentery, an infection of the intestines usually spread through contaminated food or water, at the age of 35.
In 2016, amid fears about water safety, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that an estimated nearly 80% of Flint residents had altered their bathing habits in a manner that could adversely affect hygiene -- even as an outbreak of shigellosis dysentery occurred.
Between the diary's grayish-green covers, Mr. Acevedo would record a grim roster of prisoner deaths (by dysentery, heart attack, jaundice, influenza and starvation); the cruelty of the guards; and rumors of American troops closing in on the Berga camp, a part of the Buchenwald complex.
The first is "Air Mail," a funny and vivid story of a young traveler on a Thai island undergoing such severe amoebic dysentery that he enters a state of religious ecstasy; the second is "Capricious Gardens," which holds the unshakeable images of giant armfuls of artichokes in a dim country kitchen and the chalky relic of St. Augustine's finger bone.
My Family Died of Dysentery in the Palm of My Hands—and I Loved Every Minute of ItBefore kids hunted for Carmen Sandiego, in a time when computers could barely muster a few…Read more ReadIf the handheld looks vaguely familiar it's because it's from the same company responsible for the portable version of The Oregon Trail released last year.
The survival of the 30 noncombatants was a long-held secret of World War II: the story of 13 female nurses, 13 male medics and the four-man crew of a medical evacuation plane who were stranded behind enemy lines for nine weeks, hiding in villages and caves in wintry mountains, afflicted with lice and dysentery, often near starvation and hunted by German patrols.
"Drunk: when you think you're having a rip roaring time and the next morning you wake up and your brain has broken into a frenzied beehive, and your body is shattered shards of sharp glass desperately searching for what fits where and your spirit is being eaten by worms with great white bloodied teeth and your heart has shriveled into a black prune churning your intestines to the point where dysentery feels attractive," he began.

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