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All anguished synonyms

anΒ·guished
A a

adj anguished

  • ruffled β€” (of apparel) having ruffles.
  • chagrined β€” If you are chagrined by something, it disappoints, upsets, or annoys you, perhaps because of your own failure.
  • flustered β€” to put into a state of agitated confusion: His constant criticism flustered me.
  • inconvenienced β€” the quality or state of being inconvenient.
  • harrowed β€” an agricultural implement with spikelike teeth or upright disks, drawn chiefly over plowed land to level it, break up clods, root up weeds, etc.
  • irked β€” to irritate, annoy, or exasperate: It irked him to wait in line.

verb anguished

  • pother β€” commotion; uproar.
  • affront β€” If something affronts you, you feel insulted and hurt because of it.
  • chagrin β€” Chagrin is a feeling of disappointment, upset, or annoyance, perhaps because of your own failure.
  • torment β€” to afflict with great bodily or mental suffering; pain: to be tormented with violent headaches.
  • stew β€” to cook (food) by simmering or slow boiling.
  • mope β€” to be sunk in dejection or listless apathy; sulk; brood.
  • anguish β€” Anguish is great mental suffering or physical pain.
  • bleed β€” When you bleed, you lose blood from your body as a result of injury or illness.
  • bewail β€” If you bewail something, you express great sorrow about it.
  • sorrow β€” distress caused by loss, affliction, disappointment, etc.; grief, sadness, or regret.
  • repine β€” to be fretfully discontented; fret; complain.
  • pine β€” Archaic. painful longing.
  • rue β€” to feel sorrow over; repent of; regret bitterly: to rue the loss of opportunities.
  • keen β€” finely sharpened, as an edge; so shaped as to cut or pierce substances readily: a keen razor.
  • sigh β€” to let out one's breath audibly, as from sorrow, weariness, or relief.
  • blubber β€” Blubber is the fat of whales, seals, and similar sea animals.
  • suffer β€” to undergo or feel pain or distress: The patient is still suffering.
  • miss β€” to fail to hit or strike: to miss a target.
  • languish β€” to be or become weak or feeble; droop; fade.
  • harm β€” a U.S. air-to-surface missile designed to detect and destroy radar sites by homing on their emissions.
  • distress β€” great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; acute physical or mental suffering; affliction; trouble.
  • afflict β€” If you are afflicted by pain, illness, or disaster, it affects you badly and makes you suffer.
  • sting β€” to prick or wound with a sharp-pointed, often venom-bearing organ.
  • strain β€” to draw tight or taut, especially to the utmost tension; stretch to the full: to strain a rope.
  • rile β€” to irritate or vex.
  • vex β€” to irritate; annoy; provoke: His noisy neighbors often vexed him.
  • gall β€” (Pizi) 1840?–94, leader of the Hunkpapa Sioux: a major chief in the battle of Little Bighorn.
  • worry β€” to torment oneself with or suffer from disturbing thoughts; fret.
  • injure β€” to do or cause harm of any kind to; damage; hurt; impair: to injure one's hand.
  • convulse β€” If someone convulses or if they are convulsed by or with something, their body moves suddenly in an uncontrolled way.
  • bite β€” If you bite something, you use your teeth to cut into it, for example in order to eat it or break it. If an animal or person bites you, they use their teeth to hurt or injure you.
  • wound β€” the act of winding.
  • irritate β€” to excite to impatience or anger; annoy.
  • nick β€” Old Nick.
  • tingle β€” to have a sensation of slight prickles, stings, or tremors, as from cold, a sharp blow, excitement, etc.: I tingle all over.
  • irk β€” to irritate, annoy, or exasperate: It irked him to wait in line.
  • smart β€” having or showing quick intelligence or ready mental capability: a smart student.
  • annoy β€” If someone or something annoys you, it makes you fairly angry and impatient.
  • disquiet β€” lack of calm, peace, or ease; anxiety; uneasiness.
  • prick β€” a puncture made by a needle, thorn, or the like.
  • torture β€” the act of inflicting excruciating pain, as punishment or revenge, as a means of getting a confession or information, or for sheer cruelty.
  • sadden β€” make sad
  • throb β€” to beat with increased force or rapidity, as the heart under the influence of emotion or excitement; palpitate.
  • punish β€” to subject to pain, loss, confinement, death, etc., as a penalty for some offense, transgression, or fault: to punish a criminal.
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