indisposition
31indisposition — n. 1. Disinclination, unwillingness, reluctance, dislike, aversion, backwardness. 2. Illness, sickness, ailment, poor health …
32indisposition — noun See illness …
33indisposition — n 1. sickness, sickliness, illness, unhealthiness; invalidism, valetudinarianism; exhaustion, enervation, enfeeblement, prostration; disability, infirmity, decrepitude, weakness, feebleness; disorder, complaiqt, malady; nausea, indigestion,… …
34indisposition — in·disposition …
35indisposition — in•dis•po•si•tion [[t]ˌɪn dɪs pəˈzɪʃ ən[/t]] n. 1) the state of being indisposed 2) a slight illness 3) disinclination; unwillingness • Etymology: 1400–50 …
36indisposition — /ˌɪndɪspəˈzɪʃən/ (say .indispuh zishuhn) noun 1. the state of being indisposed; a slight illness. 2. disinclination; unwillingness …
37indisposition — in|dis|po|si|tion sb., en (det at være indisponeret) …
38indisposition — s ( en) tillfällig nedsättning av en persons hälsa el. förmåga …
39Indisposition — Ịn|dis|po|si|ti|on, die; , en (schlechte körperlich seelische Verfassung) …
40CONSERVATISM — indisposition to change established laws and customs that have wrought beneficially in the past and contributed to the welfare of the country; in practical politics often a very different thing, and regarded by Carlyle in his time a portentous …