Word for lying on something without being able to get up?
“The
story ends with Mary crying next to a bandaged Tom on a hospital bed.
I thought the word was prostrated but the Google definition doesn’t quite fit? prostrate
kneel. Knee fall from face downward. But to some extent, it’s not just a figment.
What is your approach to an interview?
Unable to move word specifically like does inert inert(?
https://www.merriamwebster.org.au/product?id=30876314/merriamwebster.html. If
your example sentence was “Lying
down,” your sentence could work because of the lack of power to move, If.
As an aside, useful words referring to how one is lying in the bed are “prone” (e.g. face down) or “supine” (e.g.
body forwarding) by C.W. Henman.
Isolated ( MWD )
to reduce or eliminate movement of (the body or a part) by mechanical means or through strict bed rest.
Rest may not be used; it can be exercised without assistance.
Google didn’t confirm that. Is the prostu00e9rate meaning that? In which dialectical senses before “prostrate” are ‘face-down on the ground’ and now, the original English sense of “prostrate” (also known as face-down on the ground) calls back to Latin prostratus which is actually laid forth or out in the manner of a slain enemy or KOed boxer. The other senses (syllables, plurals) of ‘prostrate’ mean ‘leveled’, ‘defeated’, ‘powerless’.
Is it a crime to say prostrate in a sentence, but if someone is worried at all about it, they’ll blow an eye if I say it.
If people think he is facing the wrong way in his bed would it be prone? The opposite is supine although that’s relatively less well known.