46 Metaphors for treatment

His treatment of the foot when well, and how to keep it so; and how to treat the foot by shoeing when it becomes injured, is the best that can be adopted.

Specimens of the breed have occasionally been seen that are savage, but when this is the case ill-treatment of some sort has assuredly been the provoking cause.

We admire and respect many things in M. Renan; but it seems to us that his treatment of this matter is simply the ne plus ultra of the degradation of the greatest of issues by the application to it of sentiment unworthy of a silly novel.

Antiseptic treatment, such as creosoting, is the best prevention.

The treatment of the Indians by Penn may be d to (with) the treatment of them by other colonists.

TREATMENT OF PRISONERS OF WAR The prisoner of war has been a conspicuous figure in the news that has come from the seething caldron of Europe.

It would be more accurate to say that kind, courteous treatment of women is the last and highest product of civilization.

His treatment of the Indians was one point on which he showed both the correctness of his judgement, and the right feelings of his heart.

Even where the artistic treatment was not first-rate, was not such as the painterspriests and poets as well as paintersof the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries would have lent to such themes,still if the sentiment and significance were but intelligible to those especially addressed, the purpose was accomplished, and the effect must have been good.

The arcading is purely Renaissance in detail though the general treatment is mediæval.

Then, encouraged by the favorable impression he had produced, Grimbart airily disposed of the cases of Wackerlos and Hintze by proving that they had both stolen the disputed sausage, after which he went on to say that Reynard had undertaken to instruct Lampe the hare in psalmody, and that the ill treatment which the panther had described was only a little wholesome castigation inflicted by the teacher upon a lazy and refractory pupil.

The treatment of men in prison is a much more difficult problem than the care of the physically diseased.

I thought that this treatment of Indians was an excrescence upon a system that was intrinsically and mainly good.

As there are fewer patients, individual treatment is the rule, and the nurse gets more intimate knowledge of her patients' condition, which she may thus do much to ameliorate.

The treatment is obviousget rid of the cause.

"All very well," he responded, hoarsely, "as far as it goes; but I am convinced that much severer treatment will be necessaire"

Until the fourteenth century, such writings were studies in erotics rather than in literaturethe actual situations rather than their literary treatment being the authors' prime concern.

The figure is cleverly merged in half shadow, but the treatment of the face is brusque, and a most unpleasant smirk distorts the child's mouth.

His treatment of his characters is even a more significant index to his growth than the form of his dramas.

The seventeenth century is only womansee the tapestries, the delightful goddesses who have discarded their hoops and heels to appear in still more delightful nakedness, the noble woods, the tall castles, with the hunters looking round; no servile archaeology chills the fancy, it is but a delightful whim; and this treatment of antiquity is the highest proof of the genius of the seventeenth century.

This treatment was the enactment and perpetuation of a most barbarous and cruel law.

She would have you treat me, as she treats Mr. Hickman, I suppose: but neither does that treatment become your admirable temper to offer, nor me to receive.

Such treatment is the hideous but inevitable test of his rebellion's value, for so persecuted they the rebels that were before him.

"Their treatment of America is the worse for it.

Highly as the pious Hindoo venerates the sacred bull of Shira, his treatment of his mild patient beasts of burden is a foul blot on his character.

46 Metaphors for  treatment