Disease

Noun

 * 1)  An abnormal condition of the body or mind that causes discomfort or dysfunction; distinct from injury insofar as the latter is usually instantaneously acquired.
 * 2)  Any abnormal or harmful condition, as of society, people's attitudes, way of living etc.

Verb

 * 1) To infect with a disease.
 * 2)  To cause unease; to annoy, irritate.

Adjectives for Disease
mental; malignant; lurking; prevalent; hideous; pestilential; casual; vague; infectious; incurable; mystifying; loathsome obscure; virulent; contagious; incipient insidious; organic; curious; communicable subtle;  fatal; childish; indigenous; inherent; devastating; corrupting; frightful; tropical; inexorable; dread; devilish; pulmonary; inveterate; epidemic; tumorous; lingering; unconquerable; chronic; bewildering; horrible; secondary; intercurrent; febrile; fungus; advanced; inflammatory; foul; sporadic; moral; constitutional; wasting; unique; well-feigned; long-extinct;  progressive;  unripe;   nutritional resultant; purulent.

Verbs for Disease
accelerate—; afflict with—; aggravate—; alleviate—; arrest—; attribute—to; awaken —; battle—; beget—; bow down with—; breed—; carry—; characterize—; check—; combat—; communicate—; complicate—; contract—; control—; convey—; deal with —; detect—; diagnose—; disseminate—; efface—; eliminate—; engender—; eradicate —; exempt from—; expose to—; exterminate—; forestall—; fortify against—; foster —; harden to—; heal—; immunize against—; implant—; import—; induce—; infest with-—; inherit—; intensify—; introduce—; isolate—; languish with—; master—; over¬come—; predispose to—; recognize—; recover from—; rekindle—; relieve—; resist—; smite with—; stamp out—; succumb to—; suffer from—; transmit—; usher in—; ward off—; wrestle with—; —advances; —breaks out; —consumes; —declines; —destroys; —emaciates; —fastens itself upon; —flourishes; —gains a foothold; —hangs on; —lingers; —lurks; —mani¬fests itself; —menaces; —plagues; —prevails; —progresses; —rages; —ravages; —runs rampant; —spreads; —springs up; —stalks; —strikes; —subsides ; —threatens.

Synonyms for Disease
illness, malady, rot, sickness, ailment, complaint, disorder, infirmity, morbidity, infection, attack, seizure, stroke, fit, decay, convulsion, deterioration, unhealthiness, affliction, indisposition, affection, unsoundness.

Antonyms for Disease
health, soundness, virility, vigor, strength, forcefulness, robustness, sturdiness.

Thesaurus
affection, affliction, ailment, bane, blight, bug, bugbear, burden, calamity, cancer, complaint, condition, contagion, contaminate, crushing burden, curse, death, debility, decrepitude, destruction, disability, disorder, epizootic, evil, feebleness, grievance, harm, ill, illness, infect, infection, infirmity, infliction, malady, malaise, misery, murrain, nemesis, open wound, pest, pestilence, plague, running sore, scourge, sickliness, sickness, syndrome, taint, thorn, torment, unhealthiness, vexation, virus, visitation, woe

Etymology
disese from desese, disaise from  desaise:. Displaced native adle, audle "disease" (from  ādl "disease, sickness"),  cothe, coathe "disease" (from  coþu "disease").

Noun

 * Arabic: مرض, داء,  سقم
 * Armenian: ,
 * Azeri:
 * Basque:
 * Breton: kleñved -où
 * Bulgarian:, заболяване
 * Catalan: malaltia
 * Cebuano:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:, ,  病癥, ,  ,
 * Croatian:
 * Czech:
 * Danish: sygdom
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: ,
 * French:
 * German:
 * Greek:, ,  ,
 * Hawaiian:
 * Hebrew:
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Icelandic:, ,
 * Ido: malad-eso
 * Irish:
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: ,
 * Korean:


 * Kurdish: نه‌خۆشی
 * Latgalian:, ,
 * Latin:, infirmitas
 * Latvian: slimība, liga
 * Lithuanian: liga, susirgimas
 * Malayalam: രോഗം, സുഖക്കേട്
 * Norwegian:
 * Norwegian Bokmål:
 * Pitjantjatjara:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:, maladie
 * Russian:, , недуг,  хворь,  немочь,
 * Santali:
 * Scottish Gaelic:, ,  ,
 * Serbian: болест,, zaraza, obolenje
 * Slovene:
 * Spanish:
 * Swahili: magonjwa
 * Swedish:
 * Tagalog:
 * Telugu: వ్యాధి, రోగము, జబ్బు
 * Turkish:
 * Ukrainian:
 * Volapük: maläd
 * Welsh: clefyd, afiechyd

Anagrams

 * seaside