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Definition of Suffering
1. Adjective. Troubled by pain or loss. "Suffering refugees"
2. Noun. A state of acute pain.
Generic synonyms: Hurting, Pain
Specialized synonyms: Throe, Passion, Passion Of Christ
Derivative terms: Agonal, Agonise, Agonise, Agonist, Agonize, Excruciate, Excruciate, Suffer, Suffer
3. Adjective. Very unhappy; full of misery. "Wretched prisoners huddled in stinking cages"
4. Noun. Misery resulting from affliction.
5. Noun. Psychological suffering. "The death of his wife caused him great distress"
Generic synonyms: Pain, Painfulness
Specialized synonyms: Anguish, Torment, Torture, Self-torment, Self-torture, Tsoris, Wound
Derivative terms: Distress, Hurt, Hurt, Suffer
6. Noun. Feelings of mental or physical pain.
Generic synonyms: Pain, Painfulness
Specialized synonyms: Agony, Torment, Torture, Throes, Discomfort, Irritation, Soreness
Derivative terms: Hurt, Hurt, Suffer, Suffer
Definition of Suffering
1. n. The bearing of pain, inconvenience, or loss; pain endured; distress, loss, or injury incurred; as, sufferings by pain or sorrow; sufferings by want or by wrongs.
2. a. Being in pain or grief; having loss, injury, distress, etc.
Definition of Suffering
1. Adjective. Experiencing pain.(jump experiencing pain s) ¹
2. Noun. The condition of someone who suffers; a state of pain or distress. ¹
3. Verb. (present participle of suffer) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Suffering
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Suffering
Literary usage of Suffering
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle by Aristotle, Frank Hesketh Peters (1886)
"Again, is suffering injustice always one way or I the other (as doing injustice
is always voluntary), or is it sometimes voluntary and sometimes involuntary ..."
2. The Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle by Aristotle (1891)
"Again, is suffering injustice always one way or the other (as doing injustice is
always voluntary), or is it sometimes voluntary and sometimes involuntary? ..."
3. The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals by Charles Darwin (1872)
"Suffering of the body and mind: weeping.—I have already described in sufficient
detail, ... No suffering is greater than that from extreme fear or horror, ..."
4. The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals by Charles Darwin (1913)
"Suffering of the body and mind : weeping.—I have already described in sufficient
detail, ... No suffering is greater than that from extreme fear or horror, ..."
5. The woman in white by Wilkie Collins (1871)
"If the highly-appreciative feeling towards Art and its professors, which it is
the consolation and happiness of Mr. Fairlie's suffering existence to ..."
6. The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals by Charles Darwin (1886)
"General effect of grief on the system — Obliquity of the eyebrows under suffering —
On the cause of the obliquity of the eyebrows ..."