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The phrase "a feverish" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a state of intense activity, excitement, or agitation, often associated with illness or emotional turmoil.
Example: "After days of feverish work, she finally completed the project just in time for the deadline."
Alternatives: "a frenzied" or "an intense".
Exact(60)
When a feverish groom in Amenia.
He was working at a feverish pace.
The country is in a feverish state.
My last couple weeks in Rome were a feverish blur.
His greatest work, The Apocalypse, reveals a feverish, mystical imagination.
Yet the diaries record a feverish social life.
John composed the score in a feverish two-week burst.
But the Burmese had a feverish sense of purpose.
"The Others" might also have come from a feverish dream.
But he continues to trade at a feverish rate.
Kevin Wathen lends his chum, Berger, a feverish promiscuity.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com