Varianten
Pocke |
pock
|
Narbe |
scar
stigma
cicatrix
cicatrice
pit
pock
|
Pockennarbe |
pock
pockmark
|
Blätter |
foliage
pock
|
Synonyme
Werb
Varianten
My pock had become so sore and troublesome ’, soldier Lemuel Roberts recalled, ‘that my clothes stuck fast to my body, especially to my feet; and it became a severe trial to my fortitude, to bear my disorder’.
Those infected, remain contagious until the last pock falls off - about 21 days.
In the second part of Henry IV Barrit's Falstaff, his face pocked with sores and his body decaying, became a more grotesque, more disturbing but also more exuberant figure.
He was a strange-looking man, olived-skinned face marked with scars and pocks from unknown battles.
He thanked the medical staff who determined he had been poisoned, which caused him extreme internal pain and left his face pocked and grey.
Other