FEVERISH vs SICK: NOUN
- N/A
- Vomit.
- Sick people considered as a group. Often used with the.
- People who are sick
- Sickness.
FEVERISH vs SICK: ADJECTIVE
- Filled with excess energy.
- In the state of having a fever, to have an elevated body temperature.
- Disordered as by fever; excited; restless.
- Indicating, or pertaining to, fever; characteristic of a fever.
- Having a fever; suffering from, or affected with, a moderate degree of fever; showing increased heat and thirst.
- Marked by intense agitation, emotion, or activity.
- Causing or tending to cause fever.
- Having a fever or symptoms characteristic of a fever.
- Relating to or resembling a fever.
- Of or relating to or characterized by fever
- Having or affected by a fever
- Hot; sultry.
- Marked by intense agitation or emotion
- Mentally ill or disturbed.
- Nauseated.
- Of or for sick persons.
- Suffering from or affected with a physical illness; ailing.
- Affected with madness or insanity
- Feeling nausea; feeling about to vomit
- Not in good physical or mental health
- Unwholesome, morbid, or sadistic.
- An apartment in a vessel, used as the ship's hospital.
- Corrupted; imperfect; impaired; weakned.
- Having a strong dislike; disgusted; surfeited; -- with of.
- Affected with, or attended by, nausea; inclined to vomit
- Affected with disease of any kind; ill; indisposed; not in health. See the Synonym under illness.
- An apartment for the sick in a ship of war.
- A variety of headache attended with disorder of the stomach and nausea.
- Excellent; outstanding.
- The bed upon which a person lies sick.
- Constituting an unhealthy environment for those working or residing within.
- In need of repairs.
- Pining; longing.
- A list containing the names of the sick.
- A room in which a person lies sick, or to which he is confined by sickness.
- Weary; tired.
- Disgusted; revolted.
- Deeply distressed; upset.
- Defective; unsound.
- Unable to produce a profitable yield of crops.
FEVERISH vs SICK: VERB
- N/A
- Eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth
FEVERISH vs SICK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To fall sick; to sicken.
FEVERISH vs SICK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Morbidly eager; unduly ardent: as, a feverish craving for notoriety or fame.
- Excited and fitful; in a state resembling fever; now hot, now cold; characterized by sudden change or rapid fluctuations: as, a feverish state of the money market.
- Having a tendency to produce fever: as, feverish food.
- Having fever, especially a slight degree of fever: as, the patient is feverish.
- Indicating or characteristic of fever: as, feverish symptoms.
- Synonyms Sick. Ill, Ailing, Unwell, Diseased, Morbid, Sickly. Sick and ill are general words for being positively out of a healthy state, as ailing and unwell are in some sense negative and therefore weaker words for the same thing. There has been some tendency in England to confine sick to the distinctive sense of ‘nauseated,’ but in America the word has continued to have its original breadth of meaning, as found in the Bible and in Shakspere. Diseased follows the tendency of disease to be specific, as in diseased lungs, or a diseased leg—that is, lungs or a leg affected by a certain disease; but the word may be used in a general way. Morbid is a more technical or professional term, indicating that which is not healthy or does not act in a healthy way; the word is also the one most freely used in figurative senses: as, morbid sensitiveness, self-consciousness, or irritability. Sick and ill apply to a state presumably temporary, however severe; sickly indicates a state not quite equal to sickness, but more permanent, because of an underlying lack of constitutional vigor. See illness, debility, disease.
- Nautical, out of repair; unfit for service: said of ships or boats. Sometimes used in compounds, denoting the kind of repairs needed: as, iron sick, nail -sick, paint -sick.
- Spawning, or in the milk, as an oyster; poor and watery, as oysters after spawning.
- Indicating, manifesting, or expressive of sickness, in any sense; indicating a disordered state; sickly: as, a sick look.
- Tending to make one sick, in any sense.
- As a specific euphemism, confined in childbed; parturient.
- In a depressed state of mind for want of something; pining; longing; languishing; with for: as, to be sick for old scenes or friends. Compare homesick.
- Figuratively Seriously disordered, infirm, or unsound from any cause; perturbed; distempered; enfeebled: used of mental and emotional conditions, and technically of states of some material things, especially of mercury in relation to amalgamation: as, to be sick at heart; a sick-looking vehicle.
