Word definition: health

Etimology


Inherited from Middle English helthe, from Old English hǣlþ, from Proto-West Germanic *hailiþu, from Proto-Germanic *hailiþō, from Proto-Germanic *hailaz (“whole, hale”). Cognate with Old High German heilida. Analyzable as whole +‎ -th, hale +‎ -th, or heal +‎ -th. More at heal. Doublet of wholth.

noun


health (usually uncountable, plural healths)

The state of being free from physical or psychological disease, illness, or malfunction; wellness. [from 11th c.]

A state of well-being or balance, often physical but sometimes also mental and social; the overall level of function of an organism from the cellular (micro) level to the social (macro) level.

Physical condition.

(obsolete) Cure, remedy. [16th c. (Middle English: 11th–15th c.)]

(countable) A toast to prosperity. [from 17th c.]

(video games) The amount of damage an in-game object can withstand before it is destroyed.

Examples


Her mental health is really affected by stressful environments.

Then he commenced to talk, really talk. and inside of two flaps of a herring's fin he had me mesmerized, like Eben Holt's boy at the town hall show. He talked about the ills of humanity, and the glories of health and Nature and service and land knows what all.

The directors are concerned about the financial health of the project.

Strikingly, however, Waller does not deny but rather revels in the claim that healths lead to excessive drinking

The enemies on this level have a lot of health.

Lose a little health and there's a few seconds in which you'll be able to win it back by ragging on an enemy.

Related words


related terms

heal

Etimology


From Middle English heleð (“man, hero, fighter”), from Old English hæleþ (“man, hero, fighter”), from Proto-West Germanic *haliþ, from Proto-Germanic *haliþaz (“man, hero”). Cognate with West Frisian held (“hero”), Dutch held (“hero”), German Held (“hero”), Norwegian Nynorsk hauld (“freeman”).

noun


health (plural healths)

(obsolete) A warrior; hero; man.

Examples


They, under false pretence of amity and cheer, the British peers invite, the German healths to view.

Data provided by Wiktionary