Since it struck in the early '80s, researchers have scratched for a vaccine or a cure but in vain. |
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Although there is no way to cure a poison ivy rash, you can ease the discomfort. |
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The cure is simplicity itself, and in the neighbourhood of London, at any rate, could be carried out without any expense whatever. |
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With a high rate of spontaneous cure of the illness, such studies need a large number of subjects to balance the expected high placebo reactors. |
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We don't want anybody to go through what Matthew has to go through and this money could be used to find a cure or a treatment. |
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Aztecs in Mexico believed urine, when applied topically, could cure toothaches, athlete's foot, psoriasis, and dry skin. |
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Even if we were definite on the causes of global warming and agreed on a cure it could take centuries to reverse. |
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By gently manipulating your skull, these practitioners claim they can cure what ails you, yet scientific studies have not proven so. |
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Coffee has been a comfort, an instigator, and a cure for whatever ails you for hundreds of years. |
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Serve this Mexican-style soup with tortilla chips and diced avocado as a sure cure for whatever may ail you! |
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Of course, after the Goldstein scare we were offered a flood of bike saddles designed to cure the problem. |
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Gather winter squash to cure at room temperature, then store in a cool spot inside. |
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There is no known cure for lupus, but the symptoms of the disease can be controlled. |
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It was regarded as an aid to eye sight and used as a cure against witchcraft and evil spirits. |
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When the cure was complete, the probe was raised to lift the entire cell wall above the water level. |
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Mason Brown took remedial action, prescribed his own cure and is now completely well. |
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There is no known cure for Alzheimer's disease, treatment is based on reducing symptoms. |
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It also doesn't help that I've never tried a hangover cure that was even remotely effective. |
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In those days, people used to think I could cure them of laryngitis, leprosy or haemophilia just by touching them with my horn. |
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They were used to cure obesity, hemorrhoids, nephritis, laryngitis, eye disorders as well as mental illness. |
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Attempting to cure poverty by increasing the minimum wage is thus somewhat recursive. |
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The first, a satire, is about the attempts of a fanatical doctor to cure a group of alcoholics. |
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The cure for crime is locking up malefactors and doing so with equal and impartial enthusiasm regardless of skin colour. |
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Consequently, reforming institutions of the federal government to accommodate western concerns may indeed help cure this problem. |
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Radiosurgery can effectively cure a number of abnormalities, arteriovenous malformation, acoustic tumors, or meningiomas. |
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Yes, we have all tried the good old brandy, laced with honey to cure the common cold and sore throat, but this was a new discovery for me. |
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These agents offer shorter treatment courses, higher cure rates and fewer relapses. |
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The idea of the cure is so relatable for every character, but also in a large sense. |
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Even when things are going well, it's natural to become frustrated and wish for a magic bullet to cure your cancer. |
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My dad won the monthly National Science Prize when he designed a better cure for sickle-cell anemia. |
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With big bucks shaping the industry, the emphasis shifts from drugs that cure to those that sell. |
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But unfortunately there's no miracle pill or tonic that can cure your stress woes. |
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The disease could not be passed between humans and was easy to cure if caught early enough. |
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If you are sick and want to be healthy again, you can't just miraculously cure yourself. |
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I saw them and knew she couldn't cure them herself but she placed a religious scapular and medals on them. |
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Whether you have found a cure for cancer or you're just a daft old bird who can't drive makes no difference, as long as people know your face. |
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In her disguise as the boy Ganymede, Rosalind is able to promise Orlando a cure for lovesickness and also schools him in the art of love! |
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In Ireland, badgers have been eaten and cured in much the same way as we now cure bacon. |
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However, with the results of our experiments with the scion's blood sample, it is possible that a cure may be devised for this malady. |
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It's comforting to think that if we just have enough walkathons and celebrity fund-raisers, we'll cure everything. |
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The bark, seed, leaves, fruit and, in fact, every part of the jamun tree is believed to cure diabetes. |
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Scientists hope to someday cure disease by transplanting healthy stem cells into sick people. |
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Combining the two types of water cure under the label of health tourism is going to require a massive injection of capital. |
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In other cases, where a cure is not possible, the treatment aims to maximise the length and quality of life. |
