GAD

[ UK /ɡˈæd/ ]
[ US /ˈɡæd/ ]
NOUN
  1. an anxiety disorder characterized by chronic free-floating anxiety and such symptoms as tension or sweating or trembling or lightheadedness or irritability etc that has lasted for more than six months
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use GAD In A Sentence

  • The reconnaissance is conducted by teams from the reconnaissance company of the airborne brigade and the reconnaissance platoon of an IFV-equipped airborne battalion or by a designated platoon of an airborne battalion. FM 100-61 Chptr 9 Artillery Support
  • They dismiss concerns that some of the Africans who flocked to Libya under Mr. Gadhafi's policy of pan-Africanism might be subject to retribution.
  • So why not give them a travel gadget that serves a dual purpose?
  • Gadafy's striking non-endorsement of the Democratic candidate focused in part on Obama's pledge of "unshakeable" support for Israel, which caused dismay, if not surprise, across the Arab and Muslim worlds last week. Obama Taking Over Democratic National Committee Partly To Avoid Kerry's Fate
  • But what excites me most is that the coffee shop has plug sockets - no more dying gadgets for me. The Sun
  • This link is sort of off-topic but really not, as it's yet another case (as in the present one) of the media doing their level best to shout down "the critics" -- the nattering nabobs of negativism -- and then, years later, admitting that the "gadflies" were right all along, and that what looked like a scam, walked like a scam, and quacked like a scam was -- quelle surprise! Funky math with Mark Larabee (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • Members of the 800th Military Police Brigade had to use lethal force several times to quell prisoner uprisings, the report says.
  • Selles segaduses on ometi ka Eestis välja kujunenud seltskond inimesi, kes vaatavad kogu seda tohuvabohu, mis puhkimisi termini «fantastiline fiktsioon» alla mahub, kriitilise pilguga. Katsed nimetada saart: Konverents Eesti fantastikakriitika hetkeseisust
  • No doubt some of these are metrosexuals, those city-dwelling gents with more than enough disposable income to spend on clothes, restaurants, the latest gadgets, exotic holidays and eyebrow waxing.
  • Did you know that the green part of the horseradish plant was one of the five bitter herbs served on the traditional Passover seder plate during the reading of the Haggadah?
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy