Similar words: food poisoning, poison, poisonous, seasoning, reasoning, son-in-law, boning, swooning. Meaning: ['pɔɪznɪŋ] n. 1. the physiological state produced by a poison or other toxic substance 2. the act of giving poison to a person or animal with the intent to kill.
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91. They become bitter and evil, fighting each other and poisoning animals and humans with venomous darts.
92. The Consumers Association says some could have caused food poisoning.
93. Mr Spiro was found dead from cyanide poisoning in his truck three days after the November 6 massacre.
94. The germs multiply quickly in the heat, and can produce food poisoning.
95. A Petaluma man has died after eating toxic mushrooms in the second such poisoning incident in the Bay Area in a week.
96. The Echo investigation highlighted a series of deaths caused by carbon monoxide poisoning from faulty gas fires.
97. Rumours circulate of bombs in New York's subway system, and the poisoning of water wells.
98. Salmonella poisoning has received considerable publicity in the recent past.
99. There were several food poisoning cases following the church picnic.
100. The prime minister, Pascoal Mocumbi, said the cause may have been food poisoning, lack of water, or suffocation.
101. There's been an outbreak of food poisoning at the hotel.
102. Four years ago, Johnson contracted food poisoning prior to the Olympics, the illness sapping his strength and ruining his conditioning.
103. A postmortem examination report showed he died from poisoning by carbon monoxide due to inhalation of fumes.
104. Lead poisoning can cause kidney damage, injury to the central and peripheral nervous system and brain damage in particularly aggravated cases.
105. A total of 798 suspected poisoning incidents were reported, an increase of 62 on the previous year.
106. Many chemicals employed in industry have little therapeutic usefulness but may produce poisoning in man when they are used.
107. A 50g sample of each food item must be kept for 72 hours in case there is an outbreak of food poisoning.
108. Yet most people never suffer the consequences of aluminium poisoning.
109. A few days later, Earl Seiguard died of blood poisoning.
110. She warned him that the dye might come out and that he'd get blood poisoning.
111. If you're suffering from holiday diarrhoea, you've probably got food poisoning.
112. Carbon monoxide or manganese poisoning and encephalitis are rare causes of the parkinsonian syndrome.
113. I've been going downhill for several days now. Blood poisoning seems the problem.
114. In retrospect,[www.Sentencedict.com] dying of the disease itself would seem infinitely preferable to the agonies of death from mercury poisoning.
115. Some local resentment over the Government's stance during the Camelford water poisoning incident in 1988.
116. Use of inadequate machinery may result in food poisoning and subsequent prosecution under the Food Safety Act 1990.
117. The plan is intended to prevent farmers from poisoning or shooting the birds, which is against the law.
118. In Braintree 234 people suffered from food poisoning last year, with some outbreaks affecting ten or more people.
119. The inquest was told that Mr Jeffrey, who was from Stroud, had died from carbon monoxide poisoning.
120. The tell-tale signs of poisoning in birds are lethargy, refusing to feed and discoloration of the eyes.
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