prodromous
Appearance
English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]prodromous (not comparable)
- precursory.
- 1678, Vincent Alsop, Melius Inquirendum, page 123:
- Prodromous Clouds whose edges are fringed with Gold, comfort us with the hopes of an approaching greater Light, which when the Sun is up, do but darken the Horizon.
- 2023, Manasseh ben Israel, Menasseh ben Israel's Mission to Oliver Cromwell, page 92:
- Thus we have a Day-star to tell us that day is at hand; something prodromous concerning almost all the great things promised, and looked for, as might be more largely showne, if that were my proper work.
- 2023, Thomas Twining, Technical Training, page 205:
- Altogether the Lists given int he present Chapter should be accepted as they are offered, simply in a prodromous character .
- (medicine) Pertaining to signs or symptoms that precede the onset of a disease.
- 1865, Transactions of the American Ophthalmological Society, page 46:
- Where the second eye was quite free from prodromous symptoms, Græfe has seen it frequently affected shortly after operation on the first, somewhere about 10 per cent.
- 1873, Armand Trousseau, Lectures on Clinical Medicine - Volume 1, page 72:
- They were characterized in the prodromous period by the severity of the pain in the head and back, great prostration of strength, anxiety, agitation, stupor, and sometimes by delirium.
- 1900, Transactions of the New York Odontological Society, page 174:
- This constitutes its first stage; one from which recovery is the genral rule, —so general, in fact, that I have never known of its being considered by any one as a condition antecedent to alveolar necrosis, and still it is uniformly prodromous to it in all except its traumatic or purely organic types.
- Prophylactic.
- 1881 September, James More, “Edinburgh Medical Journal”, in The Use of the Catheter before Forceps-Delivery, volume 21, page 250:
- Whichever view is taken, it is equally antagonistic to the rule of prodromous catheterism in forceps-delivery.
- 1928, Japanese Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, page 244:
- Prodromous irrigation
Noun
[edit]prodromous
- A sign of something to come; a harbinger.
- 1833, Eli Geddings, “Phjysiologico-Pathological Observations on Follicular Gastro-enteritis”, in Baltimore Medical and Surgical Journal and Review, page 70:
- The neglect of this has led to much difference of opinion, and a great deal of vain and idle discussion: one party affirming that the disease consists essentially in the direct and immediate impression of the morbific cause upon the susceptibilities of the living organization; the other, that this should be merely regarded as a kind of prelude, or prodromous, and that the disease is not developed , until the influence of the cause has concentrated itself upon some tissue or organ, so as to give rise to some molecular modification of its structure, by impressing upon its vitalism certain abnormal or perverted actions, by which its nutrition becomes changed.
- 2013, John K. Sutherland, The Elusive Miss Wakefield, page 92:
- The prodromous had rung for Oliver and was giving him a most pleasant message, as well as a promise.