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Definition of Full treatment
1. Noun. Everything available; usually preceded by 'the'. "For $10 you get the full treatment"
Generic synonyms: Entireness, Entirety, Integrality, Totality
Lexicographical Neighbors of Full Treatment
Literary usage of Full treatment
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. System of Positive Polity by Auguste Comte (1876)
"full treatment reserved for Chap. IV. was in itself more dangerous than this
absolute immutability. But, acting on the basis already laid by Fetichism, ..."
2. The Encyclopædia of Pleading and Practice: Under the Codes and Practice Acts by William Mark McKinney, Thomas Johnson Michie (1897)
"For a discussion and full treatment of this subject, including the necessity of
pleading a former adjudication and its conclusiveness as an estoppel, ..."
3. Consumption and tuberculosis: Their Proximate Cause and Specific Treatment by John Francis Churchill (1875)
"Still continues well, and coughs but seldom ; pulse 60, regular, and moderately
full. Treatment.—Hypophosphite of soda, gr. viij. every other day. ..."
4. Nostrums and Quackery: Articles on the Nostrum Evil and Quackery Reprinted by American Medical Association, Arthur Joseph Cramp (1921)
"The directions accompanying the sample are very brief, but the recipient is told
that "fuller directions and suggestions accompany the full treatment. ..."
5. Steel and Its Heat Treatment by Denison Kingsley Bullens (1916)
"But if the drawing temperature must be much lower, as for gears, the full treatment
as in.(I) is advisable. a. Quench in oil from about 175° to 200° F. over ..."
6. A Treatise on venereal diseases by Auguste-Théodore Vidal (1865)
"It is not prudent to commence the full treatment of a pregnant female during the
ninth month of her pregnancy. At this period a palliative treatment only ..."