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How To Use Weighed down In A Sentence

  • And small companies are not as weighed down as big Japanese companies with large payrolls and overleveraged balance sheets.
  • The tone is that of rancorous comedy, and there is skill in the writing, but the play, unlike the movie, is weighed down with a confusing prologue and a clumsy epilogue.
  • Although the postal service has cut its work force through attrition in recent years, it is still weighed down by overly generous employee benefits, she says. Postal Service Eyes Closing Thousands of Post Offices
  • The branches of the trees were weighed down by snow.
  • I was too weighed down by guilt to eat the sweet.
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  • Weighed down by deep crimson clothes and further hindered by a heavy golden cape, he could barely keep an upright bearing in the sweltering heat of the ocean.
  • Cleaned bleaks are salted and weighed down for 48 hours.
  • Schneider looked at the passport, held it up to the light, sipped his beer, suddenly weighed down by sadness. THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS
  • Hanging on paper, and yet weighed down by leavy burdens* Trade necefijury to Enable us to fuppbrt an enox - motts debt; and yet that debt, together with an excefs of paper* money, working continually towards the dcftruAion of trade. — The Monthly Review
  • I thought she looked somehow older, weighed down by all her new responsibilities.
  • Mrs. Cherry seems altogether weighed down by her work plus parenthood.
  • In a fishing harbour near Bari in southern Italy, a flotilla of small boats rides low in the sea, weighed down by festival-goers.
  • The U.S. dollar is likely to remain weighed down this week by mounting expectations that the Federal Reserve will adopt new stimulus measures, and the pressures on the greenback are unlikely to ease until more details of the Fed 's plans are known. Pressures Likely to Remain On Dollar
  • The maker of the iconic Hills Hoist clothesline posted a net profit of $40.2 million for the year ended 30 June, up from $9.5 million last year, though last year's figure was weighed down by $18.5 million in writedowns and other significant items. The Age News Headlines
  • Sally was weighed down with shopping bags.
  • The streets are jammed with cars, the busses packed with people and the pavements overflowing with pedestrians weighed down with their purchases.
  • A lone typist hove into sight around the corner from Gordon Street, weighed down with plastic carrier bags and moving like the QE2. THREE KINDS OF KISSING - SCOTTISH SHORT STORIES
  • You hardly need reminding that a hardcore physique complete with ripped abs is likely to be much more attractive than a flabby body weighed down by its own fat.
  • His eyes are like a balance, apt to propend each way, and to be weighed down with every wench's looks, his heart a weathercock, his affection tinder, or naphtha itself, which every fair object, sweet smile, or mistress's favour sets on fire. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • With their gnarled trunks, silvery green leaves and branches weighed down with small greeny black olives, they look as old as the world.
  • The new state was weighed down by the huge debts resulting from the wars of independence.
  • I believe that she too is eminently "beatable," especially by John McCain, in the same way that Obama is: i.e., sufficiently weighed down with certain "negatives" that can be used to help explain whatever fraud might be deployed to "beat" her. Three Strikes Against Obama
  • We are returning home weighed down with awards thanks to brilliant talent and skills both on and off screen.
  • Its performance has weighed down the prized credit card business, which enjoys substantially higher returns. Times, Sunday Times
  • The ground was cold underfoot but we were laughing as we fetched rocks from the river, re-erected the tent and weighed down its rim with the rocks.
  • It was weighed down at the edges with a citronella candle and a margarita. 365 tomorrows » Roi R. Czechvala : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • Families are piled in boxy, concrete rooms capped with corrugated tin roofs weighed down by rocks.
  • I arrive at his home weighed down with preconceptions, prejudices and gossipy snippets dressed up as fact. Times, Sunday Times
  • Significant numbers of farmers have quit the business and those remaining have been weighed down by masses of new legislation and paper work.
  • It connected us with a fruity hedge with brambles, rosehips, sloes, and a hundred yards of elders weighed down with berries.
  • Instead of passion for writing, a weariness that weighed down each word and distorted the prose into something unshapely.
  • Neruda, he said, would like to extol the virtues of his fatherland for all nations to see while Sitor seems to be a cosmopolite still weighed down by the legacy of his ancestors.
  • He likes to brim with an enthusiasm that is not weighed down by regret. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fruit trees, apples, pears and plums for the most part, are weighed down with a good year's crop.
  • A tallow candle weighed down one end of it, a steel gauntlet the other.
  • And so the first day of the new term arrived, and Harry set off to lessons, weighed down with books, parchment, and quills as usual, but also with the lurking worry of the egg heavy in his stomach, as though he were carrying that around with him too. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
  • The company's 2010 pretax earnings of $3.7 billion were weighed down by $507 million of past losses that were amortized into its results. Rewriting Pension History
  • A gentleman named the Food Dude, for example, is a regular patron of the Bunny Ranch, and arrives weighed down with confectioneries which he pays upwards $ 20,000 to have two naked women throw at him. The Death of Free Fuddi
  • The author of the Bear Boy books weighed down his son with so much ineradicable embellishment that the man could never free himself from the invented boy. An Interview With Cynthia Ozick
  • There was one Indonesian guy in a red shirt who, not weighed down by carry bags, lenses and boom mikes, was running after the police car with a video camera no larger than the size of his palm.
