The Spanish Flu Epidemic was pretty major. It was probably the reason World War 1 ended. People couldn't even rally troops because there was so much death going on.
When you hear the word 'Epidemic' usually it's referring to a disease, but an epidemic isn't always a disease. Poverty, for example, could be considered an epidemic, and it is not a disease, unlike the Spanish Flu or Smallpox.
Pandemic and Epidemic are both examples for the suffix demos.
You have coined a new word! Congratulations! "Epicdemic" must be an epidemic of epic proportions, I guess. Notable epidemics include the Black Death (the Bubonic Plague epidemic in fourteenth century Europe) or the Spanish 'flu epidemic in 1919.
The word 'epidemic' is both a noun and an adjective. Example uses:Noun: The influenza epidemic of 1918 is said to have killed more people than perished in World War 1.Adjective: The epidemic protests against the war in Vietnam spread throughout the United States.
some of the non examples are healty, cured, and clean.
A pandemic is a widespread epidemic - which hits a wide geographical area and affects a large amount of the population.
Swine flu started as an epidemic in Mexico and quickly spread throughout the world to become a true pandemic in 2009.Is this just an outbreak of measles in our local area, or is this an epidemic in the entire region?An epidemic of small pox quickly spread through the city.
epidemic
The word 'epidemic' is a noun and an adjective. There is no verb form of the word epidemic.
The most recent epidemic in Jamaica in 2014 is the AIDS epidemic.
Some diseases can be very epidemic.
Seriously? Just go google that. P.S. You spelled epidemic correctly, idiot.You spelled the word epidemic correctly. Epidemic is a widespread occurrence of an infectious disease.