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Discover Ludwig'got chickenpox' is correct and usable in written English.
It's often used to describe someone having an experience of catching the illness, for example: "My brother got chickenpox last month, so he had to miss a week of school".
Exact(3)
When my daughter Rosie was two, she got chickenpox from her sister.
After Diogo got chickenpox, he was moved from his room with three other boys to a playroom converted into a makeshift infirmary.
Jabs are given only to adults and children who are in close contact with someone who is either immuno-suppressed or would otherwise be at risk if they got chickenpox.
Similar(57)
"You can get chickenpox from someone with shingles," she said.
You know how if you get chickenpox once, you generally don't get it again?
Barbara Walters Has Chickenpox: Most adults over 60 don't get chickenpox, but Barbara Walters remains hospitalized with the virus, reports USA Today.
If you live in a house with a child who gets chickenpox, your own immunity gets a boost.
Once someone has had a chickenpox infection, he or she almost always develops a lifelong immunity, meaning that person usually does not get chickenpox a second time.
I felt some disappointment that I wasn't holding out for her to get chickenpox naturally, but I was also relieved.
She could get chickenpox from those blisters, and I couldn't imagine caring for a sick child while I myself was so miserable.
It is unlikely, however, that the chickenpox vaccine as it is now routinely administered to young children will protect all of them from developing shingles, since 15percentto25percentcent of vaccinated children eventually get chickenpox anyway.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com