infectious
English
editPronunciation
edit- (General American, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɪnˈfɛk.ʃəs/
Audio (Canada): (file)
Adjective
editinfectious (comparative more infectious, superlative most infectious)
- (pathology, of an illness) Caused by an agent that enters the host's body (such as a bacterium, virus, parasite, or prion); often, also, transmitted among hosts via any of various routes (for example, contact, droplet-borne, airborne, waterborne, foodborne, fomite-borne, or bloodborne).
- Cancer is usually not infectious.
- More infectious diseases like the flu are usually less potent.
- (pathology, typically of a person) Able to infect others; capable of transmitting pathogens.
- Despite feeling better, the patient is still infectious.
- 1981 December 1, Sue Hyde, quoting Paul Black, “AIDS Update: Little To Cheer About”, in Gay Community News, volume 12, number 20, page 3:
- I doubt that [saliva] is very infectious ... I don't think this is a normal route of transmission.
- (of feelings and behaviour) Spreading quickly from one person to another.
- Her enthusiasm for work can be really infectious.
- (informal) Memorable and invoking excitement or interest.
- Pop music is more infectious than elevator music.
Usage notes
editThe terms infectious, communicable, transmissible/transmittable, and contagious, as well as spreadable and catching, overlap on a semantic field and are often loosely used synonymously in their broad senses, although they are differentiable by narrower senses, as follows:
- The word infectious describes any disease or condition that is caused by an infectious agent (such as a bacterium, virus, parasite, or prion), including ones with person-to-person transmission/spread and ones without person-to-person transmission/spread. It is thus hypernymous to the following terms.
- The words communicable and transmissible/transmittable, as well as spreadable and catching (which are informal), describe the large subset of infectious diseases in which person-to-person transmission/spread (communication) can occur, including ones that are readily/easily spread and ones that are not readily/easily spread. They are thus hypernymous to the following term.
- The word contagious describes only those infectious diseases that are readily/easily spread, to the degree that preventing their spread is quite difficult unless a population is highly vaccinated against them (examples include measles and diphtheria).
Synonyms
editSee Usage notes.
Antonyms
edit- non-infectious, noninfectious (which are hypernymous to noncommunicable)
Derived terms
edit- agroinfectious
- antiinfectious
- bovine infectious petechial fever
- feline infectious peritonitis
- hyperinfectious
- infection
- infectious abortion
- infectious agent
- infectious bovine rhinotracheitis
- infectious disease
- infectious disease specialist
- infectiously
- infectious mononucleosis
- infectiousness
- neuroinfectious
- parainfectious
- postinfectious
- preinfectious
- pseudoinfectious
- reinfectious
- subinfectious
- superinfectious
- toxicoinfectious
- uninfectious
Translations
edittransmitted between persons as illness
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able to infect others
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(of feelings and behaviour) spreading quickly between persons
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informal: memorable and invoking excitement or interest
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