immune

immune
adj.
1 protected against a disease
VERBS
be, seem
become
remain, stay
make sb

The vaccination doesn't necessarily make you completely immune.

ADVERB
completely, totally
PREPOSITION
to

Many people are immune to this disease.

2 not affected by sth
VERBS
appear, be, prove, seem
become
remain
ADVERB
completely, entirely, totally, wholly
by no means, far from

Children are far from immune to the cruelty that is latent in all humans.

almost, largely, virtually
seemingly
relatively
somehow

He seems to believe that the president is somehow immune from criticism.

PREPOSITION
from

He is immune from prosecution as long as he is in office.

to

She's quite immune to criticism.

Immune is used with these nouns: ↑defence, ↑deficiency, ↑response, ↑system

Collocations dictionary. 2013.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • immune — is followed by to or from. When the reference is to disease or some other form of harm or danger, to is more usual, and when from is used it is more often in the context of legal liabilities, but these distinctions are far from clear cut and both …   Modern English usage

  • Immune — Im*mune , a. [L. immunis. See {Immunity}.] 1. Exempt; protected. {Im*mu nize}, v. t. [1913 Webster] 2. (Med.) Protected from disease due to the action of the immune system, especially by having been inoculated against or previously exposed to a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • immune — im·mune /i myün/ adj: having immunity: exempt Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. immune …   Law dictionary

  • Immune — Im*mune , n. One who is immune; esp., a person who is immune from a disease by reason of previous affection with the disease or inoculation. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • immune — ► ADJECTIVE 1) resistant to a particular infection owing to the presence of specific antibodies or sensitized white blood cells. 2) relating to such resistance: the immune system. 3) exempt from an obligation or penalty. 4) (often immune to) not… …   English terms dictionary

  • immune — [i myo͞on′] adj. [ME immuin < L immunis, free from public service, exempt < in , without + munia, duties, functions < IE * moini : see COMMON] 1. protected against something disagreeable or harmful 2. not susceptible to some specified… …   English World dictionary

  • immune — (adj.) mid 15c., free; exempt, back formation from IMMUNITY (Cf. immunity). Cf. L. immunis exempt from public service, free from taxes. Specific modern medical sense of exempt from a disease (typically because of inoculation) is from 1881. Immune …   Etymology dictionary

  • immune — agg. [dal lat. immunis, der. di munus obbligo, servizio, imposta, ecc. , col pref. in in 2 ]. 1. [che non è soggetto a determinati obblighi o servizi, con la prep. da : i. da gravami fiscali ] ▶◀ dispensato, esente, esonerato, franco (di), libero …   Enciclopedia Italiana

  • immune — [adj] invulnerable allowed, clear, exempt, favored, free, hardened to, insusceptible, irresponsible, licensed, not affected, not liable, not subject, privileged, protected, resistant, safe, unaffected, unanswerable, unliable, unsusceptible;… …   New thesaurus

  • immune — Immune, et exempt, Immunis …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • immune — 01. Scientists do not yet understand why a small number of people seem to be [immune] to the AIDS virus. 02. Growing up in that country, the children developed a natural [immunity] to germs in the water that make visitors ill. 03. Hopefully,… …   Grammatical examples in English

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