AIDS
51Aids — One of the obligations or *feudal incidents of a tenant requiring him to make payments of money to his lord. Requests were prompted by many occasions; however, *Magna Carta imposed limits. *Bracton distinguished between services or concomitant… …
52AIDS — {{hw}}{{aids}}{{/hw}}o aids s. m. o raro f. inv. Malattia infettiva virale altamente letale che colpisce il sistema immunitario. ETIMOLOGIA: sigla dell ingl. A(cquired) I(mmuno) D(eficiency) S(yndrome) sindrome da immunodeficienza acquisita …
53AIDS — med., vet. • immuunikato, aids …
54aids — med., vet. • immuunikato, AIDS …
55AIDS — med., vet. • aids …
56aids — med., vet. • AIDS …
57Aids — (also AIDS) noun a disease, caused by a virus transmitted in body fluids, in which there is a severe loss of cellular immunity that leaves the sufferer susceptible to infection and malignancy. Origin 1980s: acronym from acquired immune deficiency …
58AIDS — I. /eɪdz / (say aydz) noun a disease caused by a retrovirus (HIV) which destroys the body s white cells, resulting in reduced immunity and therefore a susceptibility to infections, tumours, etc. {a(cquired) i(mmune) d(eficiency) s(yndrome)} II.… …
59aids — priemonės statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. aids; facilities; means; toots vok. Hilfen, f; Mittel, n rus. средства, n pranc. moyens, m …
60aids — See suspension aids …