A-Z Of Coronavirus: The Dictionary You Need During The Pandemic Season

A list of words and terms that have gained currency during the coronavirus pandemic—explained

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A list of words and terms that have gained currency during the coronavirus pandemic—explained

The coronavirus pandemic has thrown up many terms, new and old. Heard ‘covidiot’ or ‘quaranteen’? Worry not—this list will bring you up to speed with each of them.

Asymptomatic: This refers to a situation in which a person may be suffering from a particular condition or disease (COVID-19 these days), but exhibits no symptoms. Also called silent carriers or silent spreaders, asymptomatic people complicate the spread of a disease, making a correct diagnosis elusive.

Bleach: This simple, innocuous word assumed devilish proportions when President Donald Trump advised Americans to expose themselves to UV rays or inject disinfectants such as bleach to treat the novel coronavirus. There’s just a small problem with the suggestion: Bleach is generally used to clean hard surfaces in the house and also for doing laundry, but it is a highly corrosive material. If ingested, it can damage your lungs, stomach and oesophagus often leading to death; it also causes burns. No wonder Trump’s suggestion was panned by health experts. Responding to the backlash, he claimed that he was being “sarcastic.”

Community transmission: One of the most dreaded modes of transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 virus is via community transmission. Simply put, it refers to a mode of transmission of the virus where the source of the infection is not traceable. It’s puzzling because you may have contracted the disease when you didn’t even travel to a COVID-19 region or met a person who had the infection. A disease at its community-transmission stage (also called stage 3) is indicative of its scarily widespread reach.

Contact tracing: Pe...

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