Crossword-Solution: CACHEXY
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Cachexy | n. | A condition of ill health and impairment of nutrition due to impoverishment of the blood, esp. when caused by a specific morbid process (as cancer or tubercle). |
We have 4 clues for the answer “CACHEXY”
| Clue | Answers |
|---|---|
| CHRONIC debility of body or mind | 2 answers |
| DEBILITY of body or mind | 2 answers |
| DISEASE of body or mind | 2 answers |
| cachexia | 2 answers |
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Kind of apple
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T
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EREAT
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
20 +2
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Sentences with CACHEXY (5)
You know what to do for a child in a fit, for an alderman in an apoplexy, for a girl that has fainted, for a woman in hysterics, for a leg that is broken, for an arm that is out of joint, for fevers of every color, for the sailor's rheumatism, and the tailor's cachexy.
And the climate of the hot-damp category was found to suit, mainly if not only, that tubercular cachexy and those, bronchial affections and lung-lesions in which the viscus would suffer from the over-excitement of an exceedingly dry air like the light invigorating medium of Tenerife or Thebes.
Likewise the cachexy, or evill habit of the body, and the dropsie in the beginning thereof, before it be too farre gone.
Parkinson says: "Whoso is drawing towards a consumption, or ready to fall into a cachexy, shall find a wonderful help from the use thereof, for some time together." Officially, according to the London College, are prepared from the fresh dried roots collected in the autumn, a decoction (one ounce to a pint of boiling water), a juice, a fresh extract, and an inspissated liquid extract.
Nostalgia, which we are apt to sneer at as a doctor's name for homesickness, and to class with cachexy and borborygmus, was a power for evil in those days, and some of our finest troops were thinned out by it, notoriously the North Carolinians, whose attachment to the soil of their State was as passionate as that of any Greeks, ancient or modern, Attic or Peloponnesian.