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  1. 1. a. : lineage, ancestry. b. : a group of presumed common ancestry with clear-cut physiological but usually not morphological distinctions. a high-yielding strain of winter wheat. broadly : a specified infraspecific group (such as a stock, line, or ecotype) c. : kind, sort. discussions of a lofty strain. 2. a.

  2. STRAIN definition: 1. a force or influence that stretches, pulls, or puts pressure on something, sometimes causing…. Learn more.

  3. Strain definition: to draw tight or taut, especially to the utmost tension; stretch to the full. See examples of STRAIN used in a sentence.

  4. The noun strain is a stretch, effort, or exertion. You can strain your ankle, or your little brother can strain your patience.

  5. To strain is to stretch tightly, make taut, wrench, tear, cause injury to, by long-continued or sudden and too violent effort or movement: to strain one's heart by overexertion, one's eyes by reading small print.

  6. 1. a. To pull, draw, or stretch tight: The heavy load strained the rope. b. Physics To cause distortion of (a body's parts or shape) by applying an external force; deform. 2. To exert, use, or tax to the utmost: straining our ears to hear. 3. To injure or impair by overuse or overexertion; wrench: strain a muscle. 4.

  7. Jun 30, 2024 · strain (third-person singular simple present strains, present participle straining, simple past and past participle strained) ( transitive, obsolete) To hold tightly, to clasp . ( transitive) To apply a force or forces to by stretching out. to strain a rope; to strain the shrouds of a ship.

  8. a feeling of being worried and nervous about something: The strain of the last few months had exhausted her. put a strain on sb/sth. to cause problems for someone or to make a situation difficult: Children put tremendous strains on a marriage.

  9. to draw tight or taut, especially to the utmost tension; stretch to the full: to strain a rope. to exert to the utmost: to strain one's ears to catch a sound. to impair, injure, or weaken (a muscle, tendon, etc.) by stretching or overexertion.

  10. strain. noun. /streɪn/ worry/anxiety. [uncountable, countable] pressure on someone or something because they have too much to do or manage, or something very difficult to deal with; the problems, worry, or anxiety that this produces Their marriage is under great strain at the moment. These repayments are putting a strain on our finances.

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