epidemic
英 [epɪ'demɪk]
美 [,ɛpɪ'dɛmɪk]
- adj. 流行的;传染性的
- n. 传染病;流行病;风尚等的流行
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epidemic 流行的epi-, 在上,在中。-demo, 人民,词源同demotic, democracy.
- epidemic
- epidemic: [17] An epidemic is literally something that has an effect ‘among the people’. The word comes from French épidémique, a derivative of the noun épidémie, which goes back via late Latin epidēmia to Greek epidēmíā ‘disease prevalent among the people’. This was a noun use of epidémios, a compound adjective formed from the prefix epí- ‘among’ and demos ‘people’ (source of English democracy).
=> democracy - epidemic (adj.)
- c. 1600, "common to or affecting a whole people," originally and usually, though not etymologically, in reference to diseases, from French épidémique, from épidemié "an epidemic disease," from Medieval Latin epidemia, from Greek epidemia "a stay in a place; prevalence of an epidemic disease" (especially the plague), from epi "among, upon" (see epi-) + demos "people, district" (see demotic).
- epidemic (n.)
- 1757, "an epidemic disease, a temporary prevalence of a disease throughout a community," from epidemic (adj.); earlier epideme (see epidemy). An Old English noun for this (persisting in Middle English) was man-cwealm.
- 1. Drug experts say it could spell the end of the crack epidemic.
- 禁毒专家说它可能会结束强效可卡因吸食泛滥的局面。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. Health officials have successfully confined the epidemic to the Tabatinga area.
- 卫生官员成功地将疫情控制在塔巴廷加地区。
来自柯林斯例句
- 3. The major impact of this epidemic worldwide is yet to come.
- 这种传染病在世界范围内的重大影响还未完全显现。
来自柯林斯例句
- 4. The AIDS epidemic further stigmatised gays.
- 艾滋病的流行让人们更加瞧不起男同性恋者。
来自柯林斯例句
- 5. Today, doctors are fearing a worldwide epidemic.
- 现今,医生们担心会爆发世界性的流行病。
来自柯林斯例句