Ague
Ague is an archaic term for fever. The translation in Leviticus 26:16 (R.V., "fever") of the Hebrew word kaddah'ath, meaning "kindling", i.e., an inflammatory or burning fever. In Deut. 28:22 the word is rendered "fever." ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ It was also used in Old and early modern English as a word for malaria (the ague pronounced, (h)ay-g-ewe). Ague killed about 1000 men in the digging of the Montezuma Marsh section of the Erie Canal in 1819. It was understood that the fever came from the swamps, but not that mosquitos were the carriers. "Bad air" was blamed instead. Along the southeastern coast of the United States during its early history ague was a major killer, and many of the wealthier residents of Charleston, Savannah and other coastal cities with large swampy areas would travel to Boston or to the southern Appalachian Mountains to escape. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ T. S. Eliot wrote of 'The ague of the skeleton' in Whispers of Immortality. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Fever: Fever, also known as pyrexia, or a febrile response, is a medical symptom which describes an increase in internal body temperature to levels which are above normal (37 degrees Celsius, 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit). Fever should not be confused with Hyperthermia, which is an increase in body temperature ... Leviticus: Leviticus is the third book of the Hebrew Bible, also the third book in the Torah (five books of Moses). Christians refer to the Hebrew Bible as the Old Testament. The English name is derived from the Latin Liber Leviticus which is from the Greek (το) Λευιτι... Hebrew: The word Hebrew can variously mean:... | ~ Table of Content ~
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~ Related Subjects ~Hyperthermia (1) - Hypothermic (1) - Brown adipose tissue (1) - Fahrenheit (1) - Symptom (1) - Body temperature (1) - Celsius (1) - Latin (1) - Levitical (1) - Worship (1) - Old Testament (1) - Hebrew Bible (1) - Torah (1) - Christian (1) - Medical (1) -~ Community ~
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