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Answer for the clue "Doctor's office, to Brits ", 7 letters:
surgery

Alternative clues for the word surgery

Word definitions for surgery in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Surgery \Sur"ge*ry\, n. [OE. surgenrie, surgerie; cf. OF. cirurgie, F. chirurgie, L. chirurgia, Gr. ?. See Surgeon .] The art of healing by manual operation; that branch of medical science which treats of manual operations for the healing of diseases or ...

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES cosmetic surgery elective surgery ▪ elective surgery such as hip replacements keyhole surgery lifesaving surgery/treatment/drugs etc ▪ The boy needs a life-saving transplant operation. open-heart surgery plastic surgery ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context medicine English) A procedure involving major incisions to remove, repair, or replace a part of a body. 2 (senseid en medical specialty)(context medicine English) The medical specialty related to the performance of surgical procedures. 3 A ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1300, sirgirie , "medical treatment of an operative nature, such as cutting-operations, setting of fractures, etc.," from Old French surgerie , surgeure , contraction of serurgerie , from Late Latin chirurgia (see surgeon ).

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. the branch of medical science that treats disease or injury by operative procedures; "he is professor of surgery at the Harvard Medical School" a room where a doctor or dentist can be consulted; "he read the warning in the doctor's surgery" a room in ...

Usage examples of surgery.

A strange case turned up at the surgery today, it might be a variant of psychic blindness or amaurosis, but there appears to be no evidence of any such symptoms ever having been established, What are these illnesses, amaurosis and that other thing, his wife asked him.

Her morning surgery had spread until it had almost overlapped the early afternoon antenatal clinic, and her list of house-calls had lasted right up to the start of evening surgery.

Once in a while, Simpson would let general surgery residents do a proximal anastomosis, just to throw them a bone.

More knowledge, however, of the history of surgery has given a serious set-back to this self-complacency, and now we know that the later medieval surgeons understood practical antisepsis very well, and applied it successfully.

Maybe if she found a higher paying job she could afford liposuction or bariatric surgery or one of those hypnosis clinics that kept sending emails.

He rode the slidewalks and escalators until, half a mile above the ground, he came to his regular Tuesday-evening eateasy, a swank and illegal little restaurant with a grubby exterior that proclaimed to all nonmembers that it was a branch of a silicone surgery beautification chain.

Before he had been asleep very long, however, the surgery bell was violently rung, and, having dressed himself with the rapidity characteristic of doctors and schoolboys, he descended to find a frightened footman waiting outside, from whom he gathered that something dreadful had happened to Lady Bellamy, who had been found lying apparently dead upon the floor of her drawing-room.

Sheldon Blau after he developed a life-threatening infection in his bloodstream following surgery, an all-too-common occurrence.

In writing about hospital-caused errors in medication, in surgery, in laboratory tests, and just in admitting patients, Blau offers a nostrum known to any hospital patient.

Figure 279 represents a somewhat similar hypertrophic condition of the scalp and face reported in the Photographic Review of Medicine and Surgery, 1870.

I, lined and wrinkled, leaning, tucked in, shaking just a bit in the limbs, aching just a bit in the joints, showing patches and patterns of incorrect color, purples on the legs, brown maculae on the arms, swirls and masses on the face beneath the surgery and appliances.

I trust Malva to administer the ether, if I had to perform emergency surgery?

The sole bright spot in this ruddy quagmire was that Thomas Christie, quite contrary to my expectations, had allowed Malva to continue to come to the surgery, his sole stipulation being that if I proposed to involve his daughter in any further use of the ether, he was to be told ahead of time.

And I moved to go over to him, to take his arm and make him listen while I told him about what was happening to my mum in the hospital down the road that morning, to tell him about the surgery, and to use words like mastectomy, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, lymphoedema, until I saw him squirm with shame at his cowardice.

The exploratory surgery had turned into a mastectomy without her knowledge.