sclerosis
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++scle·ro·sis /sklɪˈrəʊsɪs $ -ˈroʊ-/ noun [uncountable] technical MIa disease that causes an organ or soft part of your body to become hard 硬化(症) —sclerotic /skləˈrɒtɪk $ -ˈrɑː-/ adjective → multiple sclerosis
Examples from the Corpus
sclerosis• Conditions such as diabetes, heart complaints, multiple sclerosis and alcoholism should be declared.• The woman suffered from multiple sclerosis, Fieger said.• John hopes that his mammoth walking achievement will raise £100 000 for research into multiple sclerosis.• Posterior fossa neoplasms or multiple sclerosis may rarely cause vertigo or hearing loss.• But then du Pre was stricken with multiple sclerosis and the fairytale quickly unravelled.• Two women with multiple sclerosis, including a 51-year-old Oceanside resident, were found dead in Detroit-area hotels yesterday.• Multiple sclerosis can cause facial pain indistinguishable from idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia.• This damages the liver leading to sclerosis and scarring.Origin sclerosis (1300-1400) Medieval Latin Greek sklerosis “hardening”, from skleros “hard”scle·ro·sis nounChineseSyllable
disease or a soft that an causes Corpus organ
sclerosis
scle‧ro‧sis /skləˈrəʊsəs, sklɪˈrəʊsəs $ -ˈroʊ-/
noun [uncountable] technical
—sclerotic /skləˈrɒtɪk, sklɪˈrɒtɪk $ -ˈrɑː-/ adjective
⇨ multiple sclerosis
scle‧ro‧sis /skləˈrəʊsəs, sklɪˈrəʊsəs $ -ˈroʊ-/
noun [uncountable] technical Date: 1300-1400
Language: Medieval Latin
Origin: Greek sklerosis 'hardening', from skleros 'hard'
a disease that causes an organ or soft part of your body to become hardLanguage: Medieval Latin
Origin: Greek sklerosis 'hardening', from skleros 'hard'
—sclerotic /skləˈrɒtɪk, sklɪˈrɒtɪk $ -ˈrɑː-/ adjective
⇨ multiple sclerosis