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- Dictionaryadjectivesick (adjective) · sicker (comparative adjective) · sickest (superlative adjective)
- affected by physical or mental illness:"nursing very sick children" · "visiting the sick and the elderly" · "we were sick with bronchitis"
- relating to those who are ill:"the company organized a sick fund for its workers"
- (of an organization, system, or society) suffering from serious problems, especially of a financial nature:"their economy remains sick"
- feeling nauseous and wanting to vomit:"he was starting to feel sick" · "Mark felt sick with fear"Similar:travel-sicksuffering from motion sicknesssuffering from altitude sicknesssuffering from radiation sickness
- (of an emotion) so intense as to cause one to feel unwell or nauseous:"he had a sick fear of returning"
- informaldisappointed, mortified, or miserable:"he looked pretty sick at that, but he eventually agreed"Opposite:
- archaicpining or longing for someone or something:"he was sick for a sight of her"
- (sick of)intensely annoyed with or bored by (someone or something) as a result of having had too much of them:"I'm absolutely sick of your moods"Similar:fed up withbored with/bytired ofweary ofjaded with/bysurfeited with/bysatiated withglutted with/byhave had enough ofhave had something up to hereOpposite:
- (especially of humor) having something unpleasant such as death, illness, or misfortune as its subject and dealing with it in an offensive way:"this was someone's idea of a sick joke"Opposite:in good taste
- (of a person) having abnormal or unnatural tendencies; perverted:"he is a deeply sick man from whom society needs to be protected"
- informalvery good; excellent:"it was a sick party and there were tons of cool people there"
nounBRITISH ENGLISHsick (noun)- vomit:"she was busy wiping sick from the carpet"
verbBRITISH ENGLISH(sick something up)sick (verb) · sicks (third person present) · sicked (past tense) · sicked (past participle) · sicking (present participle)- bring something up by vomiting:"he was passing blood and sicking it up" · "she sicked up all over the carpet"
OriginOld English sēoc ‘affected by illness’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ziek and German siech.verb- variant of sic
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Web3 days ago · Learn the meaning, pronunciation, and frequency of the word sick in British and American English. Find out how to use sick as an adjective, noun, verb, or slang term, and see examples and synonyms.
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