To be added at the end of the Species Sudor Calidus, in Class I.
Profuse sweats from the inverted motions of the cutaneous lymphatics, as in some fainting fits, and at the approach of death; and as perhaps in the sudor anglicanus.
The strange disease which came to be known all over Europe as sudor Anglicus, or the English Sweat, was a new type or species of infection first seen in the autumn of 1485.
Anthony Wood says of it: "Some thought that this Oxford mortality was the same that Leonard Fuchsius styles sudor Anglicus.
It was a sufficiently prominent symptom in the Oxford gaol-fever of 1577 for the sudor Anglicus to be called to mind.
At the end of the fifteenth and middle of the sixteenth century, we have as alternating with bubo plague, the Sudor Anglicanus.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sudor" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: lather; perspiration; sweat; water