Covid-19
Translingual
editProper noun
editCovid-19
- Alternative form of COVID-19
English
editProper noun
edit- Alternative letter-case form of COVID-19
French
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
edit- IPA(key): /kɔ.vid diz.nœf/
Audio (Switzerland): (file)
Proper noun
edit- (pathology) COVID-19 (disease)
- 2020 January 28, “Comprendre la Covid-19”, in Gouvernement[1]:
- Les crises d’asthme sont le plus souvent de courte durée, variables et réversibles, contrairement à l’insuffisance respiratoire liée à la Covid-19 qui est de plus longue durée.
- Asthma attacks are most often of short duration, variable and reversible, unlike respiratory failure linked to COVID-19, which is of longer duration.
- 2021 February 11, “Le point sur l’épidémie de Covid-19 en France: le variant britannique représente un quart des infections”, in Le Monde[2]:
- Ces deux variants sont particulièrement surveillés car, outre qu’ils semblent être plus contagieux, comme celui qui a émergé au Royaume-Uni, ils pourraient également être « moins sensibles à certains vaccins disponibles » et « échapper aux anticorps fabriqués » par les personnes guéries du Covid-19, a souligné Olivier Véran.
- These two variants bear special surveilance because, in addition to appearing to be more contagious, like the one that has emerged in the UK, they may also be "less sensitive to available vaccines" and to "slip past existing antibodies" of those who have recovered from COVID-19, according to Olivier Véran.
- (virology, metonymically) COVID-19 (virus)
- 2019 December 19, “Nouveau Coronavirus (Maladie: COVID-19, Virus: SARS-CoV-2)”, in sciensano[3]:
- Coronavirus Covid-19
- COVID-19 coronavirus
- 2021 February 5, “Mise en place d'un suivis des populations particulières”, in Covireivac[4]:
- Les données concernant l’utilisation des vaccins contre la Covid-19 en population particulière sont très peu nombreuses.
- There is little current data on the use of vaccines against COVID-19 within specific populations.
Usage notes
edit- In Canadian French, Covid-19 f is feminine, by analogy with maladie f.
- In Maghreb French, Covid-19 m is masculine.
- In European French, Covid-19 m or f appears in usage as masculine and feminine.
- According to the Académie Française, Office québécois de la langue française, and Organisation mondiale de la santé, this term is feminine, because the term derives from the English word disease, which is feminine in its French form, maladie f.
Indonesian
editEtymology
editPronunciation
editProper noun
editCovid-19
Alternative forms
editItalian
editProper noun
editPortuguese
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editUnadapted borrowing from English COVID-19.
Proper noun
editCovid-19 m or f
- (pathology) COVID-19 (disease)
- (virology, metonymically) COVID-19 (virus)
- 2021 April 7, “Duas enfermeiras vacinadas no Japão testam positivo para Covid-19”, in Portal Mie[5]:
- Duas enfermeiras na cidade de Atsugi (Kanagawa) que foram vacinadas contra Covid-19, desde então, testaram positivo para o vírus, anunciou o governo provincial na terça-feira (6).
- Two nurses in the city of Atsugi (Kanagawa) who had been vaccinated against COVID-19 earlier, tested positive for the virus, the prefectural government announced Tuesday (April 6).
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- id:Pathology
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