Similar words: quiet, quietly, disqualify, montesquieu, disqualified, quiescent, acquiesce, student. Meaning: [-aɪətjuːd] n. feelings of anxiety that make you tense and irritable.
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1. If you find it full of worries and disquietude, split by the noise of the streets, bombarded by bills and emails and smoke, come to me and find your peace.
2. All hearts beat with disquietude, save only the heart of Michel Arden.
3. The disquietude of his air, the somewhat apprehensive impatience of his manner, surprised me.
4. Causes for disquietude there are none so long as this blessed sentence is true.
5. Franz felt a shudder run through his veins at observing that the feeling of the duke and the countess was so much in unison with his own personal disquietude .
6. EXAMPLE: Since sales are down and several departments in our company have been closed abruptly, there is a widespread disquietude among our employees.
7. The lines of his fastidious face showed a vague disquietude.
8. It indicated the restless vivacity of her spirit, which to-day was doubly indefatigable in its tiptoe dance, because it was played upon and vibrated with her mother's disquietude.
9. "No, excellency, no," returned the steward, with a sort of nervous trembling, which Monte Cristo, a connoisseur in all emotions, rightly attributed to great disquietude.
More similar words: quiet, quietly, disqualify, montesquieu, disqualified, quiescent, acquiesce, student, aptitude, attitude, solitude, altitude, squid, acquiescence, gratitude, servitude, turpitude, magnitude, rectitude, multitude, amplitude, beatitude, longitude, similitude, pulchritude, aptitude test, equidistant, let up, get up, diet.