| 1. | affected with or suffering from distress. |
| 2. | (of merchandise or property for sale) damaged, out-of-date, or used. |
| 3. | (of real estate) foreclosed and offered for sale. |
| 4. | (of furniture) purposely blemished or marred so as to give an antique appearance. |
| 5. | (of fabric) made or processed to appear faded or wrinkled, as if from long, steady use: Our best-selling jeans are the ones in distressed denim. |
| 1. | great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; acute physical or mental suffering; affliction; trouble. |
| 2. | a state of extreme necessity or misfortune. |
| 3. | the state of a ship or airplane requiring immediate assistance, as when on fire in transit. |
| 4. | that which causes pain, suffering, trouble, danger, etc. |
| 5. | liability or exposure to pain, suffering, trouble, etc.; danger: a damsel in distress. |
| 6. | Law.
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| 7. | to dent, scratch, or stain (furniture, lumber, or the like) so as to give an appearance of age. |
| 8. | afflicted with or suffering distress: distress livestock; distress wheat. |
| 9. | caused by or indicative of distress or hardship: distress prices; distress borrowing. |
| 10. | to afflict with great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; trouble; worry; bother. |
| 11. | to subject to pressure, stress, or strain; embarrass or exhaust by strain: to be distressed by excessive work. |
| 12. | to compel by pain or force of circumstances: His suffering distressed him into committing suicide. |
dis·tress (dĭ-strěs') tr.v. dis·tressed, dis·tress·ing, dis·tress·es
[Middle English distressen, from Old French destresser, from destresse, constraint, from Vulgar Latin *districtia, from Latin districtus, past participle of distringere, to hinder; see distrain.] dis·tress'ing·ly adv. |
distress dis·tress (dĭ-strěs')
n.
Mental or physical suffering or anguish.
Severe strain resulting from exhaustion or trauma.