different between silkness vs sickness

silkness

English

Etymology

silk +? -ness

Noun

silkness (uncountable)

  1. (obsolete) silkiness
    • your silkness Clearly mistakes Mecænas and his house

Anagrams

  • sinkless, skinless

silkness From the web:



sickness

English

Etymology

From Old English s?ocnes. Synchronically analyzable as sick +? -ness.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s?kn?s/
  • Hyphenation: sick?ness

Noun

sickness (usually uncountable, plural sicknesses)

  1. The quality or state of being sick or diseased; illness.
    I do lament the sickness of the king. -William Shakespeare
    Trust not too much your now resistless charms; Those, age or sickness soon or late disarms. -Alexander Pope.
    Sickness is a dangerous indulgence at my time of life. -Jane Austen.
  2. Nausea; qualmishness; as, sickness of stomach.
  3. (linguistics) The analogical misuse of a rarer or marked grammatical case in the place of a more common or unmarked case.
    • 1997. Michael B. Smith. Quirky Case in Icelandic, § 4.7
      We can now return to the question of how we treat the phenomenon of dative sickness (the possibility of substituting dative in place of accusative on the experiencer nominal) in Icelandic.

Synonyms

  • (quality or state of being sick): disease, illness, infirmity, malady

Derived terms

Translations

References

  • sickness in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

sickness From the web:

  • what sickness do i have
  • what sickness is going around
  • what sickness did itachi have
  • what sickness do i have quiz
  • what sickness has these symptoms
  • what sickness causes loss of taste
  • what sickness causes diarrhea
  • what sickness starts with a sore throat
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