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单词 nostrum
释义

Definition of nostrum in English:

nostrum

noun ˈnɒstrəmˈnɑstrəm
  • 1A medicine prepared by an unqualified person, especially one that is not considered effective.

    a charlatan who sells nostrums
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Popular nostrums abound on the Web, but it can be very hard, if not impossible, to find the results of properly vetted, taxpayer-financed science - and in some cases it can be hard for your doctor to find them, too.
    • The variety of radioactive medical nostrums seemed endless: pastes, plasters, muds, inhalers, drinking water, and so forth.
    • This sounds like the pitch for a nineteenth-century patent medical nostrum.
    • Those other ingredients listed are deadly poisons, but bear in mind that they're not really there; just the ‘vibrations’ remain, as with all homeopathic nostrums.
    • But it neatly charts the changes in medical orthodoxy, not least since 1986, when a scathing British Medical Association report was still portraying alternative therapies as daffy nostrums peddled by quacks.
    • The trial has cost the Italian health service $5 million and no credibility remains in this anticancer nostrum.
    • It wasn't just that he doubted whether such nostrums would deliver the promised effects although he did doubt this very much.
    • Fraudulent doctors and sellers of nostrums have hawked their wares throughout the world since earliest times.
    • Stengler describes a multitude of illnesses which herbs, chemicals, homeopathic nostrums, acupuncture, etc. will fix.
    • This will allow the doctor to help the patient think through the pros and cons of such a decision, to avoid notoriously dangerous or ineffective nostrums, and to monitor for side effects.
    • When his own nostrums failed to effect a cure, William Griggs, a doctor called to examine the girls, suggested that the girls' problems might have a supernatural origin.
    • It pains us to see people buying quack nostrums that we can't touch because of the way the law is written.
    • To coax a tulip to break, early growers used a variety of entirely useless nostrums, including plaster from old walls, pigeon dung, or water from dung hills.
    • His paternal grandfather made a fortune in the States with a nostrum called Brandreth's Pills, which still exist.
    Synonyms
    patent medicine, quack remedy, potion, elixir, panacea, cure-all, cure for all ills, universal remedy, sovereign remedy, wonder drug, magic bullet
    rare catholicon, diacatholicon, panpharmacon
    1. 1.1 A scheme or remedy for bringing about some social or political reform or improvement.
      right-wing nostrums such as a wage freeze and cutting public spending
      Example sentencesExamples
      • All that means is that he is susceptible to every reactionary nostrum floated by right-wing thinktanks.
      • It is even less respectable when the economic nostrums proposed are no longer (after many intellectual and practical failures) presented as part of scientific economics but are frankly described as political economy.
      • That 27-minute lunch is a result of ‘flexible labour markets’ and other late twentieth century political nostrums.
      • The traditional strategic nostrums of the past represent an inadequate response to our current range of problems.
      • Labor's campaign in Aston was a measure of the party's abandonment of its old nostrums of social reform.
      • Regardless of any ideological bias, exposure to public choice analysis necessarily brings a more critical attitude toward politicised nostrums to alleged socioeconomic problems.
      • We are not trying to revive the reformist nostrums of the past, but work for an independent movement of the working class on an entirely different perspective.
      • Rather than rise to the challenge, the trend in intellectual circles has been to adapt to the prevailing rightward shift that has seen the repudiation of all the old nostrums of social reform.
      • The old right-wing nostrums which befuddled public opinion in the 1980s and 1990s no longer have the same impact.
      • The problem with sorting out proposed educational reforms is that the nostrums, strictures, and recommendations too often reflect personal dispositions more than disinterested analysis.
      • The discourse coheres an apparently unrelated array of policy nostrums.
      • The old nostrums of national reformism are well and truly dead.
      • The fashionable City nostrum that you can have a single market without any social dimension is simply delusion.
      • More and more plainly as the years went by, it reflected disbelief in the nostrums of neo-liberal reform that every government, left or right, unvaryingly proposed to its citizens.
      • Our people run after nostrums of cartelization or socialization, though no theorist has succeeded in discovering how to make them work.
      • These are the kind of men who do the bidding of their political masters, who unthinkingly repeat the nostrums of their own respective cultures.
      • The search for a replacement cause brought with it shallow opportunism, the honing of public relations skills and a ragbag of nostrums, some of them purloined from its political opponents.
      • As to their nostrums and remedies: ‘Virtually everything that was supposed to make things better made things worse,’ he says.
      • Among other things, when the economy spirals out of control both parties' remedies tend to be politically shortsighted nostrums that invariably make things worse, not better.
      • Not surprisingly Roy King pays particular attention to the considerations which affect the successful negotiation of an acceptable research role and suggests a number of nostrums for the conduct of research in prisons.
      Synonyms
      remedy, cure, prescription, answer, magic formula, recipe, recipe for success

Origin

Early 17th century: from Latin, used in the sense '(something) of our own making', neuter of noster 'our'.

