Cureall


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Cure´`all`


n.1.A remedy for all diseases, or for all ills; a panacea.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
Therefore, the process outlined above is not foolproof and has not been a magic cureall for every single singer, nor is it intended to be.
It is not very unsafe as some say, nor is it a cureall as others state.
SUNDERLAND'S home win against Fulham was not a cureall, according to Chris Coleman - but it may have helped the Black Cats earn a point against Birmingham City.
Although this is a powerful and useful tool that has many benefits for individuals with puzzling personal problems (misfortunes, deadends in life, irresistible attraction to another individual), it is not a panacea or a cureall.
They state in their report: "For too long, antibiotics have been used as if they were a bottomless pit of cureall miracle treatments.
"But none of us are kidding ourselves that this Budget was a cureall for the economy and we know there is still a great deal more to be done.
Re-worked from the musical bedrock of great depression cureall Crazy Girl, the Washington try-out lost half a million dollars, not without reason.
The Emirates Stadium is being held up as a cureall for Arsenal's problems.
americana, a common species from the Bolivian lowlands, is used as a "cureall" in Peru (Desmarchelier et al., 1997).
According to the Export & Finance Bank of Jordan, "Reliance on foreign aid as a cureall for Jordan's economic ills can have serious implications in the future.