Healed in a sentence as an adjective

Sick people don’t get healed in jail. See, it makes no sense."

Were it not for all of these shenanigans maybe we could have all healed from 9/11 by now.

For a split second there I thought the world had been suddenly healed of a great evil and had great joy. Alas, it passed.

We're not anywhere close to being healed yet, and I don't know how long it will take to put the pieces back together."

Because the current system/society, as it stand, is dying body that cannot be healed. It is too old.

Once your leg has healed, you don't need the crutch. If you're clinically depressed, going out and doing things you'd otherwise enjoy is hard.

I'll share mine, what I did to get deaden it, and how I finally healed it. I'm 31 now, have a wife, exciting job, close friends, and most of all, I'm happy.

Then my eyes healed and I quit buying it. A month later I get a coupon generated by a Target cash register for Systane drops, the exact brand I used to buy.

Given that it was token ring that might have isolated the AS/400 but the MAU would have healed the ring and everything would have been fine.

Some scars are still not completely healed. Those words, "His demise should be welcome by all who believe in peace and human dignity", simply serve as solace for the fact that they were unable to take him alive.

There's more to sight than light - eg when Jesus healed the blind dude in the Bible it took two steps, the first to restore vision, a second to restore perception.

We're not anywhere close to being healed yet and I don't know how long it will take to put the pieces back together." We don't know the circumstances under which the father and his then-girlfriend had given up their son for adoption.

And at the end it would declare such a version to be "healed". However, what I described above works in case you want to introduce a new server in production immediately.

That would never make sense, because the bone would have healed in that time in the incorrect position, and then require expensive surgery to re-set it. It's so obviously nonsense.

Her face didn't need surgery since the fractures healed within millimeters of their original positions. The brain is the last thing to heal, and she is a different person than she used to be, most people who didn't know her before won't notice.

Suggesting that autism can be healed or that there are children "who no longer have autism" is very misleading. Individuals can learn how to deal with the symptoms of autism and how to appear "normal" to others, but that doesn't make it a cure.

When successfully healed, sufferers are usually extremely grateful to their psychiatrist, feeling that they owe them their life. You only hear in the media and online about the times when it all goes wrong, because it makes a good story.

Which is better: "You'll never have use of that leg again" followed by a success story due to hard work and PT, or "Don't worry brah, that'll be healed in like two weeks" followed by a long slog of missed goals, unmet promises, and malpractice lawsuits? "You said I'd be walking in two weeks, and it's been two months!"

This would be a valid comparison if the bridge healed itself. Similarly, walking damages your leg bones due to the impact / stress of gravity - but your bones actually strengthen due to use, as they are continuously being rebuilt, and they adapt to such changes.

People end up thinking that the money they save will disappear with unexpected expenses, so they spend it, because the stress of not having enough money to eat is 'healed' by wasting money, which later makes sure you won't have any money to eat. It's a feedback loop, as bad choices lead to bad outcomes, which increase the chances of even more bad choices.

In some tales, humanity lives in a world in which objects think and speak, aging can be banished, wounds healed with a touch, and spirits and gods watch over all - and with progress in artificial intelligence and biotechnology most of that will come to pass. There are good reasons why certain forms of story survive the millennia: they attract us and steer us just as much as we steer them.

They could have added some complicated address negotiation protocol and then handled address collisions when partitioned networks healed, but it was "olden times" and something that complicated would not have gained traction. Fast forward to Wi-Fi. The reason you have Wi-Fi instead of any number of other wireless ideas that died is because it looks like ethernet so people didn't have to think much about it, so you inherit that baggage.

But as the stumps of harpoons are frequently found in the dead bodies of captured whales, with the flesh perfectly healed around them, and no prominence of any kind to denote their place; therefore, there must needs have been some other unknown reason in the present case fully to account for the ulceration alluded to. But still more curious was the fact of a lance-head of stone being found in him, not far from the buried iron, the flesh perfectly firm about it.

: "We waste so much energy trying to cover up who we are when beneath every attitude is the want to be loved, and beneath every anger is a wound to be healed and beneath every sadness is the fear that there will not be enough time. When we hesitate in being direct, we unknowingly slip something on, some added layer of protection that keeps us from feeling the world, and often that thin covering is the beginning of a loneliness which, if not put down, diminishes our chances of joy.

Healed 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: cured recovered