sickly child• My brother grew up as if he was a sickly child.• There was a handful of verminous women, too, and even a few sickly children.• I was a very sickly child, and so my memories of those first years are dark.• He suffered from allergies, like his great-uncle Theodore Roosevelt, and was a sickly child for much of his early years.• She was a sickly child, frequently in and out of hospital.• Patsy was a sickly child, growing very little in the first few years of his life.• Favouritism is equally bad for the favourite, who is often a sickly child, or the baby of the family.• Indeed, he was a sickly child, succumbing with monotonousregularity to ear and throatinfections.
sickly smell• As I lay in the ditch I was suddenly conscious of a very strong indescribably sickly smell.• He hadn't shaved for a few days and a sickly smellclung to his clothes and hair.• When the wind was in the west a sickly smellfloated over the pits.• As usual, it was the strange smell that repelled him - a sweet sickly smell that he couldn't identify.
sickly sweet• There can be virtue in the parlance of sincerity, sickly sweet as it seems.• Suddenly, he felt a warning, just a hint of the sickly sweetodour he remembered so vividly from the marketplace.• It was hot and jammed and the air was redolent with the sickly sweet smell of cheap champagne.• And again there was that sickly sweetstench of cookedflesh which clogged his nostrils and made him want to vomit.• He was fuming about it when Yolanda hopped into his car, the sickly sweetstink of her perfume almost choking him.