Cured in a sentence as an adjective

Enjoy sleeping in the bed you made, and here's hoping you will be permanently cured of f##king with us in the future, a##hole." The police are set upon from all sides.

The first Iraq cured me of any belief in what governments ask citizens to believe. I feel deep terror at what our government will do to us.

I'm not cured - I don't like certain situations and those can still bring out an attack. The good news is that it's now at a point where I can fight back and "be brave", which I always though would fix it but never did.

He's claiming it cured his skin disease, gave him mental superpowers, has him in the best shape of his life, it gives him more energy, it tastes great, and costs $150 a month. Reads like a sleazy wonderpill ad.

The 4th person is not fully cured and suffers bouts. Any amount of different ***** and treatments have not completely controlled the condition.

I can't say I'm cured, because there's a possibility I might relapse at some point in the future. But I have acquired the skills, knowledge, and support network that I know, without a doubt, I would be able to beat it back down again.

In the process, I think we all developed and we are extremely lucky to now read this article and know that he is very close to be one of these few cases that are "cured". \nI will just leave this here, in case someone is going through the same situation.

Personally, I'm not the fan of the "don't spend money on anything until the world's problems have been cured" style of thinking, but it's certainly a novel idea. Now all they have to do is fix the title of the signup page.

Until this irrational fear of quack medicine is cured, there will be no real progress in the field. The entire process we call "drug development" is an attempt to gain six-sigma confidence that we are not practicing quack medicine.

He had a biopsy taken on himself to prove it was the bacteria, and then cured himself with a course of antibiotics - the same way ulcers are cured today. Ulcers are not a chronic disease any more, and stomach cancer has become rare.

There are countless bipolar patients out there who struggle every day with their medications; the costs, the terrible side effects, and who fight a battle of willpower to stay on them despite feeling "cured". One article like this, one claim to the opposite, is all it takes to break them.

This is the primary reason why cancer survivors have 5Y and 10Y survival rates as opposed to, "You're cured". The mechanism and time in a cancer at which this happens depends on so many factors its currently almost impossible the predict.

The team showed how modifying a certain kind of stem cell found in the body normally to have the correct copy of the enzyme cured several patients. The corrected cells naturally move to the brain where they differentiate into glial cells and produce the correct copy of the enzyme.

This isn't true only about CS and CompEng, it's happening in fields like EE and Mechanical Engineering, but the proportion of mission-critical applications in those fields is slightly higher, so most of the hipsters get cured after their first months on the job. Turns out this system, while being almost satisfactory for the industry, breeds very bad researchers.

On the one end we have "Oh man, iPad air only has 1GB of RAM and 16GB of flash, how stupid" and on the other end we have "iPad hasn't cured cancer yet; would have expected more from Apple under Steve Jobs." Has it occurred to people to like, take a step back for a moment and think about how amazing it is that we as a society have advanced to the point where we can even have something like iPad?

Agriculture may diminish its labour and double its produce; all diseases may by sure means be prevented or cured, not excepting even that of old age, and our lives lengthened at pleasure even beyond the antediluvian standard. O that moral science were in as fair a way of improvement, that men would cease to be wolves to one another, and that human beings would at length learn what they now improperly call humanity!"

I am not completely cured of the habit, but what helped me with this -- and more importantly, what helped me actually begin finishing things -- is simply being very careful to only talk about what I've done, not what I'm working on or what I'm planning. There's this thing called "substitute for completion" where if you talk about some project, even one with hundreds of hours of work remaining, your brain gets the same reward as actually completing it.

This is a conception that some popular science writing installs in many people and that could easily be cured by tracking the long history of many things we consider simple, in which at least tens of people contributed ideas that made the final invention tick. The article sums it up very well: First of all, Id contend that nearly every invention in the engineering or sciences is an improvement on what has come before such as Teslas improvements to alternating current.

Cured definitions

adjective

freed from illness or injury; "the patient appears cured"; "the incision is healed"; "appears to be entirely recovered"; "when the recovered patient tries to remember what occurred during his delirium"- Normon Cameron

See also: healed recovered

adjective

(used of rubber) treated by a chemical or physical process to improve its properties (hardness and strength and odor and elasticity)

See also: vulcanized vulcanised

adjective

(used of concrete or mortar) kept moist to assist the hardening

adjective

(used of hay e.g.) allowed to dry

adjective

(used especially of meat) cured in brine

See also: corned

adjective

(used of tobacco) aging as a preservative process (`aged' is pronounced as one syllable)

See also: aged