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Superlative for feeling or expressing distress or anxiety
“John and I worked together to help him gain clarity and freedom from his troubled mind.”
Superlative for beset by problems or difficulties
“A number of new factors suggest that the industry may be facing some troubled times ahead.”
Superlative for characterized by, or tending to cause, agitation or anxiety
“His residence at Madrid was during the troubled and uncertain times when the ministry of Espartero was overthrown by Narvaez.”
Superlative for psychologically or emotionally disturbed
“An emotionally troubled teen retreats into a world of fantasy in Seymour's successful first novel.”
Superlative for to be continuously haunted or possessed by something
“It seems that he was constantly troubled by his own inward sense that there were many sins, tiny and even unconscious ones, that he had not confessed.”
Superlative for feeling annoyed, frustrated or worried about something
Superlative for overcome with deep or intense sorrow
Superlative for having been subjected to oppression
Superlative for having a somber or dismal atmosphere or nature
Superlative for violently disturbed or agitated
Superlative for under a great deal of strain and worry
Superlative for weighed down with something, either physically or emotionally
Superlative for overwhelmed or distressed by a weighty burden or emotional distress
Superlative for having a forbidding appearance
Superlative for made uneasy by a guilty conscience
Superlative for predisposed to having, or characterized by, bad luck
Superlative for having breaks or gaps in continuity
Superlative for distressing to the mind or senses
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