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syndrome
[sin-drohm, -druhm]
noun
Pathology, Psychiatry., a group of symptoms that together are characteristic of a specific disorder, disease, or the like.
a group of related or coincident things, events, actions, etc.
the pattern of symptoms that characterize or indicate a particular social condition.
a predictable, characteristic pattern of behavior, action, etc., that tends to occur under certain circumstances.
the retirement syndrome of endless golf and bridge games; the feast-or-famine syndrome of big business.
syndrome
/ sɪnˈdrɒmɪk, ˈsɪndrəʊm /
noun
med any combination of signs and symptoms that are indicative of a particular disease or disorder
a symptom, characteristic, or set of symptoms or characteristics indicating the existence of a condition, problem, etc
syndrome
An abnormal condition or disease that is identified by an established group of signs and symptoms.
syndrome
A set of signs and symptoms that appear together and characterize a disease or medical condition. AIDS is an example of a syndrome.
Other Word Forms
- syndromic adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of syndrome1
Example Sentences
The arbitrary nature of this career, how the impostor syndrome was enormous in him.
As the authors note, "The combination of advanced imaging techniques and machine learning confers methodological robustness and contributes significantly to the ongoing scientific discourse on post-viral syndromes."
At the group level, the pattern functions like a culture-bound syndrome, a condition shaped by shared social triggers within a specific context.
The course of radiation sickness, also called acute radiation syndrome, varies widely depending on what kind of radiation was absorbed and where in the body it causes the most damage.
Instead, the tests administered by a child psychologist proved that their child had Asperger’s syndrome.
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