rabies

listen to the pronunciation of rabies
English - Turkish
{i} kuduz

Kuduz yeryüzündeki en ölümcül hastalıktır. - Rabies is the deadliest disease on earth.

Sen kuduza karşı aşılanmalısın. - You must be vaccinated against rabies.

(isim) kuduz
(Tıp) rabi
kuduz hastalığı

Bir sincap kızıma kuduz hastalığı bulaştırdı. - A squirrel transmitted rabies to my daughter.

anti-rabies vaccine
anti-kuduz aşısı
be attacked by rabies
kudurmak
Turkish - Turkish
Kuduz hastalığının etkeni olan virüs
Kuduz
English - English
A viral disease that causes acute encephalitis in warm-blooded animals and people, characterised by abnormal behaviour such as excitement, aggressiveness, and dementia, followed by paralysis and death
a widespread, viral infection of warm-blooded animals Caused by a virus in the Rhabdoviridae family, it attacks the nervous system and, once symptoms develop, it is 100 percent fatal in animals
an acute, usually fatal disease, a form of viral encephalitis, that is transmitted through the saliva of an infected animal (usually a dog, cat, skunk, or raccoon) (Morris 1992)
an acute viral disease of the nervous system of warm-blooded animals (usually transmitted by the bite of a rabid animal); rabies is fatal if the virus reaches the brain
an acute, infectious, often fatal viral disease of most warm blooded animals especially wolves, cats and dogs The virus attacks the central nervous system and is transmitted by the bite of an infected animal Reproduction - to produce another living thing of the same kind Subordinate - not the leader The subordinate will follow the leader (dominate) animal A low ranking animal
a widespread, viral infection spread through the bite of certain warm-blooded animals It attacks the nervous system and, if left untreated, is 100 percent fatal in animals
{i} infectious fatal viral disease carried by animals (can be transmitted to humans)
Same as Hydrophobia (b); canine madness
Rabies is a serious disease which causes people and animals to go mad and die. Rabies is particularly common in dogs. a very dangerous disease that affects dogs and other animals, and that you can catch if you are bitten by an infected animal (RAGE). Acute, usually fatal infectious disease of warm-blooded animals that attacks the central nervous system. It is spread by contact with an infected animal's saliva, usually from a bite. The rhabdovirus that causes it spreads along nerve tissue from the wound to the brain. Symptoms usually appear four to six weeks later, often beginning with irritability and aggressiveness. Wild animals lose their fear of humans and are easily provoked to bite, as are pets. Depression and paralysis soon follow. Death usually comes three to five days after symptoms begin. In humans, death can result from a seizure in the early phase even before symptoms of central nervous system depression develop. One name for rabies, hydrophobia ("fear of water"), comes from painful throat contraction on trying to swallow. If not treated in time (within a day or two) with a serum containing antibodies and then a series of vaccinations, rabies in humans is almost always fatal. Immediate cleansing of animal bites with soap and water can remove much of the virus
a widespread, viral infection of warm-blooded animals; caused by a virus in the Rhabdoviridae family, it attacks the nervous system and, once symptoms develop, it is 100 percent fatal in animals
An extremely contagious zoonotic virus that primarily affects the nervous system Pronunciation: Ray*bees • (noun) Also Known As: Hydrophobia Examples: Rabies is such a dangerous problem, that most governments have made it the law to have all domestic pets vaccinated for prevention Common Misspellings: Rabes Zoonotic Diseases Veterinary Q & A: Rabies Related Terms Zoonotic Vaccine
canine madness
anti-rabies vaccine
immunization which prevents infection with the virus that causes rabies
vaccination against rabies
vaccine given to prevent being infected with rabies
rabies

    Hyphenation

    ra·bies

    Turkish pronunciation

    reybiz

    Synonyms

    hydrophobia

    Pronunciation

    /ˈrābēz/ /ˈreɪbiːz/

    Etymology

    () From Latin rabiēs (“rage, madness, fury”), from rabere (“to be angry, be mad, rave”).
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