| SICARIOS | • sicarios n. Plural of sicario. • SICARIO n. (Spanish) a hired gunman or assassin esp. in Latin America. |
| SICHTING | • SICHT v. (Scots) to sight. |
| SICKBAYS | • sickbays n. Plural of sickbay. • sick␣bays n. Plural of sick bay. • SICKBAY n. a ship's hospital. |
| SICKBEDS | • sickbeds n. Plural of sickbed. • SICKBED n. a sick person's bed. |
| SICKENED | • sickened adj. Disgusted or revolted. • sickened v. Simple past tense and past participle of sicken. • SICKEN v. to make sick. |
| SICKENER | • sickener n. One who, or that which, sickens. • sickener n. A small, bright red and possibly poisonous russula or brittlegill (Russula emetica). • SICKENER n. a poisonous toadstool. |
| SICKERLY | • sickerly adv. (Obsolete outside dialects) Certainly. • SICKER adv. (Scots) sure, certain, also SICCAR, SIKER, SYKER. |
| SICKLIED | • sicklied v. Simple past tense and past participle of sickly. • SICKLY v. to make sickly-looking. |
| SICKLIER | • sicklier adj. Comparative form of sickly: more sickly. • SICKLY adj. in poor health. |
| SICKLIES | • sicklies v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of sickly. • SICKLY v. to make sickly-looking. |
| SICKLILY | • sicklily adv. In a sickly manner. • SICKLY adv. in poor health. |
| SICKLING | • sickling v. Present participle of sickle. • sickling n. The deformation of red blood cells into an abnormal crescent shape. • SICKLE v. to harvest with a single blade implement. |
| SICKNESS | • sickness n. The quality or state of being sick or diseased; illness. • sickness n. Nausea; qualmishness; as, sickness of stomach. • sickness n. (Linguistics) The analogical misuse of a rarer or marked grammatical case in the place of a more common… |
| SICKOUTS | • sickouts n. Plural of sickout. • SICKOUT n. an organized absence of workers claiming to be sick. |
| SICKROOM | • sickroom n. A room to be used by someone who is ill. • SICKROOM n. a room occupied by a sick person. |