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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a bad fever" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a fever that is severe or concerning in nature.
Example: "After feeling unwell for several days, I finally decided to see a doctor because I had a bad fever."
Alternatives: "a high fever" or "a severe fever."
Exact(11)
"He had a bad fever; his whole body ached; he looked terrible," she said in Spanish.
"Even if I have a bad fever, I go to work anyway.
"He told me, 'Fabrice is not going to school because he has a bad fever.
"Most of them are just staying at home and avoiding contact with others but they feel terrible, with a bad fever and sore muscles.
Days later, when I came down with a bad fever and couldn't determine the cause, she revealed that she had genital herpes.
But they had still dropped the ball, big time, and all that anticipation for "The Matrix Reloaded" now seemed like a bad fever dream.
Similar(49)
He had a really bad fever.
Then, when Jamey was just 3 weeks old, he had a really bad fever.
With its skeletal narrative and desolate tone, "Bad Fever" is a low-budget oddity, a shambling study of pathological loneliness that begs for our sympathies with defiant reticence.
Eddie (Kentucker Audley), the painfully awkward hero of "Bad Fever," longs for a career in comedy, though it's clear from the outset that his real gift is for tragedy.
She was home on Thursday and Friday of last week with a bad cold, fever and sore throat.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com