YES! You can get a sickness. It is not a verb, because you cannot DO sickness, and it isn't and adjective, because you cannot BE sickness.
Yes, the word 'sick' is a noun as a word for either vomit or a general word for people who are ill.
The word 'sick' is also an adjective.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'sick' is sickness.
I don't knoe
Sick is normally an adjective She is sick. That ride was sick! :) The sick boy stayed home.
The verb is "is". "he" is a pronoun, taking the place of a noun , and "sick" is an adjective, describing the subject,"he".
Yes, the noun 'ill' is an abstract noun as a word for a state of being sick; a problem or difficulty; harm. The word ill is also an adjective and an adverb.
The word sick is an adjective (sick, sicker, sickest), a word that describes a noun; sick is also a noun (a non-count noun) for a group that are sick, for example 'caring for the sick'.
The word sick is a noun as a word for either vomit or those who are ill.The word sickness is the corresponding noun for the adjective sick.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'sick' is sickness.
yes. The sick children love having visitors. I cared for a sick dog. it can also be a verb or a noun.
Yes, the noun sick is a word for people in general who are ill, or an informal word for the noun vomit. Example: Mother Teresa dedicated her life to the forgotten sick of the world.
SICK - ill or diseased (noun : sickness)
I don't knoe
Sick is normally an adjective She is sick. That ride was sick! :) The sick boy stayed home.
The verb is "is". "he" is a pronoun, taking the place of a noun , and "sick" is an adjective, describing the subject,"he".
I think you mean What's the word for sick in French? The answer to that is: adjective: malade, malsain, maladif, pâle noun: vomissure
Sickness is the corresponding abstract noun to the adjective sick.Sick can also be used as a noun meaning either vomit or those who are ill.
The suffixes are:critic is a noun, a word for a person who judges something; related nouns are criticism and critique.coward is a noun, a word for a person who shows a lack of courage or fortitude; a related noun is cowardice.loyal + ty = the noun loyaltysick + ness = the noun sickness (note: the word sick is an informal noun, a synonym for the noun vomit)invent + or = the noun inventor; invent + ion = the noun invention.trick is a noun, a word for a deceitful, cunning, or underhand action or plan; the noun form of the verb trick is trick + ster = the noun trickster.free + ness = the noun freeness; free + dom = the noun freedom.informal + ity = the noun informality.