0 past simple and past participle of nurse --
2 When a woman nurses a baby, she feeds it with milk from her breasts. --
3 to have a strong feeling or an emotion for a long time: --
I have spoken to two people who nursed him in hospital as a baby.
The aim, of course, is to make constant attendance allowance payable in those cases where the sick person is being nursed at home.
The incidence of decubitus ulcers—pressure sores—both in hospital patients and in people being nursed at home, is affected by many factors.
Furthermore, the system nursed the soldier through the ' recruit stage ' of religious life and ensured that opportunities for worship did not depend on the ' personal charm ' of the chaplain.
They were told to have their usual breakfast and the babies were nursed from one breast at 09.00 hours; the other breast was then emptied by a mechanical pump.
Only then do they 'realize that they gave birth to and patiently nursed torturers and victims', and decide on rebellion in the name of the 'miracle of normalcy and continuation'.
In previous research on the practice of using wet-nurses, several explanations are given for the cessation of the system in which a woman nursed another woman's child.
Those who supplemented early and nursed little at night resumed cycles at a median of 7-7 months, all but one woman resuming within a year.