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If the cancer has spread, treatment with chemotherapy or radiation therapy may shrink the tumor but not cure it. |
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What plant may cure Alzheimer's disease, increase circulation, tastes like almonds and smells like rancid butter? |
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The goal of chemotherapy in people with early cancers is usually to kill the cancerous cells and to cure the condition. |
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His faith was in a simplistic Keynesianism that said willy-nilly government spending could cure the downturn. |
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None of the very skilled physicians in the royal palace had been able to cure him of whatever had ailed him, or even find out what it was. |
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The ultimate goal is to raise awareness and money to fund the research that could one day cure this killer disease. |
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Fatty foods are the only thing that are going to cure this killer hangover. |
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The hardest thing is getting the lawyers to bang them up so I hope this new terror legislation will help cure some of those ills. |
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Unfortunately, the search for a cure for the GM virus was proving difficult. |
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The plant is used by the folk healers of tropical West Africa to cure fever, skin ulcerations and wounds. |
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And an immersion in his oeuvre is an effective cure for many chronic ailments of a metaphysical nature that one might suffer. |
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These problems have become very common nowadays and have no complete cure in allopathy. |
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Although smallpox has no known cure or specific treatment, the disease was beaten with a massive, worldwide immunization campaign. |
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No cure has yet been found for the disease but Jonathan's father Don said they cannot give up trying. |
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Some even have to be given morphine in a last-ditch attempt to cure their addiction. |
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But, in an age that also brought us the puffball and the return of hot pants, her thunder thigh cure could not fail to appeal. |
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And as yet there is no cure for mesothelioma, a cancer of the lung lining caused by asbestos. |
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They believe that the best cure for a hangover is to start drinking the same stuff again as quickly as possible. |
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If it was proved that animal research helps to cure cancer, I would find it hard to resist that kind of argument. |
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I don't, by the way, in any way suggest pregnancy as a cure for anything, let alone anosmia. |
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But Priya steps in and starts encouraging him and insists that he should cure her of her problem. |
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And then, in their free time, they cure lepers or build houses for entire villages in South America. |
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Human instinct tells me that the search for a cure for all human diseases will never end. |
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A medical cure for this disease is unlikely to emerge for some time because of the complexity of the disorder. |
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It is our goal to find treatments and possibly a cure for this rare, life-threatening disease that robs children of their adulthood. |
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Cancer patients beyond cure are frequently used to set the defining standard for terminal illness. |
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If the tumor has already metastasized before local therapy is administered, cure is impossible. |
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Trials to date show similar rates of clinical cure in common respiratory infections. |
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The best hope for a cure lies in the open, honest debate that would spring from wholehearted acceptance of the priesthood of all believers. |
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In all the research and all the websites in the world, I cannot find any offers of a cure or solution. |
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While there's no cure for the common cold, old-fashioned foods can at least give you some comfort. |
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He said nanomachines could eventually be used to cure diseases such as tuberculosis and malaria. |
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They taught me about hepatitis, malaria, ringworm and how Edward Jenner discovered the cure to small pox while working with milkmaids. |
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And it's all thanks to a simple new dating game that's being billed as the cure for chronic singledom. |
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Some people think that stop-loss orders are the cure for their stock market headaches. |
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In order to cure an epidemic there must be involuntary, mandatory and humane treatment of people who are engaged in abuse. |
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From medicated oil massage to steam therapy, there are umpteen methods of proven treatments to cure different ailments. |
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Should we follow James in embracing a will to believe, if only to cure ourselves of heartsickness and melancholy at the absence of meaning? |
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Still, for what it's worth, there is one cure for those afflicted with heartsickness. |
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The authors offered neither diagnosis nor cure for the Arabs' inexplicable and uncharacteristic lack of hospitality. |
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While it would be nice to be able to cure everything with a nice, neat, simple solution, life is not like that. |
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If moisturizer doesn't cure your itchy dry skin, schedule an appointment with your doctor. |
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Clause 4 provides that the validations to prevent expiry do not cure invalidity. |
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The spotty leaves of Pulmonaria officinalis, or lungwort, indicated it could cure tuberculosis and other afflictions of the lungs. |
