sudoral

English

Etymology

sudor + -al, from Latin sudor.

Adjective

sudoral (not comparable)

  1. (dated, medicine) Of or pertaining to sweat; caused by sweat; characterised by the production of sweat.
    sudoral eruptions
    • 1869, Armand Trousseau, translated by John Rose Cormack, Lectures on Clinical Medicine, Volume 2, Lindsay & Blakiston, page 299:
      If an individual sweat profusely, even though he is in the plenitude of health, these special sudoral efflorescences will be observed: they will at times be very painful, and may bear the aspect of measles, roseola, urticaria &c.
    • 1875, Prof. Vulpian, Physiology—The Action of Jaborandi and of Atropine upon the Perspiration, Saint Louis Clinical Record, Volumes 1-2, page 38 (of volume 2),
      I think that the same reasoning applies to the action of atropine and jaborandi upon the sudoral secretion.
    • 1897, John A. Robison, “Medical Progress: Medicine”, in John H. Hollister, editor, The North American Practitioner, The J. Harrison White Company, page 213:
      The average duration of sudoral typhoid is therefore about five weeks.

French

Adjective

sudoral (feminine sudorale, masculine plural sudoraux, feminine plural sudorales)

  1. sudoral

Further reading

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French sudoral.

Adjective

sudoral m or n (feminine singular sudorală, masculine plural sudorali, feminine and neuter plural sudorale)

  1. sudoral

Declension

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