Hypothetical remedy for all ills or diseases; once sought by the alchemists.
Синонимы
Examples for "panacea "
Examples for "panacea "
1 But private companies are not necessarily the panacea to an organisation's problems.
2 But the truth is that technology itself is not really a panacea .
3 True to his imagining, hard work proved a panacea to his soul.
4 Springsteen is the panacea for all economic ills in Ireland right now.
5 With diet, contradictions abound and there is no panacea to guarantee health.
1 We may safely feel certain that the nostrum was not liquid oxygen.
2 Senator Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi, denounced this proposition as a quack nostrum .
3 Their new economic nostrum was the very toxin the Founders had warned against.
4 Still, the young native of Cologne delayed some time before using the nostrum .
5 When I try any illustrious nostrum , I shall give the preference to this.
1 Fungi are increasingly touted as a cure - all by health and wellness gurus.
2 DRAWBACKS Audits are not all the same, nor are they a cure - all .
3 Run down to Grand-daddy, Limpy-toes, and fetch a pinch of cure - all salve.
4 Never felt I so enamoured of that which seems to be the cure - all .
5 But even cellular computing enthusiasts admit they don't have a cure - all .
1 Unfortunately, I have no catholicon for every industrial ill-butthe political drug-stores are full of 'em.
2 I soon saw the Catholicon of Spain (Spanish gold) was the chief ingredient.
3 In this " Catholicon , " which, though undated, was printed before A.D. 1500, we read
4 According to Way, Promptorium Parrulorum, p. 506, note, the Catholicon Anglicanum has "A turfe grafte, turbarium."
5 I care not much if I untwist my committee-man, and so give him the receipt of this grand Catholicon .
6 Meanwhile permit me to recommend, As the matter admits of no delay, My wonderful Catholicon , Of very subtile and magical powers!
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Translations for catholicon