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For instance lungwort, with spotted leaves suggesting pulmonary disease, could be used to cure chest complaints. |
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Speaking of lobster, a whole one showered with tabbouleh and arugula will cure you if that tongue cake leaves you mute. |
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The doctor's been working on a drug to cure people with a manic case of the blahs. |
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It is the only one solely dedicated to finding the cause and cure of all kinds of arthritis. |
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But in a terrible twist of fate, the disease she has worked so hard to find a cure for has now come to haunt her. |
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The disposal of medical waste through on-site incinerators would be a cure that is worse than the disease itself. |
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If, instead of providing cure or care, doctors become intrusive and moralising, they will soon lose the respect of their patients. |
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Instead, Comte sought to moralize one and all, a cure for humanity not for one class at the expense of another. |
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One terrible morning after, Andy prepares a remark-able hangover cure for him. |
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He was a pungent, if inevitably covert, critic of Nazism, a discerning analyst of the ills of our age and our best hope of a cure for them. |
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Perhaps we can't cure cancer because the problem is simply beyond our intellects. |
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In 2001 his parents won the right to create a saviour sibling to help cure him from the potentially fatal blood disorder. |
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As a place of cure and fashion, it developed rapidly in the late nineteenth century following approval by the Saxon kings. |
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The cure rate for Hodgkin's disease is high but there is a risk of developing secondary malignancies. |
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We had been introduced to alternative medicine as a possible cure for Spence's asthma and became interested in the history of herbal medicine. |
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His father was a blacksmith and his mother a wise-woman who used herbal medicines to cure common illnesses. |
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Early transplantation of pancreas with beta cells of islets of Langerhans is a complete cure for diabetes mellitus. |
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He prescribed vanity and coquettishness to cure societal ills, and it worked, for a string of fifteen top ten hit songs. |
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Even at one in the morning a handful of them were milling about up and down the aisles in search of the perfect snack to cure their munchies. |
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It certainly seems promising, although it's clearly not a cure for cerebral palsy. |
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Would we be having this debate if the research showed promise to cure Chagas' disease and sleeping sickness? |
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Williams is to play an unhappy housewife who decides a lobotomy will cure her depression. |
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If a tiny minority of Victorians have Gambling problems, banning pokies won't cure them. |
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An effective and unified system of rules and regulations is the real cure to corruption. |
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Death is the cure of all diseases. There is no Catholicon or universal remedy I know but this. |
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The industry also produces the occasional miracle med that empowers doctors to cure otherwise intractable diseases. |
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It is the human belief that more technology, and yet more, can cure all our ills which is at fault. |
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Without leaving his wheelchair, he was able to make great strides towards a cure for conditions like his. |
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Robert Boyle, the seventeenth century scientist, thought walking about on hemlock leaves all day was a fantastic way to cure the kittens. |
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Since sickness is often seen as a problem of spiritual essence, the khwan, chants, and healing rituals are often used to cure illnesses. |
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The powdered seeds have been considered a cure for goitre and efficacious in reducing excessive corpulency. |
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Most of these drugs are efficacious and have enormously enhanced the power of the physician to treat and cure disease. |
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But the cure for double standards is not to compound them by sacrificing yet another innocent to ideological correctness. |
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Not only does the painting portray these illnesses, it also depicts many of the methods used in the hospital to cure them. |
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And when a drug like crystal meth is sprinkled on the wound, it really does seem like a miracle cure because it erases any concept of morality. |
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Engage in research for life-threatening diseases with no cure rather than working on me-too devices. |
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And they burn candles and even bathe here, believing the spirits will cure them of nagging ailments. |
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Bithwind Bindweed Bitony Wood betony, Stachys Betonica, known as bishopswort, highly popular cure although especially used for headaches. |
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The only cure for shell shock was thought to be complete rest away from all the effects of war. |
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However, the discovery of bacteria that eat biphenyls has led to research that could find an organic cure for this inorganic problem. |
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It is a cure with permanent remission from the symptoms of drug dependence. |
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And if you do not cure that sickness, other illnesses will attack and make it weaker. |
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It offers a long lasting and, in many cases, permanent cure by treating the disease at its root. |
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An international team of scientists has managed to cure a child with severe combined immunodeficiency using gene therapy. |
