IUD
English
Etymology
The Philippine sense is due to the streetfood being reminiscent of an intrauterine device.
Noun
IUD (countable and uncountable, plural IUDs)
- Initialism of intrauterine device.
- 2022 May 10, Catherine Pearson, “What to Know Before Getting an IUD”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- An IUD is a type of long-acting, reversible contraceptive. The small, T-shaped device is placed in the uterus and left in place to prevent pregnancy for between three and 12 years, depending on the type.
- 2022, Ling Ma, “Tomorrow”, in Bliss Montage, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, →ISBN:
- That, and her IUD, which had become so deeply embedded in her uterine lining that only the uninsured process of surgical extraction could remove it, had created a false narrative of childlessness.
- 2023 March 21, Jessie Gretener, “Progestagen-only contraceptives carry similar, small breast cancer risk as other hormone contraceptives, study finds”, in CNN[2]:
- The authors also said they attempted to investigate whether there are differing breast cancer risks between hormonal and nonhormonal IUDs. However, they said too few women in England had been prescribed nonhormonal IUDs to make a reliable comparison.
- (psychiatry) Initialism of inhalant use disorder.
- 2012, Paul S. Links, Jamal Y. Ansari, Fatima Fazalullasha, Ravi Shah, “The Relationship of Personality Disorders and Axis I Clinical Disorders”, in Thomas A. Widiger, editor, The Oxford Handbook of Personality Disorders (Oxford Library of Psychology), Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 247:
- Typically, respondents with ASPD that use inhalants often exhibited a greater level of antisocialism, and this relationship was intensified further if the inhalant user had an IUD.
- (psychiatry) Initialism of internet use disorder.
- (Philippines, informal) barbecued chicken intestine, sold as street food
Translations
intrauterine device
Anagrams
Italian
Noun
IUD m
- IUD
- Synonyms: DIU, spirale, dispositivo intrauterino