Rhymes

rostrum
 
 

Definition of nostrum in US English:

nostrum

nounˈnɑstrəmˈnästrəm
  • 1A medicine, especially one that is not considered effective, prepared by an unqualified person.

    a charlatan who sells nostrums
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The variety of radioactive medical nostrums seemed endless: pastes, plasters, muds, inhalers, drinking water, and so forth.
    • But it neatly charts the changes in medical orthodoxy, not least since 1986, when a scathing British Medical Association report was still portraying alternative therapies as daffy nostrums peddled by quacks.
    • Stengler describes a multitude of illnesses which herbs, chemicals, homeopathic nostrums, acupuncture, etc. will fix.
    • This sounds like the pitch for a nineteenth-century patent medical nostrum.
    • His paternal grandfather made a fortune in the States with a nostrum called Brandreth's Pills, which still exist.
    • When his own nostrums failed to effect a cure, William Griggs, a doctor called to examine the girls, suggested that the girls' problems might have a supernatural origin.
    • The trial has cost the Italian health service $5 million and no credibility remains in this anticancer nostrum.
    • It wasn't just that he doubted whether such nostrums would deliver the promised effects although he did doubt this very much.
    • Popular nostrums abound on the Web, but it can be very hard, if not impossible, to find the results of properly vetted, taxpayer-financed science - and in some cases it can be hard for your doctor to find them, too.
    • Those other ingredients listed are deadly poisons, but bear in mind that they're not really there; just the ‘vibrations’ remain, as with all homeopathic nostrums.
    • Fraudulent doctors and sellers of nostrums have hawked their wares throughout the world since earliest times.
    • This will allow the doctor to help the patient think through the pros and cons of such a decision, to avoid notoriously dangerous or ineffective nostrums, and to monitor for side effects.
    • It pains us to see people buying quack nostrums that we can't touch because of the way the law is written.
    • To coax a tulip to break, early growers used a variety of entirely useless nostrums, including plaster from old walls, pigeon dung, or water from dung hills.
    Synonyms
    patent medicine, quack remedy, potion, elixir, panacea, cure-all, cure for all ills, universal remedy, sovereign remedy, wonder drug, magic bullet
    1. 1.1 A pet scheme or favorite remedy, especially one for bringing about some social or political reform or improvement.
      right-wing nostrums such as a wage freeze and cutting public spending
      Example sentencesExamples
      • More and more plainly as the years went by, it reflected disbelief in the nostrums of neo-liberal reform that every government, left or right, unvaryingly proposed to its citizens.
      • The fashionable City nostrum that you can have a single market without any social dimension is simply delusion.
      • The old right-wing nostrums which befuddled public opinion in the 1980s and 1990s no longer have the same impact.
      • The search for a replacement cause brought with it shallow opportunism, the honing of public relations skills and a ragbag of nostrums, some of them purloined from its political opponents.
      • These are the kind of men who do the bidding of their political masters, who unthinkingly repeat the nostrums of their own respective cultures.
      • It is even less respectable when the economic nostrums proposed are no longer (after many intellectual and practical failures) presented as part of scientific economics but are frankly described as political economy.
      • The traditional strategic nostrums of the past represent an inadequate response to our current range of problems.
      • Among other things, when the economy spirals out of control both parties' remedies tend to be politically shortsighted nostrums that invariably make things worse, not better.
      • As to their nostrums and remedies: ‘Virtually everything that was supposed to make things better made things worse,’ he says.
      • The old nostrums of national reformism are well and truly dead.
      • The problem with sorting out proposed educational reforms is that the nostrums, strictures, and recommendations too often reflect personal dispositions more than disinterested analysis.
      • The discourse coheres an apparently unrelated array of policy nostrums.
      • That 27-minute lunch is a result of ‘flexible labour markets’ and other late twentieth century political nostrums.
      • Not surprisingly Roy King pays particular attention to the considerations which affect the successful negotiation of an acceptable research role and suggests a number of nostrums for the conduct of research in prisons.
      • Labor's campaign in Aston was a measure of the party's abandonment of its old nostrums of social reform.
      • We are not trying to revive the reformist nostrums of the past, but work for an independent movement of the working class on an entirely different perspective.
      • Regardless of any ideological bias, exposure to public choice analysis necessarily brings a more critical attitude toward politicised nostrums to alleged socioeconomic problems.
      • Rather than rise to the challenge, the trend in intellectual circles has been to adapt to the prevailing rightward shift that has seen the repudiation of all the old nostrums of social reform.
      • All that means is that he is susceptible to every reactionary nostrum floated by right-wing thinktanks.
      • Our people run after nostrums of cartelization or socialization, though no theorist has succeeded in discovering how to make them work.
      Synonyms
      remedy, cure, prescription, answer, magic formula, recipe, recipe for success

Origin

Early 17th century: from Latin, used in the sense ‘(something) of our own making’, neuter of noster ‘our’.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/10 22:27:41