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If it is localized, there is a very high cure rate from either surgery or from radiation, external beam radiation or seed implantation. |
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Bill gates dose many goods in this world he will personal cure cancer and sida with his fondation. |
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There is no chemical cure and all growers can do is let the crop mature and hope the blackleg tubers will rot out. |
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Some philosophers will find implausible the claim that contextualism is the cure for relativism. |
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In the old days people wrapped the twinflower round there feet and legs to cure pains. |
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That horrid slop couldn't cure a common cold if it was blest by Pope Christ! |
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There are also illustrations showing how people used to cure neurasthenia through hydrotherapy. |
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The cure is designed to give your digestive tract and all the rest of you a well-deserved rest and thorough clean-out. |
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Luckily, a German pharmacist understood my sign language and sold me a miracle cure that cleared it up in a few days. |
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It can help, definitely, but under no circumstances would we ever say it would cure something. |
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The closeness of her account to that of Teresa's childhood illness and cure means that, in many ways, she was indeed calling on the pre-written. |
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Surgical excision gives excellent short-term and long-term results that lead to an eventual cure of nonfamilial myxomas. |
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But the claim that a product can cure an incurable disease should sound alarms. |
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I could have been President, or the doctor who finds the cure for some incurable disease or anything else I ever set my mind to. |
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Although there's no cure for the common cold, you can make your baby more comfortable. |
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Patients often visit their GPs for relief from the common cold, when there is no medication to cure it. |
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Ground elder is edible and was used as a medicinal herb in the Middle Ages to cure gout. |
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To cure my impotence, Dr. Wickes experimented with a lot of elixirs and potions distilled from the manhood of prized Andalusian bulls. |
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From here on in, he is going to ask for money up front before he works a cure on anyone. |
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The bark, rubbed up in rice-water mixed with cumin-seed, is a cure for gumboils and toothache. |
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Researchers at the Karolinska Institute researchers stressed that stem cell therapy was not a cure for OI, or brittle bone disease. |
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Alfalfa-grass mixtures cure more rapidly and ensile more easily than pure alfalfa. |
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Doctors have finally reached the medical conclusion that the easiest way to cure baldness is via hair donors. |
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We previously reported that ACE inhibitors may cure symptomless dysphagia in hypertensive patients with stroke. |
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Rest is very important and some mild regular physical exercises are very beneficial and can cure many people. |
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Symptoms can lie dormant for 70 years and there is no cure for virtually all cases of mesothelioma, which affects the lining of the lung. |
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As antibiotics are ineffective against viruses, antibiotic eye drops will not help cure viral conjunctivitis. |
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The knowledge gained could cure cancer, prevent heart disease, and feed millions. |
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Prohibition of animal experimentation, as is sought by unrestrained zoomania, would be equivalent to prohibiting the cure of the sick. |
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The ejusdem generis rule is intended to guard against accidental omissions and it cannot be a cure for poor or inadequate drafting. |
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The oracle told that the cure would come to Telephos by means of rust from the sword of the very Achilles who had wounded him. |
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Gene therapy has been heralded as the one, or only, way to cure some diseases. |
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It's my hope that they'll stumble into some miracle cure for stupidity, thusly reducing my stupid rating by a factor of 5 or more. |
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The noted specialist promoted his sure-fire cancer cure developed by his great-grandfather, a well-known horse doctor. |
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It is used by some as Panpharmacon, but what Diseases it will absolutely cure I think is scarcely determined. |
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When he was only 15, an immortal taught him the art of refining cinnabar into a medicine that was said to cure all illnesses. |
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There is no cure for Huntington's disease and its progress cannot be reversed or slowed down. |
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A single injection of penicillin can cure syphilis if the woman has had the infection for less than one year. |
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When an alleged cure by faith healing occurs in a religious context it is usually called a miracle. |
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Experiments on animals have proved beyond doubt that even a placebo can cure by improving the immunochemistry of the body. |
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Aniseed, like fennel, is a traditional cure for stomach disorders and colic in babies. |
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The effective cure of the biggest killer in the Western world would have been a triumph for mankind, medicine, and big pharma. |
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Many of the fishwives travelled with the men to the fishing grounds to gut and cure so great a catch. |
