Crossword-Solution: CHARCOT 7 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 14

We have 1 clue for the answer “CHARCOT”

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French neurologist 1 answer
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Dermatological complaint
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Hint 1 meaning
An inflammatory disease of the skin, characterized by the presence of redness and itching, an eruption of small vesicles, and the discharge of a watery exudation, which often dries up, leaving the skin covered with crusts; -- called also tetter, milk crust, and salt rheum.
Hint 2 anagram
EZEMAC
Hint 3 another clue
eruption
9 +1

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Sentences with CHARCOT (5)

Yes? And of course then you understand how it act, and can follow the mind of the great Charcot--alas that he is no more!--into the very soul of the patient that he influence.
Dracula Bram Stoker 1995
Within the last half-century many scattered indications have been collected and supplemented by thoughtful, patient investigators of genius, and especially by Braid in England and Charcot in France.
History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Andrew Dickson White 1996
For Charcot's researches into the disease now known as Meteorismus hystericus, but which was formerly regarded in the ecclesiastical courts as an evidence of pregnancy through relations with Satan, see Snell, Hexenprocesse un Geistesstorung, Munchen, 1891, chaps.
History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Andrew Dickson White 1996
Charcot and other French authors have noticed the frequent occurrence of suspension of the sexual instinct during the administration of Fowler's solution.
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine George M. Gould 1996
Chiromegaly is a term that has been applied by Charcot and Brissaud to the pseudoacromegaly that sometimes occurs in syringomyelia.
Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine George M. Gould 1996

Quotes with CHARCOT (1)

The physical shape of Mollies paralyses and contortions fit the pattern of late-nineteenth-century hysteria as well — in particular the phases of "grand hysteria" described by Jean-Martin Charcot, a French physician who became world-famous in the 1870s and 1880s for his studies of hysterics...""The hooplike spasm Mollie experienced sounds uncannily like what Charcot considered the ultimate grand movement, the arc de de cercle (also called arc-en-ciel), in which the patient ar…
Michelle Stacey The Fasting Girl: A True Victorian Medical Mystery
Where this answer appears

Appears in: NYT.

Used 1 time in crossword archives (1972).