generated at
cure
source: [灰と幻想のグリムガルのメリイが回復魔法を唱えるGIF画像|無料GIF画像検索 GIFMAGAZINE 960519]

verb with object
1. relieve (a person or animal) of the symptoms of a disease or condition:
〈医者・薬などが〉〈病気・けが〉を治療する, 治す; 〈人〉を回復, 全快させる; 〖cure A of B〗 A〈人〉のB〈病気・けが〉を治療する(→ heal)
e.g. he was cured of the disease
e.g. figurative : centuries of science have not cured us of our superstitions.
e.g. this technology could be used to cure diabetes.
〈人・物・事が〉〈問題・悪癖・不安など〉を取り除く, 終わらせる, 解決する; 〖cure A of B〗 A〈人〉のB〈悪癖・不安など〉を取り除く
e.g. stopping foreign investment is no way to cure the fundamental problem.
2. preserve (meat, fish, tobacco, or an animal skin) by various methods such as salting, drying, or smoking:
(塩漬け・乾燥・薫製(くんせい)などにより)〈肉・魚など〉を保存処理する; 〈タバコ・動物の皮など〉を加工処理する (!しばしば受け身で) .
e.g. (as adjective, in combination -cured) : home-cured ham
e.g. some farmers cured their own bacon.
〈ゴム〉を加硫する
no object undergo curing by a chemical process.

noun
1. a substance or treatment that cures a disease or condition:
【病気などの】治療; 治療薬, 法 «for»
e.g. the search for a cure for the common cold.
治癒, 回復
e.g. he was beyond cure.
【問題・悪癖・不安などに対する】解決策, 対策, 救済, 矯正法(solution) «for»
e.g. the cure is to improve the clutch operation.
2. the process of curing rubber, plastic, or other material.
(ゴムの)加硫, 硫化
〘宗〙 魂の救済; (魂を救済する)牧師職, 聖職; 教会区
e.g. a benefice involving the cure of souls.

DERIVATIVES
curer | ˈkyo͝orər | noun

ORIGIN
Middle English (as a noun): from Old French curer (verb), cure (noun), both from Latin curaretake care of’, from curacare’. The original noun senses were ‘care, concern, responsibility’, in particular spiritual care (hence cure (sense 3 of the noun) ). In late Middle English the senses ‘medical care’ and ‘successful medical treatment’ arose, and hence ‘remedy’.