Associations to the word «Sicken»
Noun
- Stench
- Bloodshed
- Stink
- Odor
- Carnage
- Disgust
- Die
- Sight
- Odour
- Britannia
- Thud
- Shudder
- Slaughter
- Smell
- Pall
- Fever
- Fascination
- Filth
- Breaking
- Epidemic
- Swine
- Stomach
- Wellesley
- Anguish
- Nausea
- Hatred
- Killing
- Shaman
- Sickness
- Confinement
- Appetite
- Misery
- Outbreak
- Remembrance
- Horror
- Flu
- Waste
- Heart
- Flesh
- Soul
- Remorse
- Sorrow
- Spectacle
- Illness
- Blows
- Despair
- Shame
- Nostril
- Plague
- Decay
- Felt
- Garion
- Fade
- Cruelty
- Toxin
- Violence
- Pity
- Thought
- Worse
- Fed
Adjective
Wiktionary
SICKEN, verb. (transitive) To make ill.
SICKEN, verb. (intransitive) To become ill.
SICKEN, verb. (transitive) To fill with disgust or abhorrence.
SICKEN, verb. (intransitive) To be filled with disgust or abhorrence.
SICKEN, verb. (intransitive) To become disgusting or tedious.
SICKEN, verb. (intransitive) To become weak; to decay; to languish.
Dictionary definition
SICKEN, verb. Cause aversion in; offend the moral sense of; "The pornographic pictures sickened us".
SICKEN, verb. Get sick; "She fell sick last Friday, and now she is in the hospital".
SICKEN, verb. Upset and make nauseated; "The smell of the food turned the pregnant woman's stomach"; "The mold on the food sickened the diners".
SICKEN, verb. Make sick or ill; "This kind of food sickens me".
Wise words
It is better wither to be silent, or to say things of more
value than silence. Sooner throw a pearl at hazard than an
idle or useless word; and do not say a little in many words,
but a great deal in a few.