You are suffering, Blanche, from a malady which is exceedingly common among the young ladies of England.
It has been said of Chopin that he suffered from his earliest years from an incurable malady which might have caused death at any moment.
This sort of life seemed so strange to us that we all felt the effects of it; and before we were a hundred leagues from Montreal, not one of us was free from some malady or other.
If I wished to help a fallen state or lend an honest hand in a great cause, whether it were to eradicate a hideous and fatal national malady or assert a principle of right and justice, first shield me from the palsy of Allied diplomacy!
There is, however, the possibility that the patient during the progress of the malady may become delirious and run amok; for these more dangerous symptoms it would be well for his neighbours to keep watch and guard.
Rather an't please you, it is the disease of not listening, the malady of not marking, that I am troubled withal.
So 'tis to thee; But where the greater maladyis fix'd, The lesser is scarce felt.
No, no, it cannot be; and yet my heart Will not confess he owes the malady That doth my life besiege.
News have I that my Nell is dead i' th' spital Of maladyof France; And there my rendezvous is quite cut off.
Their malady convinces The great assay of art, but at his touch, Such sanctity hath heaven given his hand, They presently amend.
Of man and beast the infinite malady Crust you quite o'er!
The age when the malady usually appears is that of second infancy, hence its name of spinal curvature of the adolescent; spinal curvature caused by rickets, which appears in early childhood, is rarer, and is of less direct interest to us here.
The mournful truth that a man--every man-must die alone, had been thrust sharply into my mind and kept there by the frequent violent attacks of my malady I suffered at that time, every one of which threatened to be the last.
The malady took the form of an eruption, like erysipelas, on the middle of the body and extending round the waist till it formed a perfect zone.
It was the dread typhus, an almost obsolete malady in Europe, and in fact in all civilized countries, but not uncommon at that date in the pestilential city.
Yes, I had an attack of--an old malady last night.
She often thought that it would kill him before his old malady could run its course.
While the latter was declared not to be dangerous, the "Blade" hinted that his malady might suddenly have taken a dangerous turn.
Grief finally killed him; for this unexpected death seemed to have been only the ultimate climax of the secret malady which had so long been undermining him.
Machinery has intensified themalady of under-consumption or over-saving, because it has increased the opportunities of conflict between the interests of individuals and those of the community.
In such a state of society resistance must be regarded as a cure more desperate than almost any malady which can afflict the state.
But many of the vulgar not unnaturally concluded, from the perplexity of the great masters of the healing art, that the malady had some extraordinary origin.
One of them had been thrown into prison where an infectious malady was raging.
Truly, he might have made her acquaintance whilst at Oxford, but, then, he had never shown any symptoms of his present malady for long after.
I mused a little, and then observed, "You do not think, do you, that the first cause of this strange malady was some little affair of the heart?
Your malady is not of the sort that you need fear death so soon.
If this be a right notion, the spread of the malady must be materially aided by the observance of a custom prevailing amongst the people of Stamboul.
Mrs. Judson's final malady was consumption, but for several years her health had been feeble.
The effect upon him of this excitement was evil enough, yet not so evil as the malady of drink.
Except that she had not Clara's sensibilities, her lot was the harder of the two; for she knew herself stricken with a maladywhich would hunt her unsparingly to the grave.
On his arrival at Gotha, the journey having proved toilsome and exhausting, and the malady again threatening to grow worse, he made his so-called “First Will.
Again, it has been said that excessive indulgence in some Malvasian wine was, on Luther’s own admission, the cause of a maladywhich troubled him for a considerable time in 1529.
The idiot Baudouin, the white-witch, now interfered, and told his companions that no relief for the malady could ever be procured until the old man confessed his guilt.
Imagine that it is in your power to take the malady in hand, and throw it on one side.
He was excessively anxious about his health, and would grudge no sacrifice in order to escape from a place where some contagious malady prevailed.
Illustration: "And now it is time that I tell how the grievous malady began .
And now it is time that I tell of how the grievous malady began the which has made me to suffer right cruelly for love's sake.
Nor should it be regarded as a malady so trifling that it is best treated with contempt, and still less as a mere "thorn in the flesh," whose ignoring is to be counted a virtue, or whose patient endurance without sign a mark of saintship.
There is no more genuine and obstinate malady on earth than a nervous disease.
The malady of Justinian had countenanced the rumor of his death; and the Roman general, on the supposition of that probable event spoke the free language of a citizen and a soldier.
The Romans advanced to Sardica; an army of Sclavonians fled before their march; but within two days of their final departure, the designs of Germanus were terminated by his malady and death.
Is there, in fact, any cure for the dreadful malady of drunkenness?
How much better to run no risks where the malady is so disastrous, and the cure so difficult!
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "malady" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.