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There is nothing more likely to cure a coquet than a good, strong, durable passion. |
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There's no known medical cure for either ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. |
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I got changed and toasted a hot crumpet to cure the cold and wet, before heading out in the car for dinner. |
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A UV curable primer and clear topcoat, which use a hybrid cure mechanism for enhanced performance, have been developed. |
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But it should be clear that easy money can only be the cure for tight money, not for any other causes depressing the economy. |
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I give them general advice on how to manage it, you know painkillers and gargles, and then I'll explain it'll cure itself. |
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The only cure was to get soaking wet while trying to dry out the distributor that generated the electricity that made the car go. |
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Lambs graze on organic grass on the farm, where the family also rears free-range pigs and then cure their own bacon on the premises. |
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It can restore harmony to hormonal imbalances and cure breathing disorders and digestive problems. |
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They were the first to use electrotherapy to cure pain, and also have an understanding of what happened. |
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The only cure for a diseased culture is a healthy culture and the only source of a healthy culture is a healthy spirituality. |
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Two things are worth noting, apart from the obvious one that this man believes without any irony that the cure for unbelief is exorcism. |
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While there's still no cure for the herpes virus, cold sores are treatable. |
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An alternative medicine quack reckoned he could cure Faulkner of his twitching with a six-month course of treatment. |
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Apparently, urine drinking is increasingly popular with the sushi generation, who believe it may be the cure of many ills, including jet lag. |
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They only had rudimentary medicines like peppermint cure and hot lemon drinks to fight off the virus. |
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When you're first diagnosed, it's likely you'll be interested in treatments that cure cancer. |
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They have seen medications alleviate pain, cure infections, and diminish anxiety. |
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If the cancer has spread to other parts of your body, treatment will not cure the cancer. |
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And I think the best way to cure that problem is to show them some results. |
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They may have gone some way to cure the traffic problem in the village with the new ramps, but what about the roads themselves? |
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Making sure that waiting times are genuinely cut won't cure all the problems, but it would help. |
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We discussed why neither the old-time remedy of traditional reform nor the wonder drug of vouchers is likely to cure this problem. |
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The money will help to cure the flooding problem and will also ensure that the road surface water from the Carlow road will also be piped. |
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I believe that returning to the tradition is part of the way to cure the ethical problem. |
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Everything except the bacon is our own, and next year we hope to cure some pork for bacon so we'll be able to do it all ourselves. |
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It took her a few days to clean and cure the skins properly and salvage enough to do anything useful with them. |
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The lamp source is selected to provide the appropriate wavelength range of light to cure the material. |
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Waxes are not usually used to cure base concrete, but brooming to expose the aggregate surface removes the wax. |
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Synthetic rubber erasers are vulcanized to cure the rubber, but vinyl erasers skip this part. |
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The second exposure stage is further performed to cure the resin in the ultra-violet radiation system. |
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In addition to the lengthy hand lay-up of the materials, there is the use of an autoclave to cure the epoxy resin. |
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Because the big thing about the large reactors is, you have to pour concrete, and you have to cure the concrete. |
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Alum was used to cure leather and fix dyes in cloth as well as for medicinal purposes. |
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Now the builder simply waits for the epoxy to cure to a strong, translucent finish. |
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Therefore, waiting for the treatment to produce a cure is a common practice. |
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There was also a 1.7-times higher chance of cure in the fluticasone group than in the placebo group. |
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As with other chronic diseases, no cure is available for most types of arthritis including rheumatoid arthritis. |
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Today, she is desperately fighting for her life in hospital and a bone marrow transplant is the only thing that could cure her. |
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Here, we have a life-threatening illness for which we have no cure or medical vaccine. |
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There is a huge demand for venom, which is used to produce antivenin, the only known cure for the effects of snake venom. |
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To cure Fred of his practical joking, Barney convinces his friend that he is running a counterfeiting ring out of his basement. |
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Again, the only real cure to this neurosis, which is apparently taking on apocalyptic proportions, would be for him to feel good about himself. |
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Racial prejudice is like having a loathsome disease though, it's something you try to cure, and hide if you can't cure it. |
