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Answer for the clue "Pestilence transmitted by rat fleas ", 6 letters:
plague

Alternative clues for the word plague

Word definitions for plague in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a serious (sometimes fatal) infection of rodents caused by Yersinia pestis and accidentally transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected rat flea (especially bubonic plague) any epidemic disease with a high death rate [syn: pestilence ] a swarm of ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Plague is an infectious disease that is caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis . Depending on lung infection, or sanitary conditions , plague can be spread in the air, by direct contact, or very rarely by contaminated undercooked food. The symptoms of ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context often used with ''the'', sometimes capitalized: ''the '''Plague''''' English) The bubonic plague, the pestilent disease caused by the virulent bacterium ''Yersinia pestis''. 2 (context pathology English) An epidemic or pandemic caused by any ...

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES avoid...like the plague (= try hard to avoid him ) ▪ Why did you speak to him? You usually avoid him like the plague . bubonic plague COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE bubonic ▪ Monservate was demolished after ...

Usage examples of plague.

The dreadful pictures of the bodies of plague victims floating down the Thames and accumulating in the Pool of London, however, are now said to be exaggerated.

Cola di Rienzi that plunged Rome into anarchy, the plague came as the peak of successive calamities.

It was later discovered that Japanese scientists subjected Chinese prisoners of war to horrifying experiments with such lethal bioagents as anthrax, cholera, typhoid, and plague.

We know that the Soviets also manufactured plague for use in weapons and researched other biological agents, including all those discussed in the chapters in this book, such as anthrax, tularemia, and botulinum toxin.

It might have been that quixotism had inspired his infatuate gesture, but it might quite as conceivably have been everyday vanity or plain cussedness: a noble impulse to serve a pretty lady in distress, a spontaneous device to engage her interest, or a low desire to plague a personality as antipathetic to his own as that of a rattlesnake.

While Frederick was in Rome to expel Alexander III and put his antipope on the throne, a pestilence broke out, and the plague takes the rich and the poor alike.

The great plague which wasted Europe in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and reappeared in the seventeenth, had been identified with a disease which yields to enlightened treatment, and its ancient virulence was attributed to ignorance of hygiene, and the filthy habits of a former age.

Signing the last autograph, she tactfully refused the politely couched offers to buy her a drink and turned away from the swarm of theater-goers, who converged on the city streets like a plague of taxi-preying locusts closing in on their next meal.

During the Great Plague of London, Ivy berries were given with some success as possessing antiseptic virtues, and to induce perspiration, thus effecting a remission of the symptoms.

Betrayal came on its heels, betrayal that plagued him since the first moment he set eyes on Bree Hansen.

She wanted them to be gone now, now, before anything else happened, as if the plague were waiting to leap out at them like the bogeyman from the church or the brewhouse or the barn.

Black Death was, of course, a shrunken population, which, owing to wars, brigandage, and recurrence of the plague, declined even further by the end of the 14th century.

Mr Burry, that these are the times of the Anti-Christ, that men would wish they had never been born and that pestilence, plague and death would stalk the land?

The rise of nonsectarian interest in the experiential dimensions of contemplative practice is a wonderful departure from the adversarial attitude that has plagued relations among religions for centuries.

Cholera and bubonic plague followed, and then, five years and more later, when the worst seemed to have passed, came the culminating attack by maculated fever.