People must forget the cholera and the riotings; the cholera has died a natural death; the insurrection is killed; which proves that Louis-Philippe is stronger than Broussais.
The cholera had proved a troublesome competitor; there were not five hundred people in the theatre.
The cholera had invaded Paris; the town was given over to terror, riot ran rife through the street, drums beat at the hour for the opening of the box office.
The two principal parts had been given to Georges and Frédérick; but, as I have said, the cholera upset everything.
Cholera infantum is one of the most dangerous, one of the most treacherous, and one of the quickest acting diseases of childhood.
In the treatment of cholera infantum it must not be forgotten that the dangerous element is the poisoning of the system that is constantly going on.
Acute indigestion is, as a general rule, the forerunner of cholera infantum.
The European fowl-cholera has only been rarely identified in this country.
If cholera has a good start in a flock of chickens it will often be better to dispose of the entire flock than to combat the disease.
Fortunately cholera epidemics are rare and in many localities have never been known.
To the first class belong the severe epidemics, of which chicken-cholera is the most destructive.
When the cholera prevailed in the large cities of the United States, a majority of the physicians believed all fruits, even those which were ripe, to be injurious in their tendency.
Before the end of the season cholera broke out in London.
Already, on the 16th of September, a special prayer had been read in every church in England, petitioning Almighty God to stay the plague of cholera which had sprung up in the East, travelled across the seas, and broken out among the people.
The quiet little town fell into the hands of the enemy, and was at once poverty and pestilence stricken, small-pox and cholera having broken out in the hospitals, where the Princess was labouring devotedly to succour the wounded.
The protests of the latter were strengthened by the somewhat remarkable fact that, once established at Sunderland, the cholera seemed to be arrested in its course and for a while spread no further.
A similar but distinct and infinitely milder disease had long been known under the name of cholera morbus, or more correctly cholera nostras.
Two months later, the appearance of the cholera at Sunderland added another grave cause of anxiety to all the difficulties created by the defeat of the reform bill in the house of lords, and the ominous riots at Bristol.
One remarkable incident of it was a portentous outbreak of cholera in 1817, during a campaign in Gwalior conducted by Hastings in person.
I have here a message to a--a friend who is lying ill of cholera in the hospital at Pavlova;" and she drew forth a letter from under her faded shawl.
Giulio Malaspina is an old friend whom I first met ten years ago, when, in the performance of my journalistic duties, I visited the cholera hospitals of Naples with King Humbert and Queen Margherita.
During the summer and autumn, cholera infantum with children in large towns, diarrhoea, cholera morbus, dysentery, intermittent and remittent bilious fevers prevail.
This was the most sickly and dying season St. Louis ever knew, except when the cholera prevailed in October, 1832.
In 1832, the cholera made its appearance in the West.
For ten years past, there has been no general sickness in St. Louis, during the summer and autumnal months, excepting the cholera in 1832.
The other did not graduate before the cholera came.
Both the old school and the new school remained closed even after the cholera ceased to thin out the citizens, but I felt no further interest in the education of youth.
In the early summer of 1849 cholera broke out in Cincinnati, and soon became epidemic.
Awhile ago ten a day dying of cholera struck terror to all hearts; but now the tide has surged up gradually until the deaths average over a hundred daily, and everybody is getting accustomed to it.
Being in no great hurry to enter Cincinnati till the cholera had left, we consented.
On Tuesday one hundred and sixteen deaths from cholera were reported, and that night the air was of that peculiarly oppressive, deathly kind that seems to lie like lead on the brain and soul.
This together with talk of funerals, cholera medicines, cholera dietetics, and chloride of lime form the ordinary staple of conversation.
One hundred and twenty burials from cholera alone yesterday, yet to-day we see parties bent on pleasure or senseless carousing, while to-morrow and next day will witness a fresh harvest of death from them.
At Wheeling we deliberated long whether to go on board a boat for Cincinnati, but the prevalence of the cholera there at last decided us to remain.
But the rooms themselves seem like breeding places for the cholera and the plague.
The streets are kept clean, and strict sanitary regulations are enforced--a matter of the utmost moment in this hot climate, and in a dense population, where a sudden outbreak of cholera would sweep off thousands in a few days or hours.
Cholera had broken out in the camp; eleven men died in one day.
The cholerastill seems slowly advancing, but let us yet hope, knowing that all things are under the guidance of a merciful Providence.
There is a dreary village in the neighbourhood which is said to make the most of any cholera that may be going, but Jamalpur itself is specklessly and spotlessly neat.
