bodig
English
    
    Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈboʊ.dɪɡ/
Noun
    
bodig (uncountable)
- (medicine) A medical condition prevalent on Guam, or an aspect of Lytico-Bodig disease, which causes dementia.
- ´1997, Oliver Sacks, The Island of the Colorblind:
- Only by degrees did it become clear to them, and him, that this was an organic malady, an all-too-familiar one, the bodig.
 
-  2011 March 10, Carlo Colosimo; David E. Riley; Gregor K. Wenning, Handbook of Atypical Parkinsonism, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 108:- Often lumped with lytico owing to clinical, familial, and pathological associations, is the parkinsonism-dementia complex of Guam (PDCG), known locally as bodig; 40% of patients with bodig also have lytico. PDCG has its onset in middle […]
 
 
- ´1997, Oliver Sacks, The Island of the Colorblind:
Derived terms
    
References
    
-  2011 June 30, Robert F. Rogers, Destiny's Landfall: A History of Guam, Revised Edition, University of Hawaii Press, →ISBN, page 208:- The naval physicians renamed the bodig aspect of the disease, in which the spinal cord and brain are attacked, parkinsonism-dementia complex. In ALS, the lytico aspect, a sound brain is imprisoned in a paralyzed body.
 
Old English
    
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
From Proto-West Germanic *bodag (“body, trunk”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰewdʰ- (“to be awake, observe”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈbo.dij/
Noun
    
bodiġ n
Declension
    
Declension of bodig (strong a-stem)
| Case | Singular | Plural | 
|---|---|---|
| nominative | bodiġ | bodiġ | 
| accusative | bodiġ | bodiġ | 
| genitive | bodiġes | bodiġa | 
| dative | bodiġe | bodiġum | 
Descendants
    
References
    
- Joseph Bosworth and T. Northcote Toller (1898), “bodig”, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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