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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.

The suggestion of disquietude among donors met a vehement response from a lawyer who claimed to be representing a “large group of significant donors to Project Veritas.”

From Washington Post

But in times when I feel swells of disquietude, I don’t try to suppress them.

From New York Times

In a pandemic defined by widespread disquietude and legions of first-time bakers soothing their angst by muddling through banana bread recipes, the show should be, and has been, both balm and inspiration.

From Salon

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