The doctor will inoculate the children against the flu by giving them the flu vaccine.
To inoculate means to inject a micro-organism into something, as in vaccines or inoculating plants with certain experimental micro-organisms. The doctor will inoculate you against smallpox with a vaccine.It can also mean to make someone become full of a certain quality. The politician will inoculate everyone with the idea that freedom must be fought for.I will inoculate the next patient with a dose of oral polio vaccine.Definition: (v.) to treat with the objective of producing resistance to a disease.Sentence: 'The doctor gave Joe a shot to inoculate him for the flu.'
it is a inculate
Inoculate is one verb of inoculation.Inoculates, inoculating and inoculated are other verbs, depending on the tense.Some example sentences are:We will inoculate the population.The team inoculates them.They are inoculating us now.Everyone was inoculated against free thoughts, making them under the complete control of their supreme leader.
An example sentence with the word "smallpox" is: My sister was diagnosed with smallpox when she was three.
The devil is in the details of exactly what you are referring to here. Do you mean: Can a person who has been vaccinated against smallpox then catch it at a later date, and while not getting sick from it, transmit it to others? Ans: In general, no. The vaccination not only keeps you healthy, but stops the virus in your body. Can a person who has recently been vaccinated against smallpox pass on smallpox to someone else? Ans: No, we don't use weakened variola virus (smallpox virus) to inoculate people. Can a person who has been recently vaccinated against smallpox using the standard live vaccinia virus type vaccine pass on a vaccinia virus infection to other people? Ans: Yes! And, it can be dangerous. That's why people should be careful with their fresh smallpox vaccination wounds. Can a person who has been recently vaccinated with the newest MVA-type smallpox vaccinations pass on a vaccinia infection on to others? Ans: No. At least theoretically not. But, it's so new, we can't say for absolute certain.
Vaccination
No there is no Malaria in Seychelles, though we do inoculate against it, especially if visiting any African countries known to have it
The correct spelling is inoculate.
Immunization against smallpox has, for centuries, been infection with live vaccinia virus.
A doctor named Jenner.
Edward Jenner developed vaccine against smallpox in 1798. He used cowpox virus containing fluid for the same.