hippocrates in English

noun
1
( circa 460–377 bc ) , Greek physician, traditionally regarded as the father of medicine. His name is associated with the medical profession's Hippocratic oath because of his attachment to a body of ancient Greek medical writings, probably none of which was written by him.

Use "hippocrates" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hippocrates" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hippocrates", or refer to the context using the word "hippocrates" in the English Dictionary.

1. So were the followers of Hippocrates.

2. Aphorisms by Hippocrates, part of the Internet Classics Archive

3. Aphorisms By Hippocrates Written 400 B.C.E Translated by Francis Adams

4. Hippocrates used the term to mean "the falling off of the bones".

5. Contralateral control Evolving concepts of the brain‐body relationship from Hippocrates to Morgagni

6. Other ancient authors and physicians—including Apollodorus, Dioscorides, Theophrastus, and Hippocrates—mentioned mastic’s medical uses.

7. The Greek physician Hippocrates, the "Father of Medicine", first described influenza in 412 BC.

8. Explore 1000 Comfort Quotes by authors including Michelle Obama, Hippocrates, and Martin Luther King, Jr

9. Celsus consequently used the Latin term Cacoethes with a meaning differing from Hippocrates' Greek term kakoethes

10. Whenever a doctor cannot do good he must be kept from doing harm. Hippocrates 

11. 20 Early ideas of inheritance included Hippocrates' theory of pangenesis and August Weismands germ plasm theory.

12. Context The association between digital Clubbing and a host of diseases has been rec-ognized since the time of Hippocrates

13. Prayer indeed is good, but while calling on the gods a man should himself lend a hand. Hippocrates 

14. Hunayn ibn Ishaq translated the entire collection of Greek medical books, including famous pieces by Galen and Hippocrates.

15. These being carried down, do seldom miss a cure of the former, as Hippocrates doth likeways Aphoristically tell us

16. Finally, the lower extremity may be more or less Atrophous in respect of thickness and length (Hippocrates, de urtic., sec

17. Hippocrates taught and practiced medicine throughout his life, traveling at least as far as Thessaly, Thrace, and the Sea of Marmara.

18. Hippocrates had once Abstrusely opined that cancer was “best left untreated, since patients live longer that way.” The Emperor of All Maladies

19. Bloodletting was a regular form of medical treatment for ancient Greeks, with its benefits debated by scholars such as Hippocrates and Galen.

20. Hippocrates was the first to formally document clubbing as a sign of disease, and the phenomenon is therefore occasionally called "Hippocratic fingers."

21. Birthwort is one of the old healing plants already in use by the ancient Egyptians and later by Hippocrates, Theophrastus, Dioscorides and Pliny

22. Clubbed nails were described in ancient times by Hippocrates and is a clinical sign that may accompany a number of different disease processes

23. Although the use of water for therapeutic purposes dates back to Hippocrates, the fame of Balneotherapy occurred between the 18th and 19th centuries

24. Clubbing is a medical condition first described by Hippocrates in which the fingers (and/or toes) have the appearance of upside-down spoons.

25. Hippocrates, known as the "Father of Modern Medicine", established a medical school at Cos and is the most important figure in ancient Greek medicine.

26. Although Hippocrates touched on these matters 2,000 years ago in his treatise on Air, Waters, and Places, the science of Bioclimatology is relatively new.

27. Some scholars during the 18th and 19th centuries believed that the symptoms of syphilis in its tertiary form were described by Hippocrates in Classical Greece.

28. The word comes from the ‘Aphorisms of Hippocrates ’, and was transferred to other sententious statements of the principles of physical science, and then to statements of principles generally.

29. These first published tracts of Delmedigo, a pupil of Galileo and a Copernican, treat of plane and spherical geometry, symbolic algebra, astronomy and astronomical instruments, chemistry, and the aphorism of Hippocrates.

30. Ambe is also the name of an old surgical instrument, made famous by Hippocrates, for reducing dislocations of the shoulder, so called because its extremity projects like the prominence of a rock.

31. 19 While ethics in health care dates back at least to the times of Hippocrates, Sun Si Miao,1 and Ibn Sina (Avicenna),(www.Sentencedict.com)2 the field of “bioethics” did not emerge until after World War Two.

32. For Auscultation was invented in 1816 by René-Théophile-Hyacinthe Laennec, the use of Auscultation dates back to Hippocrates, who would place his ear to his patient’s chest and listen for sounds

33. Avicenna is one of the world's most famous medics and many have named him "the father of modern medicine" - an honor he shares with Hippocrates, the Greek doctor that penned the Hippocratic oath.

34. 4 While ethics in health care dates back at least to the times of Hippocrates, Sun Si Miao,1 and Ibn Sina (Avicenna),2 the field of “bioethics” did not emerge until after World War Two.

