Use "hypochondriac" in a sentence

1. Don't be such a hypochondriac - it's only a cold!

2. She's a terrible hypochondriac - she's always at the doctor's.

3. They seemed to think I was a professional hypochondriac.

4. The jetset hostess was a hypochondriac who could not manage without sleeping pills.

5. Don't be such a hypochondriac!—there's nothing wrong with you.

6. To this inveterate hypochondriac , at any rate, the long - time leader looked pretty good.

7. She's a bit of a hypochondriac - always looking up her minor illnesses in a medical book.

8. A: "I'm a hypochondriac -- I love doctors and list them at the end of the book, even my proctologist.

9. 12 It was evident from the young man's circumspect excitement that he thought he'd got his first genuine schizophrenic hypochondriac.

10. It was evident from the young man's circumspect excitement that he thought he'd got his first genuine schizophrenic hypochondriac.

11. 13 Today we appear to have excelled the hypochondriac cultures of the past by elevating the morbidly self-involved to the level of paragon.

12. Results:The rates of anxiety, agitation, hypochondriac symptom, hypomnesia, gastroenteric symptom and somatic disease were significantly higher in elderly people group than in younger adult group.

13. 25 Today we appear to have excelled the hypochondriac cultures of the past by elevating the morbidly self-involved to the level of paragon.

14. In 1673, during a production of his final play, The Imaginary Invalid, Molière, who suffered from pulmonary tuberculosis, was seized by a coughing fit and a haemorrhage while playing the hypochondriac Argan.

15. ‘It studied cardiac insufficiency, Cardiodynia, consequences of damage to the cardiac musculature, nervous cardiac disorders, and cardiac pain of other nature.’ ‘It promotes blood circulation to remove blood stasis: For Cardiodynia, hypochondriac pain, abdominal pain, stomachache, dysmenorrhea, amenorrhea, lochiorrhea and trauma with

16. "Borage and Hellebore fill two scenes, Sovereign plants to purge the veins Of melancholy, and cheer the heart Of those black fumes which make it smart; The best medicine that God e'er made For this malady, if well assaid." "The sprigs of Borage," wrote John Evelyn, "are of known virtue to revive the hypochondriac and cheer the hard student."