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But treatment with an antibiotic and loperamide often can cure you within 24 hours. |
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He invented the belief that one can cure an autistic child by using behaviorism. |
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Using drugs for everyday purposes, to cure headaches backache toothache and so on. |
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The environmental cost to cure the wood is small, though the carbon footprint is high. |
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We have regressed in our relationship to illness, and the example of diabetes illustrates how we have lost faith in science to cure physical ailment. |
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The temple is a number of buildings surrounding this man-made pool where devotees gather around and bathe themselves to purify and cure of any sickness. |
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The present invention relates to the use of certain prussiates for plant nutrition and for the prevention and cure of certain deficiency diseases in plants. |
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Their December 2003 publication in the journal Phytotherapy Research indicated that a noni extract produced a cure rate of 25-45 percent in an animal tumor model. |
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It is during this multi-crisis period that a victory from our athletes that could cure our mind-set, which is entrapped by the nightmare of sporting disasters. |
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Yes, Alicia Silverstone just offered to cure your thyroid condition and lower your risk of contracting cancer. |
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Every penny raised goes to help scientists who are working to cure cancer. |
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It is a disease that has been aided by misguided attempts to cure it. |
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This is not biltong, but medicine reputed to cure various ills. |
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Known endangered species are currently protected from any form of testing by law, with the exception of testing a cure which may be for the benefit of the particular species. |
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We started out looking for clues to a cure for Alzheimer's disease. |
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Tiger whiskers, eyes, brains, tails, and bones, in particular, are used in traditional remedies believed to cure ailments ranging from toothache to epilepsy. |
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We had to drive over rice to get here, laid out on the road to dry or cure or some other food processing I could not make out in the squall of information they gave me. |
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Trying to cure a broken heart, she set off on a trip to India. |
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They are the ones who are so easily turned away at hospitals with a painkiller to cure pulmonary tuberculosis and who are regarded as disposable members of our society. |
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Before antibiotics, most newborn eyes were treated with an antiseptic, and Barnes pushed Argyrol as the cure of choice. |
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So far, the first approach can only cure diabetic mice, while the second one can only breed mice designed not to become diabetic if their b cells are knocked out. |
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What cure I was looking for or asking for was unapparent to me, as was the gravel of being young, black, different, and unsuccessful in my own suicide. |
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Why bother to curb your appetite with a cure so close at hand? |
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The ancient Druids, powerful as they were, did not miraculously cure wounded warriors, make people invisible, or control the beasts and the birds. |
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The condition can cause stunted growth and mental disabilities, but with only about 2,000 sufferers worldwide, the search for a cure is extremely difficult to fund. |
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Scientists therefore have to examine all those genes en masse to cure or ameliorate the disease. |
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Back in the old days, the only cure for a werewolf was a silver bullet. |
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In 1519 the German humanist Ulrich von Hutton wrote a treatise on guaiacum, a new wonder drug from the Americas that was believed to cure syphilis. |
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Binders must have specific properties such as good adhesion, abrasion resistance, the ability to cure at room temperature, water resistance and ultraviolet light resistance. |
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After washing up and taking 2 aspirins in hope to cure my headache, I exit and re-enter my kitchen for what seems like the millionth time in the past 2 days. |
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For Randy, a 50-year-old ex-Mormon gay man, this cure was a particularly bitter pill to swallow. |
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But this is Hollywood, and no one's claiming to cure cancer here. |
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It was a new, ecological eye that saw new kinds of harms and legislated to cure them. |
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It is kill or cure both for the NHS and for the Government's reputation. |
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This technology is no cure all, but it would at least give the world a chance and the requisite breathing space to further develop alternative energy sources. |
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He will have noble, humane reasons for everything he does, and will want to invent a cure for cancer and communicate with a new life form in another galaxy. |
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Unless you have a permanent device I don't think you can cure the problem. |
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He died after a second bone marrow transplant could not cure the disease. |
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Since the late 1980s, doctors have been increasingly using internal radiation, also called radioactive seed implants or brachytherapy, to cure prostate cancer. |
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Since a miraculous cure to fix the ills of American health care is unlikely to happen quickly, to help you stay healthy to a ripe old age, what are your options? |
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We win every time we create a new job or cure an old ailment. |
