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View synonyms for hardship

hardship

[ hahrd-ship ]

noun

  1. a condition that is difficult to endure; suffering; deprivation; oppression:

    a life of hardship.

    Synonyms: misfortune, suffering, affliction, trouble

    Antonyms: ease

  2. an instance or cause of this; something hard to bear, as a deprivation, lack of comfort, or constant toil or danger:

    They faced bravely the many hardships of frontier life.



hardship

/ ˈhɑːdʃɪp /

noun

  1. conditions of life difficult to endure
  2. something that causes suffering or privation


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Word History and Origins

Origin of hardship1

First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English; hard + -ship

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Synonym Study

Hardship, privation, austerity refer to a condition hard to endure. Hardship applies to a circumstance in which excessive and painful effort of some kind is required, as enduring acute discomfort from cold, or battling over rough terrain. Privation has particular reference to lack of food, clothing, and other necessities or comforts. Austerity not only includes the ideas of privation and hardship but also implies deliberate control of emotional reactions to these.

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Example Sentences

Elkind and the AHA also cite emotional stress caused by economic hardship, and depression as the isolation of quarantining drags on.

From Time

For decades to follow, they are there for each other through all the hardships that accompany growing up and growing older, despite the radically different choices they make as adults.

From Time

There’s also a global pandemic where more families are experiencing financial hardship.

From Digiday

The agency surveyed all of California’s water utilities in November to get a clearer picture of the financial hardship utilities have on residents at a time when more people are jobless and quarantining at home.

Thanks for all the ways you are making our city a better place in this time of covid and other sadness and hardship.

For the millions of women and girls displaced by conflicts across the globe, it has been a summer of extreme hardship.

So, the measure underestimates both economic hardship and the aid families receive.

In reality, economic hardship is much more commonplace, and its appearance is more subtle.

Omran has that deep, mature stare that only comes with years of hardship and struggle.

They never get there and their time in the minors is marked by real economic hardship.

As judge, I set about collecting his property with much diligence, involving considerable hardship.

Uriah said it would dishonour him to seek ease and pleasure at home while other soldiers were enduring hardship at the front.

This was a great hardship to banks, and has been corrected in many states by statutes and by the courts in others.

Regardless of its financial hardship, however, the educational system continued to improve.

The more he saw of life as it was, the more he was overcome by the sight of sorrow and hardship on every side.

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inveterate

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