They wonderfully ease fevers coming of flegm, as quotidian fevers, agues, epiatos, &c.
It is the general rule, with frequent exceptions, that the quotidian paroxysm comes on in the morning, the tertian about noon, and the quartan in the afternoon.
Another rule is that the quartan has the longest cold stage, while its paroxysm is shortest as a whole; the quotidian has the shortest cold stage and a long hot stage, while its paroxysm is longest as a whole.
Quotidian intermittent is on the whole more common than tertian in hot countries; elsewhere the tertian is the usual type, and quartan is only occasional.
Ye'll like for to hare; 'Twas the double quotidian humerous faver.
Defn: Having the characteristics of both a tertian and a quotidian intermittent.
Defn: Occurring or returning daily; as, a quotidian fever.
The periods of quotidian fever are either catenated with solar time, and return at the intervals of twenty-four hours; or with lunar time, recurring at the intervals of about twenty-five hours.
In the intermittent form the fever usually has the quotidian type; some slight chilliness is experienced in the early morning as a rule, and the exacerbation occurs in the afternoon and evening, the sweating being slight toward the morning.
The truly malarial form of calculus fever differs from the traumatic in its regular periodicity and the methodical sequence of the attacks, which occur in the order of an intermittent quotidian or tertian.
If I could meet that Fancie-monger, I would giue him some good counsel, for he seemes to haue the Quotidian of Loue vpon him Orl.
As euer you come of women, come in quickly to sir Iohn: A poore heart, hee is so shak'd of a burning quotidian Tertian, that it is most lamentable to behold.
The "plebs medicorum" say that a quartan fever comes of melancholy, a tertian of choler, a quotidian of putrefied pituitous matter.
Fevers, quotidian and tertian (Hummah Salis), in Arabia, i.
Time moved for you not in quotidian beats, But in the long slow rhythm the ages keep In their immortal symphony.
But Archibald, Duke of Argyle, was narrow in his ordinary expences, in his quotidian expences.
They live, as a rule, in mediocre circumstances; they are harried by the necessities ofquotidian existence.
It is a quotidian truth that few before him had the courage or clairvoyancy to enunciate.
In the End of July, and Beginning of August, the aguish Cases we had at Munster continued to be of the Quotidian or Tertian Kind.
Statistics gathered from a great many sources and relating to many countries and climates indicate that quotidian intermittents are more common than tertian.
There is a very old and quite well-supported opinion, that the cold stage is shorter in the quotidian than in the tertian type, and also that the hot stage is longer in the former than in the latter.
It must be remarked, however, that if any natural law does exist establishing the quotidian as the typical form of intermittent fevers, it is very often set aside by unknown influences.
Marquess of Steyne, the old rake donned his beaver-hat and started on his quotidian round of the more exclusive clubs.
Yet what novelist has kept his ear so close to quotidian happenings, and with what dignity and charm in his crumbling cadences?
Time and space were abolished as sense illusions by the worthy Bishop of Cloyne, George Berkeley; but as we are up to our eyes in quotidian life, which grows over and about us like grass, we cannot shake off the oppression.