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blackleg
[ blak-leg ]
noun
- Also called black quarter,. Veterinary Pathology. an infectious, often fatal disease of cattle and sheep, caused by the soil bacterium Clostridium chauvoei and characterized by painful, gaseous swellings in the muscles, usually of the upper parts of the legs.
- Plant Pathology.
- a disease of cabbage and other cruciferous plants, characterized by dry, black lesions on the base of the stem, caused by a fungus, Phoma lingam.
- a disease of potatoes, characterized by wet, black lesions on the base of the stem, caused by a bacterium, Erwinia atroseptica.
- a swindler, especially in racing or gambling.
- British Informal. a strikebreaker; scab.
verb (used with object)
- to replace (a worker) who is on strike.
- to refuse to support (a union, union workers, or a strike).
- to betray or deceive (a person or cause).
verb (used without object)
- British Informal. to return to work before a strike is settled.
blackleg
/ ˈblæklɛɡ /
noun
- Also calledscab
- a person who acts against the interests of a trade union, as by continuing to work during a strike or taking over a striker's job
- ( as modifier )
blackleg labour
- Also calledblack quarter an acute infectious disease of cattle, sheep, and pigs, characterized by gas-filled swellings, esp on the legs, caused by Clostridium bacteria
- plant pathol
- a fungal disease of cabbages and related plants caused by Phoma lingam , characterized by blackening and decay of the lower stems
- a similar disease of potatoes, caused by bacteria
- a person who cheats in gambling, esp at cards or in racing
verb
- to act against the interests of a trade union, esp by refusing to join a strike
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
But the tick that experts warn of the most is a common blacklegged tick, which is found mainly in forests and spreads Lyme disease.
In parts of Staten Island and the Bronx, it is already found in “extremely high densities” and appears “to be displacing blacklegged ticks,” according to a 2022 health department bulletin.
For example, deer and rodent habitats are increasingly overlapping with human communities—and all three species are hosts for the blacklegged tick, also aptly named the deer tick.
Poppy-seed-size blacklegged ticks, which are also known as deer ticks and can transmit Lyme disease, can spread the disease to humans after feeding on infected mice.
The disease is spread by the western blacklegged tick, which is found in the western parts of the state and along the eastern slopes of the Cascades.
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