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cured

intermediateB1

/kjʊrd/ · cured

To eliminate a disease or condition from someone's body; to restore health.

Meanings

verbformal

To eliminate a disease or condition from someone's body; to restore health.

کسی بیماری یا حالت کو کسی کے جسم سے دور کرنا؛ صحت کی بحالی کرنا۔

علاج کرنا

ilaaj karna

Synonyms

healremedytreatشفا دیناعلاج کرنابہتری دینا

Antonyms

harmworsendeteriorateنقصان دینابدتر کرناخراب کرنا

Common Collocations

  • cured disease
  • cured meats
  • cured skin

Example Sentences

The patient was cured of her illness after several treatments.

مریضہ کئی علاج کے بعد اپنی بیماری سے شفا پا گئی۔

Mareeza kai ilaaj ke baad apni bimari se shifa paa gayi.

The doctor was confident that she could cure the infection.

ڈاکٹر کو یقین تھا کہ وہ انفیکشن کا علاج کر سکتی ہے۔

Doctor ko yaqeen tha ke woh infection ka ilaaj kar sakti hai.

They cured the meat by drying and salting it.

انہوں نے گوشت کو خشک اور نمکین کر کے علاج کیا۔

Unhoon ne gosht ko khushk aur namkeen kar ke ilaaj kiya.

Easily Confused With

cure:Cured is the past participle of cure, describing the state after treatment, while cure refers to the action of treating.

Word Family

cure
verbعلاج کرنا
curable
adjectiveعلاج کیا جا سکنے والا
curettage
nounکیورٹیج

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Remember 'cured' as 'cure + d' indicating something that has been treated.

Imagine a patient with a smile, holding a medicine bottle, symbolizing health restored.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

عشق کا کوئی علاج نہیں ہے، یہ تو زخم ہے دل کا

Ishq ka koi ilaaj nahi hai, yeh to zakhm hai dil ka

There is no cure for love; it is a wound of the heart.

Unknown, Unverified

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

روغن لگانے سے مرہم نہیں لگتا

Roghan lagane se marham nahi lagta

Applying oil does not substitute for healing.

📖 Etymology

Origin: Old French "curer" — to care for, to heal

First known use: 14th century

The word 'cure' evolved from the Latin 'cura', indicating to look after or care. Over time, it was adopted into Old French as 'curer', which influenced the English term.