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  1. Dictionary
    Mis·er·y
    /ˈmiz(ə)rē/

    noun

  2. Sep 5, 2012 · The meaning of MISERY is a state of suffering and want that is the result of poverty or affliction. How to use misery in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Misery.

  3. distress or suffering caused by need, privation, or poverty. great mental or emotional distress; extreme unhappiness. Synonyms: desolation, torment, woe, anguish, grief. Antonyms: happiness. a cause or source of distress. Older Use. a pain: a misery in my left side. rheumatism.

  4. MISERY definition: 1. great unhappiness: 2. someone who is often very unhappy and is always complaining about things…. Learn more.

  5. Misery is the way of life and unpleasant living conditions of people who are very poor.

  6. Misery is a state of deep unhappiness or discomfort. It's not dropping your ice cream cone. It's having a hairy monster steal your ice cream cone, eat it in one bite, and then kidnap you and carry you off to his cave. Misery describes a miserable situation and a miserable feeling.

  7. Definition of misery noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. misery. noun [ C, U ] uk / ˈmɪz ə ri / us. Add to word list. B2. great suffering or unhappiness: The war brought misery to millions of people. Her husband's drinking is making her life a misery.

  9. noun. miseries. A condition of great wretchedness or suffering because of pain, sorrow, poverty, etc.; distress. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Mental or emotional unhappiness or distress. American Heritage. A cause of such suffering; pain, sorrow, poverty, squalor, etc. Webster's New World.

  10. to behave in a way that makes someone else feel very unhappy. put an animal, a bird, etc. out of its misery. to kill a creature because it has an illness or injury that cannot be treated. put somebody out of their misery (informal)

  11. 1. intense unhappiness, discomfort, or suffering; wretchedness. 2. a cause of such unhappiness, discomfort, etc. 3. squalid or poverty-stricken conditions. 4. informal Brit a person who is habitually depressed: he is such a misery. 5. dialect a pain or ailment. [C14: via Anglo-Norman from Latin miseria, from miser wretched]

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