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  1. 'Vaccine' has an etymology hiding in plain sight: it comes from the fact that the earliest one was derived from cowpox. The Latin word for 'cow' is 'vaccinae,' which was then used for later vaccines of all types.

  2. 2 lis 2015 · The word vaccine, and vaccination, actually comes from the name for a pox virus—the cowpox virus, vaccinia, to be exact. But why did this wonderful tool of immunization, which constitutes one of the “greatest hits” in the entire history of medicine, get its name from a virus that attacks cows?

  3. Adopted from the French, it is a technique originally revealed in 1796 by the ingenious English doctor and researcher Edward Jenner (1749-1823) in view of the looming threat of smallpox.

  4. 28 wrz 2017 · vaccine. (n.) "matter used in vaccination," 1846, from French vaccin, noun use of adjective, from Latin vaccina, fem. of vaccinus "pertaining to a cow" (see vaccination). Related: Vaccinal; vaccinic. also from 1846.

  5. 1 sty 2021 · As we head into 2021, there’s one word on all of our minds: Vaccine. It may be in headlines right and left these days, but the word was actually coined more than a century ago. In the 1700s, smallpox seemed unbeatable.

  6. Vaccines give people immunity to infectious diseases by teaching their immune systems to recognize and destroy a particular virus or bacteria, preventing infection and protecting everyone. But where does the word vaccine come from? The Latin name for smallpox is variola. Its first recorded use was in the year 580, when Saint Gregory of Tours ...

  7. 30 kwi 2021 · The terms vaccine and vaccination are derived from Variolae vaccinae (smallpox of the cow), the term devised by Edward Jenner (who both developed the concept of vaccines and created the first vaccine) to denote cowpox.

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