different between metastasize vs metastasized
metastasize
English
Alternative forms
- metastasise
Etymology
From metastasis +? -ize.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /m??tæst?s??z/
Verb
metastasize (third-person singular simple present metastasizes, present participle metastasizing, simple past and past participle metastasized)
- (medicine, of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis.
- 1989, Margaret Atwood, Cat's Eye:
- On other screens are closeups of skin pores, before and after, details of regimes for everything, your hands, your neck, your thighs. Your elbows, especially your elbows: aging begins at the elbows and metastasizes.
- 2001, David Lodge, Thinks...:
- ‘Your lump could be a secondary cancer metastasized from the bowel. I had a patient like that not long ago.’
- 1989, Margaret Atwood, Cat's Eye:
Translations
metastasize From the web:
- what metastasis means
- what metastasis to liver
- what metastasis to lung
- what metastasis to bone
- what metastasis to the brain
- what metastasized mean
- what metastasis
- what metastasis to brain
metastasized
English
Verb
metastasized
- simple past tense and past participle of metastasize
metastasized From the web:
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