Sicken
31sicken — I. v. a. 1. Disease, make sick. 2. Nauseate, make sick, turn one s stomach, make qualmish. 3. Disgust, weary. II. v. n. 1. Become sick, fall sick, fall ill. 2. Be disgusted, feel disgust, become qualmish. 3. D …
32sicken — verb 1) the stench sickened him Syn: cause to feel sick/nauseous, make sick, turn someone s stomach, revolt, disgust; informal make someone want to throw up, gross out 2) she sickened and died Syn: become ill, fall ill, be taken ill/sick, ca …
33sicken — v 1. nauseate, turn one s stomach, make one s gorge rise; make sick, infect, afflict, poison; debilitate, enervate, weaken, enfeeble, devitalize; impair, injure, wound, cripple, incapacitate; derange, craze, madden, disorder. 2. revolt, disgust,… …
34sicken — sick·en …
35sicken — verb 1) the stench sickened him Syn: nauseate, make sick, turn someone s stomach, disgust; N.Amer.; informal gross out 2) she sickened and died Syn: fall ill, catch something • An …
36sicken — [ˈsɪkən] verb [T] to make you feel shocked and angry …
37sicken — sick•en [[t]ˈsɪk ən[/t]] v. t. v. i. to make or become sick • Etymology: 1900–50 …
38sicken — /ˈsɪkən/ (say sikuhn) verb (i) 1. to become sick. –verb (t) 2. to make sick. {sick + en1} …
39sicken — v. 1 tr. affect with loathing or disgust. 2 intr. a (often foll. by for) show symptoms of illness (is sickening for measles). b (often foll. by at, or to + infin.) feel nausea or disgust (he sickened at the sight). 3 (as sickening adj.) a… …
40sicken of something — literary to become bored with something They had sickened of each other s company …