Hospital das clinicas cursos ead em portugues

Extended 1809 to an attendant at a hospital (originally a military hospital) charged with keeping things clean and in order, from orderly (adj. Proper name, from Old English Ead-gar, literally "prosperity-spear," from ead "prosperity" (see Edith) gar "spear" (see gar). " For the sense shift from "take" to "buy" in the Latin verbs, compare Old English sellan "to give," source of Modern English sell "to give in exchange for money. Mary Spital, from spital, a Middle English shortened form of hospital, sometimes also spittle, hence spittle-man "one who lives in a hospital.

Proper name, from Old English Eadweard, literally "prosperity-guard," from ead "wealth, prosperity" (see Edith) weard "guardian" (see ward (n. 1827, originally, "clinic held in a private house" (instead of a hospital), from German Poliklinik, from Greek polis "city" (see polis) Klinik, from French clinique (see clinic).

Proper name, Old English Eadmund, literally "prosperity-protector," from ead "wealth, prosperity, happiness" (see Edith).



hospital das clinicas cursos ead em:

  • hospital das clinicas cursos ead em da
  • hospital das clinicas cursos ead em casa

"relating to a hospital," 1849 (earlier in German and French), from Late Latin nosocomium, from Greek nosokomeion "an infirmary," from nosokomein "to take care of the sick," from nosos "disease, sickness," a word of unknown origin, komein "take care of, attend to. Taken as a colloquial abbreviation of them, but originally at least in part a form of hem, dative and accusative of the third person plural pronoun. 1924, in Joan Riviere's translation of Freud's "Das Ich und das Es" (1923), from Latin id "it" (as a translation of German es "it" in Freud's title), used in psychoanalytical theory to denote the unconscious instinctual force.


*

إرسال تعليق (0)
أحدث أقدم