nurse
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 5
- Words With Friends
- 7
- Letters
- 5
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Definition of nurse
20 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included
noun
-
(informal)A person involved in providing direct care for the sick:
“My aunt was my nurse while I recuperated at home from surgery.”
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noun
-
(informal)A person involved in providing direct care for the sick:
“My aunt was my nurse while I recuperated at home from surgery.”
-
A person involved in providing direct care for the sick:
“The nurse made her rounds through the hospital ward.”
“Francis Urquhart: Right. Mackenzie. Health. No chance of getting him into a demo at a hospital, I suppose? Tim Stamper: Doesn't go to hospitals any more. Kept getting beaten up by the nurses... I think he has trouble getting insured now.”
- A person involved in providing direct care for the sick:
-
A person (usually a woman) who takes care of other people’s children.
“They hired a nurse to care for their young boy.”
-
(figuratively)One who, or that which, brings up, rears, causes to grow, trains, or fosters.
“Eton College has been called "the chief nurse of England's statesmen".”
“the nurse of manly sentiment and heroic enterprise”
- A shrub or tree that protects a young plant.
- A lieutenant or first officer who takes command when the captain is unfit for his place.
- A larva of certain trematodes, which produces cercariae by asexual reproduction.
- (archaic)A wet nurse.
- A nurse shark or dogfish.
verb
-
(transitive)To breastfeed: to feed (a baby) at the breast; to suckle.
“She believes that nursing her baby will make him strong and healthy.”
- (intransitive)To breastfeed: to be fed at the breast.
-
(transitive)To care for (someone), especially in sickness; to tend to.
“She nursed him back to health.”
-
(transitive)To tend gently and with extra care.
“She nursed the rosebush and that season it bloomed.”
- (transitive)To manage or oversee (something) with care and economy.
-
(informal, transitive)To drink (a beverage) slowly, so as to make it last.
“Rob was nursing a small beer.”
-
(figuratively, transitive)To cultivate or persistently entertain (an attitude, usually negative) in one's mind; to brood or obsess over.
“to nurse a grudge”
“to nurse a grievance”
“If, like me, you have been confined to your home, glued to the news and nursing ever greater anxiety about the state of the world, you have probably become familiar with the sight of the World Health Organization’s director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and his daily press briefings.”
-
(transitive)To hold closely to one's chest.
“Would you like to nurse the puppy?”
-
(transitive)To strike (billiard balls) gently, so as to keep them in good position during a series of shots.
“It is to our interest to let Lee and Johnston come together, just as a billiard-player would nurse the balls when he has them in a nice place”
name
- A surname.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English norice, from Old French norrice, from Late Latin nūtrīcia, noun based on Latin nūtrīcius (“that which nourishes”), from nūtrīx (“wet nurse”), from nūtriō (“to suckle”).
Words you can make from nurse
32 playable · top: RUNES (5 pts)
Best play runes 5 points4-letter words
9 words3-letter words
14 words2-letter words
8 wordsHooks
3 extensions · 3 back
A single letter you can add to nurse to make another valid word.
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