cure (ky r)n.1. Restoration of health; recovery from disease. 2. A method or course of medical treatment used to restore health. 3. An agent, such as a drug, that restores health; a remedy. 4. Something that corrects or relieves a harmful or disturbing situation: The cats proved to be a good cure for our mouse problem. 5. Ecclesiastical Spiritual charge or care, as of a priest for a congregation. 6. The office or duties of a curate. 7. The act or process of preserving a product. v. cured, cur·ing, cures v.tr.1. To restore to health. 2. To effect a recovery from: cure a cold. 3. To remove or remedy (something harmful or disturbing): cure an evil. 4. To preserve (meat, for example), as by salting, smoking, or aging. 5. To prepare, preserve, or finish (a substance) by a chemical or physical process. 6. To vulcanize (rubber). v.intr.1. To effect a cure or recovery: a medicine that cures. 2. To be prepared, preserved, or finished by a chemical or physical process: hams curing in the smokehouse.
[Middle English, from Old French, medical treatment, from Latin c ra, from Archaic Latin coisa-.]
cur er n. cure less adj. Synonyms: cure, heal, remedy These verbs mean to set right an undesirable or unhealthy condition: cure an ailing economy; heal a wounded spirit; remedy a structural defect. |
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | curing - the process of becoming hard or solid by cooling or drying or crystallization; "the hardening of concrete"; "he tested the set of the glue"plastination - a process involving fixation and dehydration and forced impregnation and hardening of biological tissues; water and lipids are replaced by curable polymers (silicone or epoxy or polyester) that are subsequently hardened; "the plastination of specimens is valuable for research and teaching" |
How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
|