英:[trentʃ fut]
美:[trɛntʃ fʊt]
英:[trentʃ fut]
美:[trɛntʃ fʊt]
n.
战壕足病
noun
a painful foot disorder resembling frostbite and resulting from prolonged exposure to cold and wet
壕沟足
The first known use of trench foot was in 1915
trench footnoun
a painful foot disorder resembling frostbite and resulting from exposure to cold and wet
1 For many American soldiers, learning about the jungle — including jaguars and trench foot — has meant confronting the limits of American technological prowess, inspiring a greater degree of humility.
2 Dire reports warned of unserviceable and overflowing toilets and looming trench foot.
3 Perspiration needs to be managed; moisture increases the risk of hypothermia and trench foot.
4 The medics often see people with ailments including trench foot, frostbite, blisters from too-small boots, gout and infected lacerations, Burns says.
5 Cases of athlete’s foot, corns, toenails that had gone uncut for years and were coiled around and around themselves — all were uncomfortable and easily fixed, as was trench foot.
6 Providers are anecdotally seeing the worst cases of things like trench foot, a type of foot damage from prolonged exposure to cold, damp and unsanitary conditions causing feet to swell and smell like decay.
7 O’Connell and a colleague later made a small study of death records, which suggested that patients with a history of frostbite — or of trench foot — had a death rate seven times as high as other homeless people of the same age group.
8 And doctors at the Bakhmut hospital said hypothermia and trench foot, a painful skin condition caused by prolonged immersion in cold water, were common among Ukrainian forces, though treated quickly and often at the front line.
9 This will keep your feet as dry as possible, and could save you from trench foot.
这样可以让你的脚尽可能的保持干燥, 让你远离战壕足病.
10 Sergeant Lick lost all his toenails but through regular massages and a rotation of his socks he avoided trench foot.
利克中士失去脚指甲,但是通过不懈的按摩和勤换袜子,他还是避免了战壕足病。