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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tapeworm" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a type of parasitic flatworm that lives in the intestines of animals and humans, often causing health issues.
Example: "After feeling unwell for weeks, the doctor diagnosed her with a tapeworm infection."
Alternatives: "a parasitic worm" or "an intestinal worm".
Exact(60)
"It's sort of like a tapeworm".
Doctors there failed to find a tapeworm.
Julia Raeside Stein pootles east, like Palin with a tapeworm.
What does the head of a tapeworm look like?
After purging, Rita discharged a tapeworm three feet long.
That distinction goes to a tapeworm that lives in the intestines of whales.
This is what Romo Mangun says: "Javanese culture is like a tapeworm.
Show me a tiger or show me a tapeworm, and I'll watch with equal intensity.
You may think you don't care about such things, but the inkling burrows like a tapeworm.
On the way back, he told her that he had a tapeworm.
Recently, del Rio had a patient with a tapeworm infection who needed another old drug, called albendazole.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com