sanious
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- Rhymes: -eɪniəs
Adjective
[edit]sanious (comparative more sanious, superlative most sanious)
- Of, relating to, or discharging sanies; ichorous.
- 1860 January, The American Medical Monthly, volumes 13-14, page 32:
- Furthermore, I touched with the pure solution the most sanious portions, especially the portions of the bones.
- 1861, Charles Caillault, translated by Robert Howarth Blake, A Practical Treatise on Diseases of the Skin in Children, page 198:
- The ulcers are then, also, more sanious and humid.
- 1870, Arthur E. Durham, “Diseases of the Nose”, in Timothy Holmes, editor, A System of Surgery: Theoretical and Practical, volume 4, page 308:
- The discharge from the nose associated with the presence of a fibrous polypus is as a rule more scanty, and thinner, more sanious, and more liable to become foul and ozamic than the mucous discharge usually associated with the presence of the softer growths.