"I believe I'm coming down with the flu."
I had to call in sick to work today because I have the flu.
Grippe is an old word for the flu (influenza), so you would use it the same way you would use the word flu, but it is not commonly used now anyway; flu is used instead. Example: The child was sent home from school with grippe.
When the scale of the epidemic was understood, the town was sealed off.
The verb in the sentence is "call," which is used to describe the action of naming or referring to something as the flu.
Using the word "then" at the beginning of a sentence is not incorrect. However, it does not make a sentence complete. A complete sentence must have, at a minimum, a subject and a verb. "Then" is neither of those.
I just recovered from my bout with the flu.
The boy simply had a bad cold, not the flu.
I had to call in sick to work today because I have the flu.
Influenza is commonly known as the flu.
Kate's household was in turmoil, everyone had the flu.
Kate's household was in turmoil, everyone had the flu.
After a week in bed with the flu, his face was ahsen and he felt weak.
Supposedly she has the flu so she won't be in to work today.
An epidemic of the flu would bring the city to a screeching halt.
Yes I certainly can make a sentence with that word.
how can make the sentence for word mercy
"what does the word enfeebled means?" dumb whoever answered that.