Nurse /(nûrs)/
Nurse
n.
- One who nourishes; a person who supplies food, tends, or brings up; as: (a) A woman who has the care of young children; especially, one who suckles an infant not her own. (b) A person, especially a woman, who has the care of the sick or infirm.
-
One who, or that which, brings up, rears, causes to grow, trains, fosters, or the like.
The nurse of manly sentiment and heroic enterprise.
- A lieutenant or first officer, who is the real commander when the captain is unfit for his place. (Naut.)
- A peculiar larva of certain trematodes which produces cercariae by asexual reproduction. See Cercaria, and Redia. (Zool.)
Phrases & Compounds
- Nurse shark
- A large arctic shark (Somniosus microcephalus), having small teeth and feeble jaws; -- called also sleeper shark, and ground shark.
- To put to nurse
- to send away to be nursed; to place in the care of a nurse.
- Wet nurse
- See Wet nurse, and Dry nurse, in the Vocabulary.
Nurse
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Nursed; p. pr. & vb. n. Nursing
-
To nourish; to cherish; to foster
Sons wont to nurse their parents in old age.
Him in Egerian groves Aricia bore, And nursed his youth along the marshy shore.
-
To bring up; to raise, by care, from a weak or invalid condition; to foster; to cherish; -- applied to plants, animals, and to any object that needs, or thrives by, attention.
By what hands [has vice] been nursed into so uncontrolled a dominion?
- To manage with care and economy, with a view to increase; as, to nurse our national resources.
- To caress; to fondle, as a nurse does.
Phrases & Compounds
- To nurse billiard balls
- to strike them gently and so as to keep them in good position during a series of caroms.