the application of medicines, surgery, psychotherapy, etc, to a patient or to a disease or symptom the manner of handling or dealing with a person or thing, as in a literary or artistic work the act, practice, or manner of treating an expansion of a script into sequence form, indicating camera angles, dialogue, etc - the treatment ⇒
the usual manner of dealing with a particular type of person (esp in the phrase give someone the (full) treatment)
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
treat•ment /ˈtritmənt/USA pronunciation
n.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026- the act, manner, or process of treating:[uncountable]The principal's children don't receive special treatment from the teacher.
- Medicine, Psychotherapythe use of medicines, surgery, etc., in curing a person of a disorder: [uncountable]shock treatment for his depression.[countable]weekly chemotherapy treatments.
treat•ment
(trēt′mənt),USA pronunciation n.
- an act or manner of treating.
- action or behavior toward a person, animal, etc.
- management in the application of medicines, surgery, etc.
- literary or artistic handling, esp. with reference to style.
- subjection to some agent or action.
- Radio and Television[Motion Pictures, Television.]a preliminary outline of a film or teleplay laying out the key scenes, characters, and locales.
- treat + -ment 1550–60
- 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged . handling, management, conduct, approach.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
'medical treatment' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
-iatry
- Munchausen syndrome
- Xenical
- administration
- aid station
- bath
- biological psychiatry
- case history
- clinic
- contract practice
- detoxification
- dilatation
- doctor
- drugless
- empirical
- golden hour
- leech
- maintenance and cure
- medicable
- medical
- medicalize
- monotherapy
- noninvasive
- on-site
- passive euthanasia
- pharmacogenomics
- private health insurance
- private patient
- rest-cure
- risk-benefit
- sweat
- unction