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5 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
nurse
/ˈnɝs/
護士,保姆,奶媽(vt.)看護,照顧,栽培(vi.)喂奶,看護病人
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
nurse
/ˈnɝs/
名詞
護士,護理,照料
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Nurse
n.
1.
One
who
nourishes
;
a
person
who
supplies
food
,
tends
,
or
brings
up
;
as
:
(a)
A
woman
who
has
the
care
of
young
children
;
especially
,
one
who
suckles
an
infant
not
her
own
.
(b)
A
person
,
especially
a
woman
,
who
has
the
care
of
the
sick
or
infirm
.
2.
One
who
,
or
that
which
,
brings
up
,
rears
,
causes
to
grow
,
trains
,
fosters
,
or
the
like
.
The
nurse
of
manly
sentiment
and
heroic
enterprise
.
--
Burke
.
3.
Naut.
A
lieutenant
or
first
officer
,
who
is
the
real
commander
when
the
captain
is
unfit
for
his
place
.
4.
Zool.
(a)
A
peculiar
larva
of
certain
trematodes
which
produces
cercariae
by
asexual
reproduction
.
See
Cercaria
,
and
Redia
.
(b)
Either
one
of
the
nurse
sharks
.
Nurse shark
.
Zool.
(a)
A
large
arctic
shark
(
Somniosus microcephalus
),
having
small
teeth
and
feeble
jaws
; --
called
also
sleeper shark
,
and
ground shark
.
(b)
A
large
shark
(
Ginglymostoma cirratum
),
native
of
the
West
Indies
and
Gulf
of
Mexico
,
having
the
dorsal
fins
situated
behind
the
ventral
fins
.
To put to nurse
,
or
To put out to nurse
,
to
send
away
to
be
nursed
;
to
place
in
the
care
of
a
nurse
.
Wet nurse
,
Dry nurse
.
See
Wet nurse
,
and
Dry nurse
,
in
the
Vocabulary
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Nurse
,
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Nursed
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Nursing
.]
1.
To
nourish
;
to
cherish
;
to
foster
;
as
:
(a)
To
nourish
at
the
breast
;
to
suckle
;
to
feed
and
tend
,
as
an
infant
.
(b)
To
take
care
of
or
tend
,
as
a
sick
person
or
an
invalid
;
to
attend
upon
.
Sons
wont
to
nurse
their
parents
in
old
age
.
--
Milton
.
Him
in
Egerian
groves
Aricia
bore
,
And
nursed
his
youth
along
the
marshy
shore
. --
Dryden
.
2.
To
bring
up
;
to
raise
,
by
care
,
from
a
weak
or
invalid
condition
;
to
foster
;
to
cherish
; --
applied
to
plants
,
animals
,
and
to
any
object
that
needs
,
or
thrives
by
,
attention
.
“To
nurse
the
saplings
tall.”
By
what
hands
[
has
vice
]
been
nursed
into
so
uncontrolled
a
dominion?
--
Locke
.
3.
To
manage
with
care
and
economy
,
with
a
view
to
increase
;
as
,
to
nurse
our
national
resources
.
4.
To
caress
;
to
fondle
,
as
a
nurse
does
.
To nurse billiard balls
,
to
strike
them
gently
and
so
as
to
keep
them
in
good
position
during
a
series
of
caroms
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
nurse
n
1:
one
skilled
in
caring
for
young
children
or
the
sick
(
usually
under
the
supervision
of
a
physician
)
2:
a
woman
who
is
the
custodian
of
children
[
syn
:
nanny
,
nursemaid
]
v
1:
try
to
cure
by
special
care
of
treatment
,
of
an
illness
or
injury
; "
He
nursed
his
cold
with
Chinese
herbs
"
2:
maintain
(
a
theory
,
thoughts
,
or
feelings
); "
bear
a
grudge
";
"
entertain
interesting
notions
"; "
harbor
a
resentment
"
[
syn
:
harbor
,
harbour
,
hold
,
entertain
]
3:
serve
as
a
nurse
;
care
for
sick
or
handicapped
people
4:
treat
carefully
; "
He
nursed
his
injured
back
by
liyng
in
bed
several
hours
every
afternoon
"; "
He
nursed
the
flowers
in
his
garden
and
fertilized
them
regularly
"
5:
give
suck
to
; "
The
wetnurse
suckled
the
infant
"; "
You
cannot
nurse
your
baby
in
public
in
some
places
" [
syn
:
breastfeed
,
bottle-feed
,
suckle
,
suck
,
wet-nurse
,
lactate
,
give suck
] [
ant
:
bottlefeed
]
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