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They mean much the same but "I am suffering from fever" is grammatically more correct: it is the fever that actually makes you suffer.
Reducing fever and other symptoms associated with Malaria.
a person who is suffering from fever.
Have you ever suffered from fever before? Did you suffer from fever yesterday?
to the principle, school name address sir, i inform to you that i AM suffering from fever from yesterday.and doctor advices me that to take bad rest. so, i am not able to come to school. your obediently name class
Quinine
In both the diseases, fever may start with slow onset. Patients suffering from both of them complain of headache. Patients suffering from both will have mild spenomegaly at some stage of fever. ( Usually at the end of week.) Both fevers have leucopenia in peripheral smear. Fever will never rise above 104 degree Fahrenheit in typhoid fever. And patient of typhoid fever will get 'toxic' in about 7 days of fever. At 104 degree Fahrenheit temperature he will need assistance of two persons to go to toilet as against patient of malarial fever. Patient of malarial fever can walk to longer distance without assistance. The experienced doctor can tell from the face of the patient that he is suffering from typhoid fever or not.
it helps the fever when you come down with malaria, also as a preventable source for malaria as well.
A fever victim is someone who is suffering from a, possibly longterm, fever. Usually the term 'fever victim' is reserved for those who have fever's of such high temperatures that there is a possibility of brain damage.
No. Most fevers are not caused by cancers. You can have a fever and not have a cancer, this is the most common case. You can also have cancer and not have a fever, and you can have cancer and a fever.
The common word is "feverish" (suffering from a fever, or hurried).
castor oil