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  1. Dictionary
    Dis·tress·ing
    /dəˈstresiNG/

    adjective

    • 1. causing anxiety, sorrow or pain; upsetting: "some very distressing news"
  2. Definition of distressing adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. distressing. adjective. /dɪˈstresɪŋ/ making you feel extremely upset, especially because somebody is suffering. It was a very distressing documentary. What could be more distressing than the death of their only child?

  3. 6 days ago · If something is distressing, it upsets you or worries you. It is very distressing to see your baby attached to tubes and monitors. Synonyms: upsetting, worrying, disturbing, painful More Synonyms of distressing. distressingly adverb.

  4. distressing. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English distressing /dɪˈstresɪŋ/ (also distressful /dɪˈstresfəl/) adjective making you feel very upset a distressing experience —distressingly adverb Examples from the Corpus distressing • The front page news was shocking and distressing.

  5. noun. 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. a state of extreme necessity or misfortune: After the stock market crash, he found himself in great financial distress. Synonyms: destitution, need.

  6. Sep 5, 2023 · distressing (comparative more distressing, superlative most distressing) Causing distress ; upsetting ; distressful . The details of the ordeal can be distressing to some readers.

  7. a situation in which someone is in danger and needs help: an aircraft in distress. distress. verb [ T ] uk / dɪˈstres / us. to make someone feel very upset or worried: It distressed me to see how ill she looked. distressing. adjective. B2. a distressing experience.

  8. Define distressing. distressing synonyms, distressing pronunciation, distressing translation, English dictionary definition of distressing. tr.v. dis·tressed , dis·tress·ing , dis·tress·es 1. To cause strain, anxiety, or suffering to. See Synonyms at trouble. 2. To mar or otherwise treat to give...

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