This trail is not for the frail.
She was too frail to be moved.
She was so frail that she fell.
The elderly woman moved slowly, her frail frame barely able to carry the weight of her years.
FRAILTY
"Frail" comes from the Latin word fragilis, "breakable", via Old French frele. Fragilis in turn comes from the verb frangere, "to break". Believe it or not, frangere and "break" (and thus "frail" and "breakable") are related: they ultimately both come from the Proto-Indo-European root bhreg.
There are many words that contain the Latin and Greek roots frail, fact, and frag. Some are:FragmentFractalsFractionSuffrageFragileInfractionRefractFragmentedFractureFrail
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
A sentence that asks a question is called an interrogative sentence.
He was very frail, frail meaning weak.
After her illness, the old woman appeared frail and weak as she slowly walked down the hallway.
Towards the end of her life, my grandmother was very frail.
The frail old woman needed assistance walking up the stairs.
Although he was once a strong and healthy athlete, the cancer left Joe sickly and frail.
i feel so frail after last night. far too many pingers
But that isn't a sentence, it is a sentence fragment. Let's say you want to use that fragment in a sentence. You might say something like, My neighbor is a thin, frail, elderly-appearing 65-year-old lady. As an editor I would also point out that if you have already noted that this woman is thin and frail and 65 years old, it is really superfluous to also state that her appearance is elderly. I would omit that phrase.
Frail male (frail male)
lifting a box full of heavy books is a very strenuous job for a skinny and frail women
lifting a box full of heavy books is a very strenuous job for a skinny and frail women.
The frail woman's faltering voice made her words difficult to discern above the din of traffic.
Joe Frail was born in 1869.