/ˈsɪkəʊ/, /ˈsɪkoʊ/
OriginFrom sick + -o (“person with characteristic”).
- A physically ill person.
“The amazing Mr. Sick Day [Milo Filbum] has missed an amazing 73% of 1,020 work days for such ailments as a toothache, [...] "I finally gave the sicko his walking papers when other people started doing”
“Sicko status: Can you keep going even when you're feeling out of sorts?”
“Sickos: If it seems like your toddler is always sick, it's because they are.”
- Characterized by depraved tastes or habits; deviant.
““Your kid isn't nuts.” “Ever had one of his broccoli-and-asparagus omelets? Kid eats another vegetable, I'm going to ram a carrot down his throat until he gags.” “Most parents would kill for a kid lik”
“The damage level was sicko, even Eddy had been taken aback when they'd first gone inside, scared but trying to hide it. What was Eddy doing? "One last thing I wanna get," he'd said, and then disappear”
““I didn't want that pediatrician to touch me, he was, like, a very weird guy, very sicko.” He took pictures of her genitals, and she later wondered whether this was for child pornography.”
Formssickos(plural) · sickoes(plural) · more sicko(comparative) · most sicko(superlative)