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Definitions

disquietude

[dis-kwahy-i-tood, -tyood] / dɪsˈkwaɪ ɪˌtud, -ˌtyud /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Because when she welcomes in Rosh Hashanah, she will be embracing that disquietude, a lesson she says she learned over the past year — 2020 for the secular world and 5780 by the Jewish calendar.

From Washington Post

He also has a way of gassing up that energy until the engine rumbles with a purring disquietude that warms up to a roar before lurching forth on a tread of unstoppable fright.

From Salon

The novel shifts into a minor key of doomy disquietude as events unfold.

From New York Times

There is nothing in the Game of Game of Thrones rulebook that prevents players from uniting to cause disquietude in the league.

From The Verge

The front-runner for Best Play is probably Stephen Karam’s bleak and revelatory drama “The Humans,” which has much to say, albeit indirectly, about the disquietude driving this election season.

From The New Yorker