English to Arabic Dictionary incurable

incurable

عضال
definition
noun
The hospital - which has more than 2,000 fundraisers - was first opened as a cancer pavilion and home for incurables in 1892, but was renamed The Christie Hospital in 1901 in recognition of the pioneering work of both Mr and Mrs Christie.
a person who cannot be cured.
adjective
But the claim that a product can cure an incurable disease should sound alarms.
(of a sick person or a disease) not able to be cured.
translation of 'incurable'
adjective
المعضول,
عضال,
لا أمل في علاجه
example
The disease is 'incurable' in about half of patients at presentation.
He responds with the optimism and fervour of the 'incurable' romantic.
Many of those who support human embryonic stem-cell research do so for the best of motives, to try and find cures for 'incurable' diseases.
Call me an 'incurable' optimist, but it does happen.
Sigmund Freud echoed such views, while suffering from 'incurable' cancer of the palate.
But the claim that a product can cure an 'incurable' disease should sound alarms.
In this week's program we hear the personal stories of three people who have been struck down with the 'incurable' illness Motor Neurone Disease.
There are signs of improvement, but only an 'incurable' optimist would conclude that the game is in rude health.
That will change once people living with the 'incurable' disease - for which there is still no vaccine - gain access to increasingly affordable, life prolonging antiretroviral drugs, it said.
Here, hundreds of millions of men, women and children are suffering from an 'incurable' disease, chronic arsonicosis, and millions more are at risk.
He is a great talker, a charming and 'incurable' optimist, and everything is grist to his mill.
I've mentioned before his 'incurable' optimism and general good will and positive attitudes.
With 'incurable' optimism went a sense of power and vast reserves of energy encompassing the continent.
Ultimately, he is surprisingly reminiscent of the 'incurable' sentimentalist, forever seeking comfort and reassurance for his damaged inner child.
The track record for winning anything was pretty poor, but I'm an 'incurable' optimist.
Devotees hold that any 'incurable' disease will be cured and any desire will be fulfilled by pilgrimaging to this temple.
He established one of the first licensed fetal-tissue banks in the country, collecting pancreases for research that may lead to cures for 'incurable' diseases.
Neurologists are often accused of being interested in only rare 'incurable' diseases.
This predictability of the dying phase is not always as clear in other chronic 'incurable' diseases.
Infinitely understated but eminently sophisticated, this album is a treat made for 'incurable' romantics to love unreservedly.
They came of gentry stock, and their father exhibited one of the occasional weaknesses of that origin - an 'incurable' optimism in money matters which left him penniless.
Hughes is well cast as the sympathetic, Candide-like Simon, an 'incurable' optimist who talks about hopelessness without quite grasping the concept himself.
‘I find most skeptics to be 'incurable' optimists,’ Hyde continues.
Most of the problems associated with chronic or 'incurable' illness, being social issues, require interventions by communities.
Thus most educated and uneducated groups sought and held sufficient biomedical knowledge to understand that diabetes was 'incurable' and to commit to biomedical management.
There are 'incurable' diseases in medicine, incorrigible vices in the ministry, insoluble cases in law.
For an 'incurable' optimist like me, the Wallabies showed enough to keep me hopeful that they really can retain the World Cup as long as all the cards fall the right way.
Even in cases of 'incurable' cancer, palliative or experimental therapy may improve quality and extent of life.
Her partner was an 'incurable' optimist and also a firm believer in hope, and Drea knew that if it weren't for her sake, Kiremay would have kept going until the ends of the world.
From the early twentieth century many psychiatrists began to establish private practices in the belief that asylums had become repositories for the 'incurable' .
Credits: Google Translate
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