[
US
/mæˈɫeɪz/
]
[ UK /mælˈeɪz/ ]
[ UK /mælˈeɪz/ ]
NOUN
- physical discomfort (as mild sickness or depression)
How To Use malaise In A Sentence
- Other symptoms include fever, joint and muscle pain, malaise, urticaria, and pharyngitis.
- I found myself a few minutes ago, by mistake, on a lolcats website. The lolcat is the essential representation of the malaise of contemporary life: people with too much time on their hands and no idea how to use it.
- And another thing too - when a malaise is as commonplace as 'street harassment/eve teasing' is, we become somewhat indifferent to it. Archive 2006-03-01
- There is no easy short-term solution to Britain's chronic economic malaise.
- There is no easy short-term solution to Britain's chronic economic malaise.
- After a deep malaise following the death of Edith, his longtime lover, he had sought the advice of an astrologist. A Covert Affair
- The BBC, like a well-kicked hound, does not in its post-Hutton malaise wish to antagonise politicians. BBC is 'confusing cause and effect' in its Israeli coverage
- A landau was a "social carriage" meant to haul four rich folks in bouncy, horse-poop-scented comfort back in the 18th century, but Malaise Era marketers in the Motor City made the name their own. Jalopnik: Top
- The November 6 vote is a symptom of a far deeper malaise in Australian politics.
- It was no mistake that the only decade to rival the 1930s in terms of prolonged market malaise was the 1970s, another era defined by interventionist wage and price policies.