sick

  • 71sick — See: take ill or take sick …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 72sick — adj. RG. 564 v. n. == sicken, become sick. 506 B …

    Oldest English Words

  • 73sick — sɪk n. people who are ill, sick people collectively adj. ill, suffering from a disease or illness; nauseous, feeling the need to vomit; disgusted, fed up; pertaining to a sickness, pertaining to a disease; yearning, longing; infected with… …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 74sick — • interesting, cool, never seen before. The more sick something is, the better …

    Londonisms dictionary

  • 75sick of — not interested any more, bored by, tired of    We re sick of his jokes because he repeats them …

    English idioms

  • 76sick of — bored with (smb or smth), dislike I think that she is sick of working overtime every day …

    Idioms and examples

  • 77sick of — bored by or annoyed with through excessive exposure. → sick …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 78sick — a. 1. Ill, indisposed, ailing, unwell, laid up. 2. Nauseated, affected with nausea, sick at the stomach, inclined to vomit. 3. Disgusted, tired, weary. 4. Diseased, weak, morbid, unsound, distempered, disordered, feeble. 5. Pining, languishing,… …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 79sick —  1. Disgusted. Very upset.  2. sick to death of Utterly disgusted with. Tired of.  3. (Of humour) Cruel, morbid …

    A concise dictionary of English slang

  • 80sick — Adjective: Affected with or suffering from physical or mental disorder; more or less disabled by disease or bad health; indisposed; ill. Nauseated. Upset. Noun: Persons who are sick, considered as a class. See sickness …

    Ballentine's law dictionary