See Also: forensic medicine(medicine)
forensic medicine(encyclopedia)
Forensic medicine(health)
Herbal medicine (botanical medicine, herbology, phytomedicine)(health)
Medicine Lodge Memorial Hospital- Medicine Lodge(health)
Orthomolecular medicine (orthomolecular nutritional medicine, orthomolecular therapy)(health)
medicine(2)(dictionary)
medicine(dictionary)
medicine(1)(dictionary)
medicine(encyclopedia)

Yes (medicine) and Forensic medicine (health)


Yes (medicine)


yes


Ay; yea; a word which expresses affirmation or consent; opposed to no.

Yes is used, like yea, to enforce, by repetition or addition, something which precedes; as, you have done all this yes, you have done more. "Yes, you despise the man books confined."

"The fine distinction between 'yea' and 'yes,' 'nay' and 'no,' that once existed in English, has quite disappeared. 'Yea' and 'nay' in Wyclif's time, and a good deal later, were the answers to questions framed in the affirmative. 'Will he come?' To this it would have been replied, 'Yea' or 'Nay', as the case might be. But, 'Will he not come?' To this the answer would have been 'Yes' or 'No.' Sir Thomas More finds fault with Tyndale, that in his translation of the Bible he had not observed this distinction, which was evidently therefore going out even then, that is, in the reign of Henry VIII.; and shortly after it was quite forgotten."

Origin: OE. Yis, yis, yes, yise, AS. Gese, gise; probably fr. Gea yea + swa so. See Yea, and So.

Source: Websters Dictionary


Forensic medicine (health)


The branch of medicine that deals with the application of medical knowledge to legal problems and legal proceedings. Also called legal medicine. A physician may be engaged in forensic (or legal) medicine; a lawyer with comparable interests is said to be engaged in medical jurisprudence.