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youre
maladie
disease [Brit dɪˈziːz, Am dəˈziz] N
1. disease (specific illness):
disease
2. disease U (range of infections):
disease
to spread disease
British disease N
British disease
Bright's disease [Brit ˈbrʌɪts dɪˌziːz, Am ˈbraɪts dəˌziz] N
Bright's disease
deficiency disease N
deficiency disease
Crohn's disease [Brit ˈkrəʊnz dɪˌziːz, Am ˈkroʊnz dəˌziz] N
Crohn's disease
coeliac disease N
coeliac disease
eye disease N
eye disease
liver disease N
liver disease
social disease N euph
social disease
Paget's disease [Brit ˈpadʒɪts, Am ˈpædʒəts dəˌziz] N MED
Paget's disease
English
English
French
French
disease [dɪˈzi:z] N a. fig
disease
a symptom of a disease
to catch a disease
to die from a disease
heart disease N
heart disease
killer disease N
killer disease
skin disease N
skin disease
foot-and-mouth disease N
foot-and-mouth disease
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease N
Alzheimer's (disease) [ˈæltshaɪməʳ-, Am ˈɑ:ltshaɪmɚ-] N
Alzheimer's (disease)
OpenDict entry
bluetongue disease N
bluetongue disease
French
French
English
English
English
English
French
French
disease [dɪ·ˈziz] N a. fig
disease
symptom of a disease
to catch a disease
to die from a disease
heart disease N
heart disease
killer disease N
killer disease
skin disease N
skin disease
Lyme disease N
Lyme disease
Alzheimer's (disease) [ˈalts·haɪ·mərz-] N
Alzheimer's (disease)
inflammatory disease, arthritis
ineradicable disease
French
French
English
English
PONS OpenDict

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Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)
Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)
These all have highly transmissible pathogenic agents that induce brain damage.
en.wikipedia.org
Peerages attached to fiefs were transmissible or inheritable with the fief, and these fiefs are often designated as "pairie-duch" (for duchies) and "pairie-comt" (for counties).
en.wikipedia.org
It is a type of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, caused by a prion found in humans.
en.wikipedia.org
It does not appear to be caused by a transmissible agent, such as a virus.
en.wikipedia.org
Folklore can be divided into four areas of study: artifact (such as voodoo dolls), describable and transmissible entity (oral tradition), culture, and behavior (rituals).
en.wikipedia.org