panacea

listen to the pronunciation of panacea
الإنجليزية - التركية
(sözde) her derde deva ilaç
{i} her derde deva
{i} her derde deva ilaç
(isim) her derde deva ilaç
genel çare
(Tıp) Her derde deva olan ilaç
cure all
tüm tedavi
cure all
her derde deva
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Daughter of Asclepius and Salus (or Epione). She was the personification of healing through herbs
A remedy believed to cure all disease and prolong life that was originally sought by alchemists; a cure-all
Something that will solve all problems

A monorail will be a panacea for our traffic woes.

A particular plant believed to provide a cure-all

There, whether it diuine Tobacco were, / Or Panachæa, or Polygony, / She found, and brought it to her patient deare .

a remedy or medicine proposed for or professing to cure all diseases
{n} an universal medicin, an herb
cure all
A remedy for all diseases; a universal medicine; a cure-all; catholicon; hence, a relief or solace for affliction
\pan-uh-SEE-uh\, noun: A remedy for all diseases, problems, or evils; a universal medicine; a cure-all
The herb allheal
hypothetical remedy for all ills or diseases; once sought by the alchemists
{i} cure-all, medication which can heal any problem
a miracle cure-all
If you say that something is not a panacea for a particular set of problems, you mean that it will not solve all those problems. Membership of the ERM is not a panacea for Britain's economic problems. something that people think will make everything better and solve all their problems = cure-all panacea for (panakeia, from pan- ( PAN-) + akeisthai )
panaceas
plural of panacea
panacea

    الواصلة

    pan·a·ce·a

    التركية النطق

    pänısiı

    النطق

    /ˌpanəˈsēə/ /ˌpænəˈsiːə/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ "pa-n&-'sE-& ] (noun.) 1548. From Latin panacēa, from Ancient Greek πανάκεια (panakeia), from πανακής (panakēs, “all-healing”), from πᾶν (pan, “all”) (equivalent to English pan-) + ἄκος (akos, “cure”).
المفضلات