The word sick is the adjective form.
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.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'sick' is sickness.
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.
Synonyms for disease include illness, malady, sickness.
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.
Sick is normally an adjective She is sick. That ride was sick! :) The sick boy stayed home.
Morning sickness is a symptom of pregnancy.He has the sickness.There is a sickness going bout.It is a sickness in her head.
No. It is an adverbial (adverb phrase). This in the term is an adjective, and morning is a noun. But together they answer the question "when" for a verb. e.g. "They left this morning." (morning is not an object)
The Italian word for male is "Uomo" if you are using it as an adjective it usually is maschio
sickness
No, because sick is an adjective and there are not plural forms for adjectives. However, if you changed it into a noun (i.e., sickness) then you could make it into sicknesses.Some compound words that contain the word sick are:airsickcarsickhomesicklovesickheartsicksickoutsickbedsickroomsickbayseasick
My mom had a sickness that was called pneumonia