出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/25 20:48 UTC 版)
Borrowed from Latin dēlīrium (“derangement, madness”).
delirium (countable and uncountable, plural deliriums or deliria)
From dēlīrō (“to deviate from a straight track; to be crazy or deranged”) + -ium (nominal suffix).
dēlīrium n (genitive dēlīriī or dēlīrī); second declension
Second-declension noun (neuter).
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | dēlīrium | dēlīria |
| genitive | dēlīriī dēlīrī |
dēlīriōrum |
| dative | dēlīriō | dēlīriīs |
| accusative | dēlīrium | dēlīria |
| ablative | dēlīriō | dēlīriīs |
| vocative | dēlīrium | dēlīria |
Found in older Latin (until the Augustan Age).
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/07/07 02:47 UTC 版)
Delirium or acute confusional state is a common and severe neuropsychiatric syndrome with core features of acute onset and fluctuating course, attentional deficits and generalized severe disorganization of behavior. It typically involves other cognitive deficits, changes in arousal (hyperactive, hypoactive, or mixed), perceptual deficits, altered sleep-wake cycle, and psychotic features such as hallucinations and delusions. It is often caused by a disease process outside the brain, such as infection (UTI, pneumonia) or drug effects, particularly anticholinergics or other CNS depressants (benzodiazepines and opioids). Although hallucinations and delusions are sometimes present, these are not required for the diagnosis, and the symptoms of delirium are clinically distinct from those induced by psychosis or hallucinogens (with the exception of deliriants.)
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a desire
the condition of being intoxicated
名詞の変化形:
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