amœbic
See also: amoebic
English
Etymology
From international scientific vocabulary, reflecting New Latin combining forms: amœb- + -ic.
Adjective
amœbic (not comparable)
- Obsolete form of amoebic.
- 1907, Ludvig Hektoen, in Modern Medicine, Lea Brothers & Co.; Volume II., Chapter I., page 19:
- Important infectious diseases in man and animals are caused by protozoa; e.g., malaria, amœbic dysentery, trypanosomiasis, piroplasmosis, and possibly yellow and scarlet fever.
- 1907, Ludvig Hektoen, in Modern Medicine, Lea Brothers & Co.; Volume II., Chapter I., page 19:
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