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"slightly feverish" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It describes someone who has a slight fever, or an elevated body temperature. Example: "I woke up feeling slightly feverish and decided to stay home from work for the day."
Exact(6)
She appeared slightly feverish; in fact, everyone did, everyone seemed eager and a little overheated.
She was working on a problem I couldn't decipher from my side of the chain-link fence, working with the slightly feverish motion she sometimes has, as if the ball can't reach her racket soon enough.
He had slept uneasily all night and had wakened an hour earlier than usual, and, feeling sluggish and slightly feverish, had debated whether to go to the hospital at all; his sense of duty finally forced him to go, and he had started out on an earlier train than he took most mornings.
Health authorities warn that occasionally people feel slightly feverish or achey afterward.
Here's what it's like to lose your Marc Jacobs virginity: you walk out of the show feeling dizzy, clammy, heart pounding, a little nauseous, and slightly feverish.
You will notice that you might feel slightly feverish and your body will actually welcome the much needed rest as well.
Similar(47)
For the most part Joseph Millson offers a decent, bluff, soldierly Macbeth, but one slightly deficient in feverish imagination.
Even sitting still, smoking a hand-rolled cigarette or reading a tattered paperback, he radiates a feverish, slightly dangerous intensity, a charisma disproportionate to Joe's modest, straitened surroundings.
But the mood of the contest would not leave me, a mood of cerebral excitement, feverish and slightly sick, like a real inflammation of the brain.
John Constable's "The Lock" of 1808-1809, unfonlynately only represented in the show by an engraving, is among the first pictures in which short strokes of paint were applied with feverish energy, slightly blurring the landscape.
One of those situations when there are plenty of other seats and somebody gets way too close, and now that he was near I noticed he looked a little feverish with a slightly unsteady gleam in his eyes.
Related(20)
slightly violent
rather feverish
slightly frenetic
slightly frenzied
slightly frantic
slightly wild
slightly hot
little feverish
less feverish
slightly febrile
slightly overheating
slightly heated
slightly sweaty
slightly chewy
slightly modern
slightly eccentric
slightly different
slightly nutty
slightly wrong
slightly klutzy
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com