No. It is the breakdown of used neutrophils in an infected wound that forms pus. The neutrophils are a type of bacteria (or any foreign body) fighting white blood cells.
No it's just an infection
Yes.
Pus oozed out of the infected wound.
"Pus" in Hebrew is "moo-GLAH" (accent on the second syllable).
no, sometimes i just means you have a blister. if its green its infected.
That is the correct spelling of "pus" (dead cellular material in an infection). The similar word is "puss" (a cat, or slang for a face).
Oc-to-pus.
The combining form of the root word meaning pus is "pyo-."
It means viscous, yellowish fluid produced by an infection. The Latin saying Ubi pus, ibi evacua is used by medical students: "Where [there is] pus, there evacuate it."
There is a Latin word of the same spelling which is related to Greek 'puon'
The word campus has two syllables. Cam-pus.
pushy
pus pus on toast or a roast pus pus on toast or a roast