- In a restricted sense, affected with nausea; qualmish; inclined to vomit, or actually vomiting; attended with or tending to cause vomiting: as, sick at the stomach.
- Affected with or suffering from physical disorder; more or less disabled by disease or bad health; seriously indisposed; ill: as, to fall sick; to be sick of a fever; a very sick man.
- Having floured: said of mercury.
- Hence To cause to seek or pursue; incite to make an attack; set on by the exclamation “Sick!” as, to sick a dog at a tramp; I'll sick the constable on you.
- To seek; chase; set upon: used in the imperative in inciting a dog to chase or attack a person or an animal: often with prolonged sibilation: as, sick or s-s-sick 'im, Bose!
- To make sick; sicken.
- To grow sick; become sick or ill.
- Disgusted from satiety; having a sickening surfeit: with of: as, to be sick of flattery or of drudgery.
- Shockingly repellent
- Dim or feeble
- Feeling about to vomit
- Feeling nausea
- Shockingly repellent; inspiring horror
- Deeply affected by a strong feeling
- (of light) lacking in intensity or brightness; dim or feeble
- Having a strong distaste from surfeit
- Affected by an impairment of normal physical or mental function
- Inspiring horror
- (idiom) (sick and tired) Thoroughly weary, discouraged, or bored.
FEVERISH vs SICK: RELATED WORDS
- Violent, Fanaticism, Hot, Fanatical, Heated, Frenetic, Frantic, Fevered, Frenzied, Ill, Sick, Agitated, Hectic, Feverous, Febrile
- Indisposed, Queasy, Carsick, Sneezy, Vomit, Infirm, Sickly, Seasick, Mad, Dizzy, Bedridden, Bedfast, Nauseated, Unwell, Ill
FEVERISH vs SICK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Violent, Fanaticism, Hot, Fanatical, Heated, Frenetic, Frantic, Fevered, Frenzied, Ill, Sick, Agitated, Hectic, Feverous, Febrile
- Indisposed, Queasy, Carsick, Sneezy, Vomit, Infirm, Sickly, Seasick, Mad, Dizzy, Bedridden, Bedfast, Nauseated, Unwell, Ill
FEVERISH vs SICK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- But behind closed doors there has been feverish activity.
- Another feverish, frenetic and heartfelt vision from Balkan dir.
- Even the most lambent passages have a feverish urgency.
- Do not exercise if you are feverish or ill.
- Quite often the patient feels unwell generally and feverish.
- Feeling suddenly feverish, achy, and crummy all over?
- Your child may be feverish after being vaccinated.
- In some cases the victim can feel feverish.
- Affected infants can also be feverish and irritable.
- My only symptoms are feeling tired and feverish.
- Employees cannot be paid for sick leave used unless they have accrued sick leave hours.
- Including both curatorship over the sick, and social or medical legislation on the sick Cf.
- Those who are sick, have a household member or other close contact who is sick.
- Sick leave without pay will count as service for the accrual of paid sick leave.
- The kind of blasphemy you people run really makes me sick, I mean really sick.
- Any balance in the Sick Leave Bank shall be converted to Sick Leave.
- Those who are sick should avoid petting, snuggling, being kissed or licked, and sharing food with their animals while sick.
- Additionally, OSHA recommends that employers encourage sick employees to stay home if they are sick.
- What if I am sick with Coronavirus or caring for someone who is sick?
- Click the Sick Hoursbutton or on the Activitiesmenu, select Sick Hourshe Sick Hours dialog box appears.
FEVERISH vs SICK: QUESTIONS
- How many answers did the crossword solver find to the feverish crossword?
- What does it mean when you feel feverish without a fever?
- Is it normal to feel feverish without having a fever?
- What held Gatsby most with its fluctuating feverish warmth?
- What does very sick with hospitalization necessary mean?
- What percentage of world population is mentally sick?
- Does Everyone infected with tuberculosis (TB) become sick?
- Do physiotherapists need to provide sick certificates?
- Can statutory sick pay be offset against company sick pay (cossp)?
- How much sick pay do you get on Statutory Sick Pay?
- How does Munch's the sick child differ from Krog's sick girl?
- Do you have to give employees a sick note for sick days?
- Do employees who call in sick too often abuse sick time?
- How to convince people you're sick after a sick day?