No one in the filthy streets (but for the blessed sea breezes San Francisco would enjoy cholera every season) interfered with my movements, though many asked for cumshaw.
The people have been untouched by cholera for four years, proof that Providence looks after those who do not look after themselves, for Neemuch Cantonment, a hundred miles away, suffered grievously last summer.
A few months ago there was an impressive outbreak of cholera in Jodhpur, and the Residency Doctor, who really hoped that the people would be brought to see sense, did his best to bring forward a general cleansing-scheme.
Every tissue in the living bodies which had absorbed this water was inflamed, and ready to yield to the first epidemic; and cholera was the natural outcome of such conditions.
The cholera broke out; and all who drank from the well became its victims, though the square seemed a healthy location.
It showed that the habitat of cholera and the habitat of fever were one and the same.
Cholera was once more proved to be a filth disease, and in the main confined to filthy localities.
During the summer of 1892 the appearance of cholera on the west coast of Europe--particularly Hamburg--exposed London to the importation of cases of this disease.
Thousands of miles away in Hindoostan, Asiatic cholera of a deadly type had been playing havoc with the people of the country.
At Deptford, where cholera was at the worst, no Inspector of Nuisances was appointed, even for the emergency.
The visitation of cholera was doubtless in the main accountable for the excess of energy displayed by Parliament about this period in matters affecting the public health.
During the recent cholera epidemic the physicians complained that all rational means of abating the plague were continually thwarted by the ignorance and obstinacy of the lower classes.
It was in one of the streets bordering this park that the cholera broke out in 1873, and there too, Kaulbach, one of its last victims, had his home.
It was scarcely surprising that the cholera should spread rapidly, for fear is its powerful auxiliary, and the Cruces people bowed down before the plague in slavish despair.
Other symptoms followed quickly, and, before nightfall, I knew full well that my turn had come at last, and that the cholera had attacked me, perhaps its greatest foe in Cruces.
I know I came across, the other day, some notes of cholera medicines which made me shudder, and I dare say they have been used in their turn and found wanting.
While the cholera raged, I had but too many opportunities of watching its nature, and from a Dr.
An American, whom I had cured of the cholera at Cruces, lent me his boat, and I hired two or three natives to cut down and shape the posts and bamboo poles.
I think their chief reliance was on "the yellow woman from Jamaica with the cholera medicine.
For while we were dull enough at this great trouble, we had cholera raging around us, carrying off its victims of all ranks.
In the year 1850, the cholera swept over the island of Jamaica with terrible force.
The Prophecy Fulfilled As soon as the camp arrived on Rush Creek, the cholera broke out among the members and continued for several days.
Typhoid, malaria, and yellow fever, cholera and others are examples of this class.
It may carry typhoid fever, Asiatic cholera, dysentery, cholera morbus, and other intestinal diseases; it may carry the bacilli of tuberculosis and certain eye diseases.
Flies that had been allowed to contaminate themselves with cholera germs were allowed access to milk and meat.
As with the typhoid germs milk seems to be a particularly good medium for the development of the cholera germs.
The evidence that flies carry and spread the deadly germs of cholera is most conclusive.
The Queen feels very anxious lest the fearful heat which the Army is exposed to should increase cholera and fever.
Last year the choleraquite decimated Newcastle, and was bad in many other places, but there was no special prayer, and now the illness is in London but not in any other place, a prayer is proposed by the Archbishop.
Footnote 32: He died of cholera at Delhi, on the 5th of July.
In addition to the hardships of the road the Indians gave considerable trouble and cholera broke out, causing the death of many.
Cholera broke out en route and twenty-one members of the party died ere they reached their destination.
He suffered the usual penalties for breaking out of bounds when there was cholera in the city.
The wife died of cholera in Ferozepore, and O'Hara fell to drink and loafing up and down the line with the keen-eyed three-year-old baby.
Cholera is endemic in some parts of the vilayet, and before 1875 the same was true of the bubonic plague.
Thus in cholera the bacteria are practically confined to the intestine, in diphtheria to the region of the false membrane, in tetanus to some wound.
This food is often very bad, and from that, combined with other causes, the cholera makes sad ravages amongst these poor people.
Of course, for this food a most exorbitant price is charged, and at the same time it is of so inferior a quality that numbers died of cholera in consequence of eating it.
The cholera this year was very mild; but not less than 650 died at Pooree, or between that place and Cuttack.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cholera" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.