battle fatigue

NOUN
  1. a mental disorder caused by stress of active warfare
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How To Use battle fatigue In A Sentence

  • After nine years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq, they are beginning to recognize age-old legacies of the battlefield -- once known as shellshock or battle fatigue -- as combat wounds, not signs of weakness. Michael Winship: Don't You Know There's a War On?
  • While Mormeck shadow boxed toward the ring, led by a string of handlers all dressed in battle fatigues, the loud speaker pumped runway music for a Victoria Secret show.
  • A lifeless performance left manager Lennie Lawrence wondering whether his players are suffering battle fatigue after a hectic cup-and-league programme.
  • Combat stress is common in every war — including "battle fatigue" cases in World War II and the lasting trauma still suffered by thousands of veterans of the Vietnam conflict.
  • They were also given to soldiers to combat battle fatigue. Taking Drugs Seriously
  • They were also given to soldiers to combat battle fatigue. Taking Drugs Seriously
  • What had been considered shell shock in the first World War, presumably due to petechial hemorrhages in the brain, became battle fatigue, then war neuroses, during World War 2. Dr. Leo Rangell: Music in the Head: Living at the Brain-Mind Border; Part 1
  • They were also given to soldiers to combat battle fatigue. Taking Drugs Seriously
  • They were also given to soldiers to combat battle fatigue. Taking Drugs Seriously
  • Seated next to me in the lounge was a group of soldiers dressed in battle fatigues.
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