MOTS EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «MITHRIDATISM»
mithridatism
snake
venom
practice
pronounce
cyanide
mithridatism
protecting
oneself
against
poison
gradually
self
administering
lethal
amounts
word
derives
from
mithridates
king
pontus
feared
being
poisoned
that
regularly
ingested
small
medical
more
merriam
webster
tolerance
acquired
taking
increased
biographical
note
mith
meaning
pronunciation
translations
define
production
action
origin
after
said
have
wordsmith
father
wonder
wanted
story
goes
defeat
pompey
wiktionary
article
uncountable
development
gradual
ingestion
successively
wordreference
ˈmɪθrɪdeɪˌtɪzəm
large
prior
mithridatic
ˌmɪθrɪˈdætɪk
ˈdeɪ
defined
larger
views
immunization
10 LIVRES EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «MITHRIDATISM»
Découvrez l'usage de
mithridatism dans la sélection bibliographique suivante. Des livres en rapport avec
mithridatism et de courts extraits de ceux-ci pour replacer dans son contexte son utilisation littéraire.
1
Poison Eaters: Snakes, Opium, Arsenic, and the Lethal Show
Mithridatism described a possible exemption by returning to the achieved
immunities of the past. Mithridatism was possible with typhoid: people who had
lived in an en- vironment saturated with typhoid acquired a capacity to fend off
the ...
2
Love, Drugs, Art, Religion: The Pains and Consolations of ...
Mithridatism. Thus far, our enquiry has yielded two possible ways in which art
may be said to mitigate suffering: it might cause pleasure in us, thus
offsettingpain;orthe disinterestedness inherent in aesthetic engagement might
produce an ...
3
Handbook of Chemicals and Safety
The term mithridatism is well known in pharmacology. It is named after King
Mithridates of Pontus (112–63 BC), an enemy of the Roman Empire. To avoid
being assassinated, he took small doses of poison to immunize himself against it.
4
The passions of the human soul and their influence on ...
Y by Mithridatism. The inverse or external M ^ by Albinoism. ACCOKD >*! Y OF
DIRECT FOCUS BY MlTHRIDATISM. I have made choice of this word, because it
designates by tradition the faculty that the human body has of fashioning itself ...
5
The Facts On File Dictionary of Classical and Biblical Allusions
“Mithras reveals all,”whispered the archaeologist as the sun's rays entered the
tomb,lighting the way ahead. mithridatism (mithridaytiza ̆m) Immunity to a
poison acquired through the consumption of gradually increased doses of it over
a long ...
Martin H. Manser, David Pickering, 2003
6
Handbook of Multilingualism and Multiculturalism
«Mithridatism» (Simonin, 1982: 384), then, described the approach to languages
during that period. The 16th century did not yet seem aware of the balance of
power between modern languages, even though relationships between
prestigious ...
Geneviève Zarate, Danielle Lévy, Claire J. Kramsch, 2011
7
Cleveland Medical Journal
... that he introduced the poison into the stomach and not under the skin, whence
v. Behring proposes that we denominate this form of immunization
Mithridatisation or Mithridatism. In our day, Koch introduced Mithridatism into
medical science.
8
The Origins of English Words: A Discursive Dictionary of ...
... sta misunderstood: ne mite: mail miter: mei IV Mithras: mei IV mithridate: mei IV
Mithridates: mei IV mithridatism: sta mitigate: mei V mitochondria: mei IV mitome:
mei IV mitosis: mei IV mitosome: teue 3 Mitra: mei IV mitrailleuse: mai I mittens: ...
Joseph Twadell Shipley, 2009
9
The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights: From Declaration to ...
The new mechanisms applicable to the CFSP are bound to characterize all future
developments in this area, and can hardly be seen to be a sort of mithridatism
carried out against the Community method. Hence, it is suggested that the CFSP
...
Di Federico Giacomo, Giacomo Di Federico, 2010
10
Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary
Ornithonyssus bacoti. velvetm. see Trombicula. mithramycin[mith′′r -mi′sin]
see plicamycin. mithridate mustardsee Thlaspi arvense. mithridatism acquisition
of immunity toapoisonby ingestion of graduallyincreasing amounts ofit. miticide ...
Virginia P. Studdert, Clive C. Gay, Douglas C. Blood, 2011
4 ACTUALITÉS CONTENANT LE TERME «MITHRIDATISM»
Découvrez de quoi on parle dans les médias nationaux et internationaux et comment le terme
mithridatism est employé dans le contexte des actualités suivantes.
These fairy tales are backed by science
Better known as mithridatism (named for Mithridates, a king of Pontus, who, fearing assassination, legend has it, took small doses of poison to ... «The Week Magazine, avril 15»
I Am Sorry to Think I Have Raised a Timid Son by Kent Russell
Friede is a practitioner of mithridatism, named for the Poison King, Mithradates VI, who immunized himself so effectively against the various foul ... «Paste Magazine, mars 15»
Politics Without Politics
The need to live does not, however, imply a willingness to be played for a fool. A veritable “mithridatism” designed to arrest any awareness that ... «Brooklyn Rail, nov 14»
The Ironic End of the Man who Made Himself Immune to Poison
This process is, even today, called mithridatism or mithridatization. Not only was he a king and an advocate of matricide, he was a pioneering ... «io9, janv 13»