English
Noun
nostra p
- plural of|nostrum#English|nostrum
#* 1847�1848: [A<small>UTHOR UNKNOWN</small>], Annalist: A Record of Practical Medicine in the City of New York, p193<sup>?</sup>
#*: �beg our clerical friends to remember that quack medicines are of two kinds,� �with his poisonous nostra in the form of doctrines, upon those of whose�
#* 1917: Torald Hermann Sollmann, A Manual of pharmacology and its applications to therapeutics and toxicology, p71
#*: On the other hand, alchemists had arisen with their pertinacious search for the philosopher�s stone, which was to convert all metals into gold, and cure all diseases. In this search they gave their nostra extensive trial on sick and well.
#* 1928: Massachusetts Medical Society & New England Surgical Society, The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, p121
#*: Much less shall we enter into a detail of the many nostra and patent medicines that have been, and still are, trumpeted round as sure and never-failing�
#* 1955: King Edward Memorial Hospital (Bombay, India), Journal of Postgraduate Medicine, p71
#*: �immunotherapy, Isselsism, thermotherapy, and all other nostra � are used faut de mieux, when the three bulwarks of surgery, radiation and chemotherapy have failed, or are prima facie useless.
Italian
Pronoun
la nostra f (feminine of il nostro, plural le nostre)
- our|Our.
ko:nostra
pt:nostra
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