Associations to the word «Intervention»
Noun
- Dementia
- Nursing
- Nutrition
- Diagnosis
- Appropriation
- Genocide
- Struggling
- Retardation
- Catheter
- Crise
- Prevalence
- Addiction
- Disorder
- Aggression
- Pretext
- Milieu
- Abuse
- Trauma
- Mortality
- Epidemiology
- Cochrane
- Risk
- Syria
- Incidence
- Advocacy
- Diabetes
- Disparity
- Patient
- Behalf
- Offender
- Setting
- Contingency
- Monitoring
- Violence
- Health
- Vaccination
- Stigma
- Consultation
- Dren
- Sanitation
- Levant
- Requiring
- Timor
- Sustaining
- Regimen
- Modality
- Prob
- Empowerment
- Iq
- Blind
- Sovereignty
- Mussolini
- Devel
- Abstinence
- Pact
- Nicaragua
- Chil
- Deficit
- Counselor
- Somalia
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
INTERVENTION, noun. The action of intervening; interfering in some course of events.
INTERVENTION, noun. (US) (legal) A legal motion through which a person or entity who has not been named as a party to a case seeks to have the court order that they be made a party.
INTERVENTION, noun. An orchestrated attempt to convince somebody with an addiction or other psychological problem to seek professional help and/or change their behavior.
INTERVENTION, noun. (Medicine) An action taken or procedure performed; an operation.
Dictionary definition
INTERVENTION, noun. The act of intervening (as to mediate a dispute, etc.); "it occurs without human intervention".
INTERVENTION, noun. A policy of intervening in the affairs of other countries.
INTERVENTION, noun. The act or fact of interposing one thing between or among others.
INTERVENTION, noun. (law) a proceeding that permits a person to enter into a lawsuit already in progress; admission of person not an original party to the suit so that person can protect some right or interest that is allegedly affected by the proceedings; "the purpose of intervention is to prevent unnecessary duplication of lawsuits".
INTERVENTION, noun. Care provided to improve a situation (especially medical procedures or applications that are intended to relieve illness or injury).
Wise words
Actions speak louder than words.