Imperative |
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nurse |
nurse |
Noun | 1. | ![]() foster-nurse - a nurse who raises another woman's child as her own graduate nurse, trained nurse - someone who has completed the course of study (including hospital practice) at a nurses training school head nurse - the person in charge of nursing in a medical institution caregiver, health care provider, health professional, PCP, primary care provider - a person who helps in identifying or preventing or treating illness or disability licensed practical nurse, LPN, practical nurse - a nurse who has enough training to be licensed by a state to provide routine care for the sick matron - a woman in charge of nursing in a medical institution accoucheuse, midwife - a woman skilled in aiding the delivery of babies probationer, student nurse - a nurse in training who is undergoing a trial period registered nurse, RN - a graduate nurse who has passed examinations for registration scrub nurse - a nurse who helps a surgeon prepare for surgery visiting nurse - a nurse who is paid to visit the sick in their homes nurse-patient relation - the responsibility of a nurse to act in the best interests of the patient |
2. | ![]() dry nurse - a nurse who cares for but does not suckle an infant keeper - someone in charge of other people; "am I my brother's keeper?" adult female, woman - an adult female person (as opposed to a man); "the woman kept house while the man hunted" | |
Verb | 1. | nurse - try to cure by special care of treatment, of an illness or injury; "He nursed his cold with Chinese herbs" practice of medicine, medicine - the learned profession that is mastered by graduate training in a medical school and that is devoted to preventing or alleviating or curing diseases and injuries; "he studied medicine at Harvard" |
2. | nurse - maintain (a theory, thoughts, or feelings); "bear a grudge"; "entertain interesting notions"; "harbor a resentment" feel, experience - undergo an emotional sensation or be in a particular state of mind; "She felt resentful"; "He felt regret" | |
3. | nurse - serve as a nurse; care for sick or handicapped people | |
4. | nurse - treat carefully; "He nursed his injured back by lying in bed several hours every afternoon"; "He nursed the flowers in his garden and fertilized them regularly" | |
5. | nurse - give suck to; "The wetnurse suckled the infant"; "You cannot nurse your baby in public in some places" suck - draw into the mouth by creating a practical vacuum in the mouth; "suck the poison from the place where the snake bit"; "suck on a straw"; "the baby sucked on the mother's breast" |