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Distressful   Listen
adjective
Distressful  adj.  Full of distress; causing, indicating, or attended with, distress; as, a distressful situation. "Some distressful stroke." "Distressful cries."
Synonyms: distressing.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Distressful" Quotes from Famous Books



... with reason. What is that spectre the tired slumberer sees? The foul familiar lineaments affright him; Its pose of menace and its pointing hand To caution urge, to providence invite him, To foil this scourge of the Distressful Land. ...
— Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 99, August 30, 1890. • Various

... exhibits herself on the stage to several hundred people, but there I do not distinguish the individual eyes that are fixed on me, and my mind is diverted from the annoyances of my real situation by the distressful circumstances of my feigned one. Moreover, to add to my sorrows, at the beginning of the evening a lady spilled some coffee over a beautiful dress which I was wearing for the first time. Now I will tell you what ...
— Records of a Girlhood • Frances Anne Kemble

... the place in the midst of an impressive stillness, which made the sharper and more distressful to me the clank of ...
— Innocents abroad • Mark Twain

... he had ceased to try for it, and a lover who was carried so much past it on the white wings of an angel, that he could not get back to it. Massimilla could be happy with desire, not imagining its issue; but her lover, distressful in his happiness, would sometimes obtain from his beloved a promise that led her to the edge of what many women call "the gulf," and thus found himself obliged to be satisfied with plucking the flowers at the edge, incapable ...
— Massimilla Doni • Honore de Balzac

... servile egotism that is almost always at the bottom of the homage paid to those in high places. More deeply than in the hearts of others was this resentment implanted in the heart of Franz Ferdinand, and he never forgave the world what he suffered and went through in those distressful months. It was chiefly the ostensible vacillation of the then Minister for Foreign Affairs, Count Goluchowski, that had so deeply hurt the Archduke, who had always imagined that Goluchowski was deeply attached to him. According to Franz Ferdinand's account, Goluchowski ...
— In the World War • Count Ottokar Czernin


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