pulmonary
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++pul·mo·na·ry /ˈpʊlmənəri, ˈpʌl- $ -neri, ˈpʌl-/ adjective [only before noun] medical HBHrelating to the lungs, or having an effect on the lungs 肺的;对肺有影响的
Examples from the Corpus
pulmonary• Some clinicians and microbiologists continue to believe that P cepacia is a marker for, rather than the cause of, pulmonary deterioration.• Symptomatic coccidioidomycosis has a wide clinical spectrum, ranging from mild influenza-like illness to serious pulmonary disease to widespread dissemination.• Mortality is 3-4%, mainly owing to opportunistic infections and pulmonary emboli.• They said she had pulmonary embolism and 7 days later, she died.• Most patients taking the pills do not develop pulmonary hypertension, he said.• Some researchers worry, however, that some cases of pulmonary hypertension may have been overlooked.• These include the more firmly established association between the drugs and a potentially fatal lung disease, primary pulmonary hypertension.• First, our population was limited to patients with sputum-smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis.Origin pulmonary (1700-1800) Latin pulmonarius, from pulmo “lung”pul·mo·na·ry adjectiveChineseSyllable
relating to the having lungs, Corpus or an effect the on
pulmonary
pul‧mo‧na‧ry /ˈpʊlmənəri, ˈpʌl- $ -neri, ˈpʌl-/
adjective [only before noun] medical
pul‧mo‧na‧ry /ˈpʊlmənəri, ˈpʌl- $ -neri, ˈpʌl-/
adjective [only before noun] medical Date: 1700-1800
Language: Latin
Origin: pulmonarius, from pulmo 'lung'
relating to the lungs, or having an effect on the lungs
Language: Latin
Origin: pulmonarius, from pulmo 'lung'