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The phrase "ear ache" is not correct in standard written English; it should be written as "earache" (one word)
You can use it when referring to pain or discomfort in the ear. Example: "After swimming, I developed a painful earache that lasted for several days."
Exact(16)
aQi imbalances refer to TCM concept of bodily vital energy disharmonies [ 38]. bOther conditions include: Headache, ear ache and multi-symptom conditions.
Participants were asked to report any newly experienced febrile respiratory symptoms, including fevers (≥38°C), sore throats, cough, nasal congestion, headache, sinus problems, muscle aches, fatigue, ear ache or infection or chills during the influenza season.
Other ayurvedic uses of the plant includes treatment of nose bleeding, hematoma, skin blemishes due to it's bleaching properties, halitosis, ear ache, otitis, and as an emenagogue favouring menstruation and alleviating it's pains.
Respiratory signs and symptoms were defined as coryza (rhinorrhea or nasal congestion), sore throat, ear ache with or without ear discharge, cough, sputum production or dyspnea, in the presence or absence of fever (>38°C).
In addition, when parents were asked for the most common symptoms leading to a paediatric visit (including cough, fever, runny nose, ear ache, sore throat, hoarseness and change of behaviour) (question 26), 95.4% of symptoms were a runny nose (CI: 94.8%-95.9%), often accompanied by other symptoms.
"You don't need to be giving everybody an ear ache going off the ground.
Similar(42)
The homes of cookery writer Elizabeth David – described by the biographer Rosemary Hill as "the woman who persuaded Britain that olive oil was good for more than curing ear aches" – the ballet dancer Margot Fonteyn, the cack-handed magician Tommy Cooper, and Laurie Cunningham, one of the first black footballers to play for England, will also get plaques.
Mastoiditis made his bandaged ears ache, but still he tuned in to the hubbub of the streets.
By Edwidge Danticat The New Yorker, September 11 , 2000P. 84 Short story about a reclusive Brooklyn nurse, Nadine Osnac, who reads a letter from her Haitian parents on her lunch hour, thanking her for sending money, requesting more for her father's medical bills, and hoping for a phone call ("We have not heard your voice in a while and our ears ache for it").
Short story about a reclusive Brooklyn nurse, Nadine Osnac, who reads a letter from her Haitian parents on her lunch hour, thanking her for sending money, requesting more for her father's medical bills, and hoping for a phone call ("We have not heard your voice in a while and our ears ache for it").
"Perhaps we have a deep need to know in our entire being what the day is like, to see it and to feel it, to know how the sky is gray with patches of blue in the southwest, with snow on the ground, the thermometer at 18 degrees and cold wind making your ears ache.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com