Nghĩa của từ quackery bằng Tiếng Sec

quackery <n.> šarlatánství Entry edited by: B2

Đặt câu có từ "quackery"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "quackery", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh - Tiếng Sec. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ quackery, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ quackery trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh - Tiếng Sec

1. Quackery, Cozenage and double standards

2. 1 synonym for Charlatanism: quackery

3. So-called "evidence-based medicine" has become modern-day quackery.

4. 11 Some scientists relegate parapsychology to the sphere of quackery.

5. People are intoxicated thing repeatedly reported, but no expose quackery mystery.

6. However, much of Egyptian “medicine” was really religious quackery and far from scientific.

7. In a famous play by Goethe, the doctor is accused of practicing quackery.

8. It’s even spawned a form of quackery, Atavistic chemotherapy, promoted by Dr

9. Synonyms for Charlatanism include charlatanry, quackery, flimflam, deceit, fraud, imposture, deception, dishonesty, deceitfulness and pretense

10. It's time to end the quackery of modern medicine and the profiteering from human suffering.

11. Aromatherapy (essential oils) The threat of imminent immune system collapse is the calling card of quackery

12. He informed that aim of holding Consultative meeting is to build partnership of regulatory bodies, eliminate menace of quackery through new anti-quackery strategy, capacity building of healthcare providers, provision of quality health services in Pakistan and others

13. Its primary focus is on quackery -related information that is difficult or impossible to get elsewhere.

14. There are critics who describe the robot cure for an aging society as little more than high-tech quackery .

15. Most medical practices were based on a fearful quackery, and most of the doctors were butchers or cranks.

16. Their “doctors” had some remedies based on natural ingredients, yet many of their “treatments” would now be labeled quackery.

17. This has opened the door to herbal quackery and even the sale of dangerous herbal concoctions passed off as cures.

18. Neither the accepted medical help, nor the quackery were of much use, for poor Louisa died early the following morning.

19. LaHaye's books have their share of quackery and pseudoscience, but that does not preclude some genuinely wise counsel to lovers--especially inexperienced ones.

20. Law's latest work, Believing Bullshit, sets out a spotter's guide to the standard techniques of intellectual quackery, to help the unwitting among us.

21. It is time to ban drug ads for good, and protect Americans from the fraudulent hype, propaganda and quackery of pharmaceutical medicine.

22. 29 Law's latest work, Believing Bullshit, sets out a spotter's guide to the standard techniques of intellectual quackery, to help the unwitting among us.

23. Charlatanism: 1 n the dishonesty of a charlatan Synonyms: quackery Type of: dishonesty , knavery lack of honesty; acts of lying or cheating or stealing

24. Using aspirin, an over-the-counter pill on sale in every supermarket without a prescription, to treat serious circulatory disease may seem almost like quackery.

25. Despite, or possibly because of, its long-known toxicity, arsenic-containing potions and drugs have a history in medicine and quackery that continues into the 21st century.

26. LONDON (Reuters) - Prince Charles has been accused of quackery and exploitation over his Duchy Originals food company's promotion of a "detox" tincture made from artichoke and dandelion.

27. The trouble with herbal medicines arises from a lack of reputable scientific study, a lot of quackery and a lack of Government regulations on the quality and claims of herbal preparations.

28. • A Charlatan (also called swindler or mountebank) is a person practicing quackery or some similar confidence trick in order to obtain money Synonyms of “Charlatan” Using a synonym can be a good alternative for using “Charlatan”.

29. A Charlatan (also called a swindler or mountebank) is a person practicing quackery or some similar confidence trick or deception in order to obtain money, fame, or other advantages via some form of pretense or deception

30. During the 1830s, faced with a "popular prejudice" against the curability of deafness as well as intraprofessional rivalries and continuous accusations of quackery, Aurists found their surgical authority questioned and their field's value threatened.