In my case I describe this as "EXTREME EXHAUSTION", I dont wanna move and have no drive in me at all. Nothing excites me or can move me at all. No matter what I do or try. I have no appetite. I hate this. Cant wait for it to leave me. If you have never experienced this you have no idea how terrible it can be.
There isn't a greek word for that. Liteally it means ανοιξιατικος πυρετος meaning spring fever.
Some words and phrases that contain the word 'spring' are:bed springbox springHope springs eternal.hot springsIt might as well be spring.mineral springrite of spring'Silent Spring'Song of Springspringboardspringbokspring breakspring danceSpringfieldspring formspring forthSpring is here.Spring is just around the corner.spring rollsspringtimespring waterspringyunderground springwellspringX-springa spring in ones stepa way to describe the age of a person, "a spring chicken" = young, "no spring chicken" = olderas in gymnastics, a handspring or back handspringspring loadedspring fever
No, the word 'restless' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a restless night, a restless audience).The noun form of the adjective 'restless' is restlessness,.
· alive with new growth
The term "febrile" can describe conditions associated with chills and fever, indicating a state of fever or elevated body temperature often accompanied by shivering or chills.
cool crisp clean a celebration
The combining form that means fever is "febr/o." It is derived from the Latin word "febris," which translates to fever. This combining form is often used in medical terminology to describe conditions related to fever, such as "febrile."
Which would best describe the weather during spring in north carolina
No. Someone who is suffering from a high fever and therefore raving, is said to be delirious.
Nouns don't describe, adjectives describe. Synonyms are words that have the same or similar meanings as a word. Some adjectives to describe the spring: warmer, wet, promising, sunny, seasonable. Some synonyms for the spring: beginning, season, greening, emergence.
The word "restlessness" has the same suffix as "idleness", which is "-ness".
Yes, restlessness is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; an emotions, a word for a lack of ease that can be exhibited by movement or activity.