Use "feverish" in a sentence

1. He worked with feverish haste.

2. The child's body felt feverish.

3. She was aching and feverish.

4. I felt feverish all night.

5. He had a feverish brow.

6. 14 He worked with feverish haste.

7. Her skin felt moist and feverish.

8. 28 She was aching and feverish.

9. She looked feverish, her eyes glistened.

10. He is too feverish to rest.

11. I touched his forehead. He felt hot and feverish.

12. During her illness she had feverish dreams.

13. ▪ Is still feverish after 72 hours

14. There was a feverish blush to his cheeks.

15. The whole place was a scene of feverish activity.

16. I kissed her face, which was moist and feverish.

17. Have you seen the feverish activity in the kitchen?

18. She felt feverish and was aware she was muttering.

19. The pace slowed after two days of feverish activity.

20. 5 The whole place was a scene of feverish activity.

21. I'm feeling a bit feverish - I hope it's not the start of flu.

22. To ease physically; relieve: Comforted the feverish patient with a cool cloth

23. A feverish child refuses to eat and asks only for cold drinks.

24. The counterattack existed only in the feverish mind of the desperate dictator.

25. I feel dizzy ( feverish, shivery, sleepy, like vomiting, nauseous, itching, weak, irritated ).

26. Synonyms for Corybantic include frantic, frenzied, wild, hysterical, agitated, mad, distraught, excited, furious and feverish

27. The feverish girl's skin was Clammy and slick with a light layer of sweat

28. The show was about to begin and backstage there were signs of feverish activity .

29. He was no Apologist, but the glittering, near-feverish eloquence of his writing suggests fascination, almost reverence.

30. Believing he had only a year to live, his writing took on a feverish intensity.

31. They waited in a state of feverish anxiety for their mother to come home.

32. Antonyms for Afebrile include febrile, fevered, feverish, pyretic, hot, overheated, agitated, furious, impassioned and incensed

33. Joan was feverish last night, but she is as right as a trivet his morning.

34. Once the feverish atmosphere of the Liberation had subsided the practice aroused feelings of shame.

35. The court of Aenarion was a wild place, full of desperate gaiety and feverish mirth.

36. Hours of feverish activity lay ahead. The tents had to be erected, the stalls set up.

37. The land, relentlessly monotone in all but a few summer weeks of feverish flowering, is almost uninhabited.

38. ‘Catnip is best known for treating feverish conditions but is also used for Afterpains and other conditions.’.

39. Demand has been so feverish that the company has a backlog of unfilled orders for commercial satellites.

40. 28 Demand has been so feverish that the company has a backlog of unfilled orders for commercial satellites.

41. The events that followed proceeded at a feverish, hallucinatory pace that no one seemed able to control.

42. 14 There were no longer seasonal periods of slack and recovery to offset the periods of feverish activity.

43. So many sickly and feverish people were wandering about, some of them half-maimed, some burned from explosions.

44. This kind of feverish cold is slow to cure; it often kicks back just when you think you are better.

45. You ought to be careful about this kind of feverish cold, it often kicks back when you think you are better.

46. A fatal disease--tuberculosis, also called consumption--provided a favorite metaphor to represent the destructiveness of feverish emotions, such as pining or Amorousness

47. One scholar renders this phrase “my heart beats wildly,” noting that the expression refers to “a feverish and irregular beating of the pulse.”

48. It became a time of feverish activity: first, to complete the temple, and secondly, to build wagons and gather supplies to move into the wilderness of the West.

49. In CSF of all feverish patients with meningitis, pneumonia, or pyelonephritis, concentrations of prostaglandins of the E series were about twice higher than those of the afebrile subjects.

50. Forty years ago this very morning, we woke Blearily from a feverish jam-packed party all‑nighter which had jubilantly swirled around a whole floor of the swish Regency Hyatt hotel in Atlanta, Georgia.

51. He was perhaps the most exciting performer of his generation , known for his backward-gliding moonwalk , his feverish , crotch-grabbing dance moves and his high-pitched singing , punctuated with squeals and titters .

52. Its banks having risked no big money and its community fathers then lacking Midland’s stubborn feverish dreamy Boosterisms, it remained a vulgar sprawl of a town—the home of pipe yards, oil

53. Here a case is presented of a 21-year-old man who developed mainly neuropsychiatric symptoms which he caught one week after a feverish infection during his stay in India: troubles with concentration and memory, confusion, as well as depressive delusions and agoraphobia.

54. Apodal: lacking feet apodictic: necessarily true beyond contradiction apodosis: main concluding clause in a conditional sentence apodysophilia: feverish desire to undress apograph: exact copy; facsimile apolaustic: dedicated to the search for enjoyment apologetics: defense and proof of Christianity or other doctrine aponia: painlessness apopemptic

55. Nowhere is the stillness of the grave so deeply impressive; the feverish turmoil of the living, made up of pleasure, duty, labor, folly, sin, whirling in Ceaseless movement about them, is less than the passing winds and the drops of rain to the tenants of those grounds, as they lie side by side, in crowded but unconscious company.

56. Aperients were given in various forms and quantities and at different stages of the patient's admission.: Feverish and irritable conditions yield frequently to Aperients, or to gelsemium and quinine.: Besides alcohol and ether, the patient took vast quantities of Aperients, thyroid preparations and various salts, as well as homoeopathic preparations.: In all cases the bowels should be moved by

57. Later, a Calenture became any kind of raging fever linked to delirium and it also took on a figurative sense of some burning passion, the feverish ardour of a man afflicted with love, or the emotions of a spurned lover: That the man who had promised to marry her, had exhausted the vocabulary of love for her, should thus cast her off, struck her