  • The story is messy and weighed down by its attempts at meaningfulness.
  • Weighed down with supplies, they found the steep path difficult to climb.
  • I arrived home, my arms weighed down with bags, my luggage.
  • They were weighed down with history while he was freighted with an uncertain and probably dangerous future. THE LAST RAVEN
  • The meetings are bittersweet, weighed down by regret, guilt and grief.
  • I began to understand what an annoyance it must be to have a bough up there that you couldn't flick at with your stick as you passed by, and that even when weighed down by its summer greenery would bemock you if you made a casual clutch at its foliage, and laugh at you in its leaves. Without Prejudice
  • He is weighed down with guilt.
  • Many of the shelves were old and crooked, weighed down over the years by books and trinkets his grandfather had collected.
  • At 6.20 am, crowded together in small boats and weighed down with heavy kit, the soldiers approached the deserted shore in silence.
  • He likes to brim with an enthusiasm that is not weighed down by regret. Times, Sunday Times
  • I thought she looked somehow older, weighed down by all her new responsibilities.
  • His skin is almost entirely covered with tattoos and he is weighed down by gold bling and huge dreadlocks. Times, Sunday Times
  • Mrs. Cherry seems altogether weighed down by her work plus parenthood.
  • ‘We really ought to tell them we're weighed down with responsibility and not the carefree single girls we seem,’ I entreated.
  • vines weighed down with grapes
  • The song is moody and weighed down but not indolent: Propelled by a polyrhythmic drumbeat, it reveals emo-core and math-rock leanings.
  • Britain was weighed down with soft snow and light on hard news. Times, Sunday Times
  • In contrast to the rowers and the cyclists, British swimmers seemed weighed down rather than buoyed by the roars of the home crowd. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was a Siamese, born to be sleekly elegant, and here she was, weighed down by this swollen bellyful of kittens. NOTHING TO WEAR AND NOWHERE TO HIDE: A COLLECTION OF SHORT STORIES
  • It connected us with a fruity hedge with brambles, rosehips, sloes, and a hundred yards of elders weighed down with berries.
  • Weighed down with bags, he nevertheless looks as if he has long since recovered from his nightmare.
  • Weighed down with supplies, they found the steep path difficult to climb.
  • Eat sitting at tables in gilded overstuffed dining room chairs, reclining on cushions in a diwan, or kneeling on a concrete floor around a sheet of plastic weighed down with bowls of kubba. Day of Honey
  • The ground was cold underfoot but we were laughing as we fetched rocks from the river, re-erected the tent and weighed down its rim with the rocks.
  • She took refuge in this extravagant, romantic atmosphere when she felt weighed down by the vulgarity of real life. THREE KINDS OF KISSING - SCOTTISH SHORT STORIES
  • At Kandahar air base, streams of soldiers and airmen weighed down with huge rucksacks breathed a sigh of relief. Times, Sunday Times
  • Weighed down by high debts, the company made an abortive attempt at refinancing, and cancelled dividend payments in 2001.
  • He comments on being weighed down ‘with the burdens of pastoral care’ and ‘great tumultuous uproars in secular affairs’.
  • Making sure that the story doesn't get weighed down by massive info dumps about the early origins of the legends of Elesstar/Azilis or the intricacies of the spice trade war between Tielen and Francia is another necessity - but it's not a hardship. MIND MELD: The Most Difficult Part of Being A Writer Is...
  • Hanging on paper, and yet weighed down by leavy burdens* Trade necefijury to Enable us to fuppbrt an enox - motts debt; and yet that debt, together with an excefs of paper* money, working continually towards the dcftruAion of trade. — The Monthly Review
  • The company became a byword for excellence, developing a team-based corporate culture, but by the 1990s, the vast company had become weighed down by bureaucracy.
  • Snow weighed down the branches and from a distance, they looked like trees bearing white blossoms.
  • Mrs. Cherry seems altogether weighed down by her work plus parenthood.
  • As a result it was weighed down by debt and its share price dived.
  • Here the tourists fight for seats with the elderly locals, usually weighed down with dozens of bags of shopping.
  • weighed down with cares
  • The denizens, be they peers or peasants, are weighed down by tradition and inertia, living out their lives according to exactly the same patterns as their ancestors.
  • McMaster's jab is notable because the rest of the Republican candidates for governor – not wanting to be weighed down by the Sanford saga - have so far tread lightly when handling questions about the governor. SC Republican gov candidate jabs Sanford in announcement

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