curative - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of curative in Hindi

  • रोगनिवारक
  • रोगहर
  • नीरोगकारी
  • रोगनिवारक

curative Definition

Adjective

  • able to cure disease.

Noun

  • a medicine or remedy.

curative Example

  • the curative properties of herbs ( जड़ी बूटियों के उपचारात्मक गुण )
  • The temple and the curative establishment of the god were situated outside the city. ( भगवान का मंदिर और उपचारात्मक प्रतिष्ठान शहर के बाहर स्थित थे। )
  • He is curative to the nation, like medicine. ( वह औषधि की तरह राष्ट्र के लिए उपचारात्मक है। )
  • Florentino Ariza was never very conscious of that curative journey. ( फ्लोरेंटिनो एरिज़ा उस उपचारात्मक यात्रा के प्रति कभी भी सचेत नहीं थे। )

More Sentence

  • The earth plays the baptismal blood immersion burial as a curative rite:.
  • My reunion with Lovern, curative moments of talk and love, would have to wait.
  • Nonetheless, no evidence currently suggests that dietary changes are curative for.
  • Every day at home she diligently performed the entire complex of curative gymnastics recommended by the chiropractor.
  • The odd-looking roots and fungi might have curative properties but that didn't mean they couldn't be produced as damning evidence in a witchcraft trial.
  • Yet, in spite of its 350 acres of gardens, lawns, woods, and walking paths, its well-trained staff and comfortable surroundings, there would be no curative treatment for Rosemary.
  • He believed that time in the wilderness provided a lasting curative and civilizing value, and he spent twenty-five years advocating for the PCT, though when he died in 1957 the trail was still only a dream.
  • The antitoxic serum when injected enttinoxic previously to the toxin also confers immunity (passive) against it; when injected after the toxin it has within certain limits a curative action, though in this case its dose requires to be large.
  • This is still used for curative purposes, as it was in the days of Herod, but it is neglected and dirty.
  • It was principally famous, however, for its warm sulphur springs, remarkable for their variety and curative properties (Pliny, Hist.
  • he could suppress its symptoms by a curative process of borrowing and economy.
  • Many of the springs have curative properties, one of them, the Green Cove Spring in Clay county, discharging about 3000 gallons of sulphuretted water per minute.
  • Muswell Hill took name from a holy well, of high repute for curative powers, over which an oratory was erected early in the 12th century, attached to the priory of St John of Jerusalem in Clerkenwell.
  • In the vicinity of many of these mountain lakes thermal springs, with remarkable curative properties, are to be found.
  • Sacred wells are familiar features of Semitic sanctuaries, and Islam, retaining the well, made a quasi-biblical story for it, and endowed its tepid waters with miraculous curative virtues.
  • The well of St Triduana, which was reputed to possess wonderful curative powers, vanished when the North British railway was constructed.
  • So beneficial is the action that for years there prevailed the unfortunately erroneous belief that Chian turpentine is actually curative in this condition.
  • GUACO, Huaco or Guao, also Vejuco and Bejuco, terms applied to various Central and South American and West Indian plants, in repute for curative virtues.
  • It deals with the totality of individual and social health including preventive and curative aspects.  
  • Ginseng was both native and plentiful in New England and was highly regarded by the Chinese for its use as a curative for a variety of ailments.  
  • In alternative medicine, urine is considered a curative for a variety of medical conditions.  
  • It is now the curative for all the world's ills from war, to poverty, to cultural primitiveness.  
  • A lot are here because they have learning difficulties but this is because parents see our education as a curative.  
  • He reported he felt better, making her wonder about the benefits of increased circulation as a curative.
  • They appear in a document dating from 1341, where they are called "the Auschowitzer springs belonging to the abbey of Tepl;" but it was only through the efforts of Dr Josef Nehr, the doctor of the abbey, who from 1779 until his death in 1820 worked hard to demonstrate the curative properties of the springs, that the waters began to be used for medicinal purposes.
  • The most interesting of Pasteur's investigations in preventive and curative medicine remains to be told.