What part of speech is pandemic?

Pandemic can be categorized as a noun and an adjective.

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Parts of speech

  • 1. pandemic is a noun, singular of pandemics.
  • 2. pandemic is an adjective.

Inflections

Noun

Adjective

  • Positive
    Comparative
    Superlative
  • more pandemic
    most pandemic
  • Positive: pandemic 
  • Comparative: more pandemic
  • Superlative: most pandemic

What does pandemic mean?

Definitions

Adjective

pandemic - epidemic over a wide geographical area; "a pandemic outbreak of malaria"
pandemic - existing everywhere; "pandemic fear of nuclear war"

Noun

pandemic - an epidemic that is geographically widespread; occurring throughout a region or even throughout the world

Examples of pandemic

#   Sentence  
1. adj. A pandemic outbreak of malaria.
2. adj. Pandemic fear of nuclear war.
3. adj. The World Health Organization says the coronavirus outbreak does not yet fit the criterion for a pandemic — but warns a pandemic is possible and nations should prepare.
4. adj. Governments around the world are responding to the coronavirus pandemic with more and more travel bans.
5. adj. Recurrent wintertime outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 could occur after the initial pandemic wave.
6. adj. School closures caused by the coronavirus pandemic mean many parents are trying to come up with ways to educate and entertain their children at home.
7. adj. People are rushing to stock up on supplies as the coronavirus pandemic rages on.
8. adj. El Salvador, one of the world’s homicide hot spots, reported something highly unusual early in the coronavirus pandemic — four murder-free days.
9. adj. Health workers on the front line of the pandemic response face greater risks.
10. adj. Cyberslacking is what I've been doing at work and school since the pandemic hit.
11. adj. Rare pink dolphins are returning to the waters between Hong Kong and Macau after the coronavirus pandemic halted ferries.
12. adj. What’s a great way to be outdoors, socialize but also be safe in these pandemic times? For many people the obvious answer involves water.
13. adj. Under public pressure, some governments are easing their pandemic restrictions in a bid to salvage something of the holiday spirit.
14. adj. Many European governments say they have little choice but to ease pandemic restrictions, fearing that if they maintain stringent rules, their citizens will only ignore them.
15. adj. "Reason dictates that people should get vaccinated in a pandemic and those who wait risk a serious illness and spreading the virus," Spahn said.
16. noun The World Health Organization (WHO) lists the Nipah virus as a developing disease that could cause a global pandemic. Ebola and Zika are also on this list.
17. noun Tom is afraid of the pandemic.
18. noun The World Health Organization says the coronavirus outbreak does not yet fit the criterion for a pandemic — but warns a pandemic is possible and nations should prepare.
19. noun European officials say they fear the spread could quickly develop into a pandemic.
20. noun If a disease is called a pandemic, it can't be controlled, but that doesn't necessarily mean that a lot of people are dying.
21. noun The last pandemic was in 2009 when a new influenza virus, called H1N1, started in the U.S. and circulated the globe. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that between 151,000 and 600,000 people died.
22. noun The World Health Organization declared the novel coronavirus a pandemic.
23. noun The World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a pandemic.
24. noun The World Health Organization determined Wednesday that the fast-spreading coronavirus outbreak is now a pandemic .
25. noun Not only will they look at us again and admire us, they will take us as a positive example of a country that, thanks to its sense of community, has managed to win its battle against this pandemic.
26. noun Fears are growing that disruptions from the coronavirus pandemic will strangle U.S. economic growth and send the country into a recession.
27. noun The coronavirus is now a pandemic.
28. noun Concerns are mounting that the coronavirus pandemic could disenfranchise large numbers of American voters in the U.S. presidential election.
29. noun India is watching to see if the country’s traditional greeting, the namaste, described as “virus-proof,” goes global as some world leaders adopt it amid the coronavirus pandemic.
30. noun Experts say the pandemic is going to get worse before it gets better.
Sentence  
adj.
A pandemic outbreak of malaria.
Pandemic fear of nuclear war.
The World Health Organization says the coronavirus outbreak does not yet fit the criterion for a pandemic — but warns a pandemic is possible and nations should prepare.
Governments around the world are responding to the coronavirus pandemic with more and more travel bans.
Recurrent wintertime outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 could occur after the initial pandemic wave.
School closures caused by the coronavirus pandemic mean many parents are trying to come up with ways to educate and entertain their children at home.
People are rushing to stock up on supplies as the coronavirus pandemic rages on.
El Salvador, one of the world’s homicide hot spots, reported something highly unusual early in the coronavirus pandemic — four murder-free days.
Health workers on the front line of the pandemic response face greater risks.
Cyberslacking is what I've been doing at work and school since the pandemic hit.
Rare pink dolphins are returning to the waters between Hong Kong and Macau after the coronavirus pandemic halted ferries.
What’s a great way to be outdoors, socialize but also be safe in these pandemic times? For many people the obvious answer involves water.
Under public pressure, some governments are easing their pandemic restrictions in a bid to salvage something of the holiday spirit.
Many European governments say they have little choice but to ease pandemic restrictions, fearing that if they maintain stringent rules, their citizens will only ignore them.
"Reason dictates that people should get vaccinated in a pandemic and those who wait risk a serious illness and spreading the virus," Spahn said.
noun
The World Health Organization (WHO) lists the Nipah virus as a developing disease that could cause a global pandemic. Ebola and Zika are also on this list.
Tom is afraid of the pandemic.
The World Health Organization says the coronavirus outbreak does not yet fit the criterion for a pandemic — but warns a pandemic is possible and nations should prepare.
European officials say they fear the spread could quickly develop into a pandemic.
If a disease is called a pandemic, it can't be controlled, but that doesn't necessarily mean that a lot of people are dying.
The last pandemic was in 2009 when a new influenza virus, called H1N1, started in the U.S. and circulated the globe. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that between 151,000 and 600,000 people died.
The World Health Organization declared the novel coronavirus a pandemic.
The World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a pandemic.
The World Health Organization determined Wednesday that the fast-spreading coronavirus outbreak is now a pandemic .
Not only will they look at us again and admire us, they will take us as a positive example of a country that, thanks to its sense of community, has managed to win its battle against this pandemic.
Fears are growing that disruptions from the coronavirus pandemic will strangle U.S. economic growth and send the country into a recession.
The coronavirus is now a pandemic.
Concerns are mounting that the coronavirus pandemic could disenfranchise large numbers of American voters in the U.S. presidential election.
India is watching to see if the country’s traditional greeting, the namaste, described as “virus-proof,” goes global as some world leaders adopt it amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Experts say the pandemic is going to get worse before it gets better.

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