The AI-powered English dictionary
countable and uncountable, plural cancers
(medicine, oncology, pathology) A disease in which the cells of a tissue undergo uncontrolled (and often rapid) proliferation. quotations
If successful, Edison and Ford—in 1914—would move society away from the […] hazards of gasoline cars: air and water pollution, noise and noxiousness, constant coughing and the undeniable rise in cancers caused by smoke exhaust particulates.
2006, Edwin Black, chapter 1, in Internal Combustion
Risk is everywhere. From tabloid headlines insisting that coffee causes cancer (yesterday, of course, it cured it) to stern government warnings about alcohol and driving, the world is teeming with goblins. For each one there is a frighteningly precise measurement of just how likely it is to jump from the shadows and get you.
2013 June 22, “Snakes and ladders”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8841, page 76
(figuratively) Something damaging that spreads throughout something else. quotations examples
Sierra Leone's post-dictator problems are almost absurd in their breadth. It once exported rice; now it can't feed itself. The life span of the average citizen is 39, the shortest in Africa. Unemployment stands at 87 percent and tuberculosis is spreading out of control. Corruption, brazen and ubiquitous, is a cancer on the economy.
1999, Bruce Clifford Ross-Larson, Effective Writing, page 134
comparative more cancer, superlative most cancer
(slang) Extremely unpleasant and annoying.