distress
Americannoun
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great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; acute physical or mental suffering; affliction; trouble.
distress over his mother's illness.
- Synonyms:
- tribulation, adversity, anguish, agony
- Antonyms:
- comfort
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a state of extreme necessity or misfortune.
After the stock market crash, he found himself in great financial distress.
- Synonyms:
- destitution, need
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the state of a ship or airplane requiring immediate assistance, as when on fire in transit.
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that which causes pain, suffering, trouble, danger, etc..
His willful disobedience was a distress to his parents.
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liability or exposure to pain, suffering, trouble, etc.; danger.
a damsel in distress.
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Law.
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the legal seizure and detention of the goods of another as security or satisfaction for debt, etc.; the act of distraining.
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the thing seized in distraining.
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adjective
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afflicted with or suffering distress.
distress livestock; distress wheat.
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caused by or indicative of distress or hardship.
distress prices; distress borrowing.
verb (used with object)
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to afflict with great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; trouble; worry; bother.
It distresses Grandpa when you bring up the war.
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to subject to pressure, stress, or strain; embarrass or exhaust by strain.
to be distressed by excessive work.
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to compel by pain or force of circumstances.
Her faithlessness distressed him into ending their marriage.
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to dent, scratch, or stain (furniture, lumber, or the like) so as to give an appearance of age.
She used an old bicycle chain to distress the surface of the table before applying a deep stain.
verb
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to cause mental pain to; upset badly
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(usually passive) to subject to financial or other trouble
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to damage (esp furniture), as by scratching or denting it, in order to make it appear older than it is
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law a less common word for distrain
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archaic to compel
noun
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mental pain; anguish
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the act of distressing or the state of being distressed
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physical or financial trouble
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(of a ship, aircraft, etc) in dire need of help
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law
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the seizure and holding of property as security for payment of or in satisfaction of a debt, claim, etc; distraint
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the property thus seized
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( as modifier )
distress merchandise
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Related Words
See sorrow.
Other Word Forms
- distressful adjective
- distressfully adverb
- distressfulness noun
- distressing adjective
- distressingly adverb
- predistress noun
Etymology
Origin of distress
First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English noun destresse, distresse, from Anglo-French distresse, destresse, Old French, from unattested Vulgar Latin districtia, equivalent to Latin district(us) “exercise of justice” + noun suffix -ia; the verb developed from the noun; district, -ia
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
There was also a widely-held belief that migrants calling from small boats exaggerated the distress, meaning the Coastguard underestimated the emergency.
From BBC
The 53-year-old said the pain "etched" on older people's faces was distressing to watch as was the lack of dignity, with some men and women requiring toileting and feeding support.
From BBC
Some $25 billion of software loans were trading at distressed levels—below 80 cents on the dollar—at the end of January, up from $11 billion a month earlier.
She added that despite the men's claims to the contrary, their behaviour had been "intended to cause alarm and distress".
From BBC
Capita said they are "sincerely sorry for the distress this situation has caused" and confirmed that Caoimhe's case was affected by the inherited backlog.
From BBC
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.