Artificial intelligent assistant

sunstroke

ˈsunstroke
  [For the earlier ‘stroke of the sun’, transl. F. coup de soleil. Cf. G. sonnenstich.]
  Collapse or prostration, with or without fever, caused by exposure to excessive heat of the sun.
  Also loosely extended to similar effects of heat from other sources, as electric sunstroke: see quot. 1890.

[1807 J. Johnson Oriental Voy. 14 Several of the people got sick, with..what are called ‘Coups de Soleil’, or strokes of the Sun. 1823 Gentl. Mag. XCIII. ii. 647/2 He instantly expressed a feeling of having received what is called ‘a stroke of the sun’.]



1851 G. W. Curtis Nile Notes xxxvii. 188 Warding off sun-strokes with huge heavy umbrellas of two thicknesses of blue cotton. 1865 Dickens Let. to E. Yates 30 Sept., I got a slight sunstroke last Thursday. 1875 H. C. Wood Therap. (1879) 653 The terrible mortality of sunstroke. 1890 Gould New Med. Dict., Sunstroke, Electric, an illogical term for the symptoms, somewhat similar to those of heat-stroke, produced by too close and unprotected proximity to the intense light emitted in welding metals by electricity.

Oxford English Dictionary

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