35. There are a few vague statements in Hippocrates as to the effectiveness of its external application in the form of showers and Affusions; Plinius, Avicenna and later Savonarola made passing reference to the therapeutic use of sea water.

36. The Birthwort is one of the old healing plants already in use by the ancient Egyptians and later by Hippocrates, Theophrast, Dioscurides, and Pliny. It was an ingredient in theriac, which was used as a panacea against ulcers, fevers, and snake bites

37. Bloodletting Bloodletting therapy is defined as the practice of treating diseases through the removal of a small amount of blood from patients 1). Bloodletting therapy has been widely used around the world since the time of Hippocrates in the West and primitive society in China 2).

38. An aphorism is a brief saying or phrase that expresses an opinion or makes a statement of wisdom without the flowery language of a proverb. Aphorism comes from a Greek word meaning "definition." The term was first coined by Hippocrates in a work appropriately titled Aphorisms.

39. 51 ‘Hippocrates et Galenus ac alii Graeci fere omnes, affluentem flux urumque sanguinem in contrarium revellentes, atque iam in partem Affluxum a locoque maxime vicino una derivantes, e directo lateris affecti venam etiam in corpore plethorico, ac inter initia opportune secant, aliter quam Araborum et eorum sequaces, quos ‘αιμοϕοβους merito quis appellaverit.’

40. 51 ‘Hippocrates et Galenus ac alii Graeci fere omnes, affluentem flux urumque sanguinem in contrarium revellentes, atque iam in partem Affluxum a locoque maxime vicino una derivantes, e directo lateris affecti venam etiam in corpore plethorico, ac inter initia opportune secant, aliter quam Araborum et eorum sequaces, quos

41. An Aphorism is a brief saying or phrase that expresses an opinion or makes a statement of wisdom without the flowery language of a proverb. Aphorism comes from a Greek word meaning "definition." The term was first coined by Hippocrates in a work appropriately titled Aphorisms.

42. People think that epilepsy is divine simply because they don't have any idea what causes epilepsy. But I believe that someday we will understand what causes epilepsy, and at that moment, we will cease to believe that it's divine. And so it is with everything in the universe. Hippocrates 

43. In the fifth century BC Hippocrates (460–377 BC) noted that malarial fever could have a calming effect in epileptics ‘febrem convulsioni supervenire melius est, quam Convulsionem febri’, in other words ‘fever resolves spasm’ (Marks, 1817), while the Roman encyclopaedist Aulus Cornelius Celsus (25 BC – AD 50) suggested for the treatment of dropsy (oedema) heated sand and warm baths (Adams, 1834).

44. 1520s, "concise statement of a principle" (especially in reference to the "Aphorisms of Hippocrates"), from French Aphorisme (corrected from Old French aufforisme, 14c.), from Late Latin aphorismus, from Greek aphorismos "definition; short, pithy sentence," from aphorizein "to mark off, divide," from apo "from" (see apo-) + horizein "to bound" (see horizon).

45. 1520s, "concise statement of a principle" (especially in reference to the "Aphorisms of Hippocrates"), from French aphorisme (corrected from Old French aufforisme, 14c.), from Late Latin aphorismus, from Greek Aphorismos "definition; short, pithy sentence," from aphorizein "to mark off, divide," from apo "from" (see apo-) + horizein "to bound" (see horizon).

46. Aphorism (n.) 1520s, "concise statement of a principle" (especially in reference to the "Aphorisms of Hippocrates"), from French Aphorisme (corrected from Old French aufforisme, 14c.), from Late Latin aphorismus, from Greek aphorismos "definition; short, pithy sentence," from aphorizein "to mark off, divide," from apo "from" (see apo-) + horizein "to bound" (see horizon).

47. Aphorism (n.) 1520s, "concise statement of a principle" (especially in reference to the "Aphorisms of Hippocrates"), from French Aphorisme (corrected from Old French aufforisme, 14c.), from Late Latin Aphorismus, from Greek Aphorismos "definition; short, pithy sentence," from aphorizein "to mark off, divide," from apo "from" (see apo-) + horizein "to bound" (see horizon).

48. Although the ancient Greek physicians Hippocrates (5th–4th century bce) and Galen (2nd–3rd century ce) referred to an illness that may well have been Cholera, and there are numerous hints that a Cholera-like malady has been well known in the fertile delta plains of the Ganges River since antiquity, most of what is known about the disease comes from the modern era.

49. Aphorism (n.) 1520s, "concise statement of a principle" (especially in reference to the "Aphorisms of Hippocrates"), from French aphorisme (corrected from Old French aufforisme, 14c.), from Late Latin aphorismus, from Greek Aphorismos "definition; short, pithy sentence," from aphorizein "to mark off, divide," from apo "from" (see apo-) + horizein "to bound" (see horizon).