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Giberti, like Sadoleto, chose to reside in his see, where he disciplined his clergy, reformed religious houses, and took the cure of souls seriously. |
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Forget breathing into a paper bag, gulping down a glass of water or having someone scare the living daylights out of you to cure a case of hiccups. |
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Proponents of coconut water claim it can boost your immunity, cure hangovers, and contains more potassium than two bananas. |
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Fans of the drink believe that it can boost qi, improve circulation, cure arthritis, and strengthen the body in general. |
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Members of the Banu Sa'd al-Din, a prominent Sufi family in Damascus, made talismans and charms which could reportedly heal the sick and cure the insane. |
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In one case it was discovered that they used the electrical charge of the Malapterusus electricus, a close relative of the electric eel, to cure certain kinds of pain. |
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Microbiologic cure used a four-point scale to document eradication of the pathogen, microbiologic persistence, indeterminate results, or missing data. |
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This clownesque mouthpiece claims to cure your saggy cheeks and tired muscles after three minutes a day of use. |
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Only tough love will cure them of this cancer that grows worse every year. |
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The doctors seeking a longevity cure for humans should study The Simpsons, and it continues to be this big, international hit. |
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Oblivious self-entitlement is now so widespread and suitable for mockery that the ostensible cure has begun to follow in its wake. |
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The only cure is for them to be caged in solid concrete walls. |
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They would now be able to understand such things as acupuncture, chi, orgone energy, telepathy, etc., as well as diagnose and cure whatever ails us. |
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All chapters and other benefices without cure of souls were now abolished. |
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It would be impossible to cure all that ailed the GOP in the course of a single calendar year. |
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I learnt how to make saucisson, cure ham and make a good black pudding. |
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As a homeopath I am used to people assuming that I can use remedies almost like a magic wand to cure skin conditions such as eczema and psoriasis. |
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Another cure is Kvass, a slightly alcoholic beverage made by soaking dried rye bread with sugar and yeast. |
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They are very good natured animals when domesticated, but I believe it to be impossible to cure that savageness, which all I have seen seem to possess. |
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And part of the reason that women wait so long is that they falsely believe that IVF is the magic cure all for infertility. |
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Nobody would hold up the single outpost of Moo Cluck Moo as a cure for the malady of low wages. |
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A conservative JournoList would hardly be the cure for that malady, if we can call it that. |
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The coronation ceremony stressed his semi-spiritual quality, which seemed proven by the alleged power of the royal touch to cure the skin disease scrofula. |
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Thermosets flow during molding and then cure or harden irreversibly. |
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Among the alchemists's asserted aims were the transmutation of base metals into gold, as well as the preparation of an elixir of longevity and a universal cure for illness. |
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I glued them on and allowed the glue to cure before continuing. |
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The anti-viral drugs would not offer a cure but could reduce the severity of symptoms although their precise use cannot be assessed until the precise flu strain is identified. |
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Marshmallow, which grows in the primordial bogs and swamplands, was harvested and used to fashion these crude idols, which were then devoured to cure thigh ache. |
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It sounds a bit thin compared to finding the cure for diseases or inventing those dimples that make golf balls fly farther, but I am sure it must have some value. |
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The intellectual descendants of Hobbes and Rousseau tend to regard government as either a cure for or a cause of violence. |
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She was a firm believer in barley sugar as a cure for travel sickness. |
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Fame in its highly diluted modern form provides a sort of homeopathic cure for the ancient evil of jealousy. |
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No wonder they're running to alternative medicine and paying good money to iridologists, aromatherapists and homosexualpaths to cure their cancer. |
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On the other hand I am the one sharing the bishop's cure of souls here, with responsibility to do what I can to instil sound teaching and believing. |
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Even now, stammering has remained a confusing speech impediment for the sufferer as well as for those who have attempted to cure it through medicines. |
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Can it, as researchers hypothesize, cure our jet lag and help us get pregnant? |
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I guess you could say it's a cure for creative constipation. |
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Every physical ailment is classified as warm or cold, and its cure depends on restoring the body's equilibrium by ingesting foods with the opposite properties. |
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His life's mission is to cure the world of the curse of infertility. |
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In this article, we'll examine the symptoms, the treatment, and the communicability of the disease, and we'll find out what is being done to cure and control the condition. |
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