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virus
 virus
gen. Virus
agric. Virus; infektiöse Enzephalomyelitis der Pferde
comp. Computervirus; Virus
ed. Computervirus
emerg.care Virus
environ. Virus
IT Virusprogramm
law, ADR Computervirus
| deoxyribonucleic acid
 deoxyribonucleic acid
gen. Desoxyribonukleinsäure
| virus
 virus
environ. Virus
- only individual words found (there may be no translations for some thesaurus entries in the bilingual dictionary)

noun | adjective | to phrases
virus ['vaɪ(ə)rəs] n
gen. Virus
IT Virusprogramm n
law, ADR Computervirus m (Ein virus ist ein Programm, das sich selbst reproduziert, Computer befällt und auf dem befallenen Computer die Programmabläufe beeinflusst oder zerstört)
phys. Computer-Virus m
virus ['vaɪ(ə)rəs] adj.
agric. Virus (pl. viruses); infektiöse Enzephalomyelitis der Pferde
comp. Computervirus (a program); Virus (a program)
ed. Computervirus
emerg.care Virus
virus Submicroscopic agents that infect plants, animals and bacteria, and are unable to reproduce outside the tissues of the host. A fully formed virus consists of nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) surrounded by a protein and lipid (fat) coat. The nucleic acid of the virus interferes with nucleic acid-synthesizing mechanism of the host cell, organizing it to produce more viral nucleic acid. Viruses cause many diseases (e.g., mosaic diseases of many cultivated plants, myxomatosis, foot and mouth disease, the common cold, influenza, measles, poliomyelitis). Many plant viruses are transmitted by insects, some by eelworms. Animal viruses are spread by contact, droplet infection or by insect vectors and some are spread by the exchange of body fluids adj.
environ. Virus
 English thesaurus
virus ['vaɪ(ə)rəs] abbr.
abbr. v
IT A program with the ability to reproduce by modifying other programs to include a copy of itself (A virus may contain destructive code that can move into multiple programs, data files or devices on a system and spread through multiple systems in a network)
med. A microscopic infectious agent that requires a living host cell in order to replicate. Viruses often cause disease in humans, including measles, mumps, rubella, polio, influenza, and the common cold. HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
VIRUS ['vaɪ(ə)rəs] abbr.
abbr., comp., net., IT Virtual Information Resource Under Seize
abbr., IT Vital Information Resources Under Siege
abbr., mil. Very Important Resource Under Siege
abbr., progr., IT Very Important Resource Under Search
abbr., sec.sys., IT Vital Information Resource Under Siege
virus: 960 phrases in 22 subjects
Agriculture14
Alternative dispute resolution1
Animal husbandry6
Biology5
Business4
Computers17
Dyalysis1
Economy1
Foreign trade1
General80
Health care197
Informal2
Information technology8
Life sciences14
Medical514
Microsoft7
Natural resourses and wildlife conservation7
Natural sciences6
Obsolete / dated12
Pharmacy and pharmacology19
Phytophathology5
Technology39