Antonym: happiness. Similar words: miserable, commiserate, nursery, demise, adviser, premise, promise, premises. Meaning: ['mɪzərɪ] n. 1. a state of ill-being due to affliction or misfortune 2. a feeling of intense unhappiness.
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31. Destruction and misery attend on war.
32. Lewis was boiling with rage and misery.
33. What's the matter with you, misery guts ?
34. Old misery guts here doesn't want to go out.
35. Stop being such an old misery guts!
36. Her misery brought her to the verge of tears.
37. One usually associates poverty with misery.
38. Many of the people live in poverty and misery.
39. His constant criticism made her life a misery.
40. He was too wrapped in misery to reply.
41. He equates poverty with misery.
42. His face was a picture of sheer misery.
43. The giant-killers heaped more misery on the home team.
44. Don't be such an old misery!
45. The news plunged him into abject misery .
46. I think you should put the poor creature out of its misery.
47. Go on,(http://sentencedict.com/misery.html) put them out of their misery and announce the winner.
48. After a year of misery here, I'm finally shaking the dust of this town off my feet.
49. They will have to bear the misery of living in constant fear of war.
50. Flinging herself on the bed, she gave way to helpless misery.
51. The man immediately responsible for this misery is the province's governor.
52. Empathy for the criminal's childhood misery does not imply exoneration of the crimes he committed as an adult.
53. The actress is asking the court to protect her from an obsessive fan who is making her life a misery.
54. Please put me out of my misery. How do you do it?
55. The reforms served only to intensify the misery of the poorer peasants.
56. The figures represent such overwhelming human misery that the mind wants to shut it out.
57. She looked away so that Tom wouldn't see her misery.
58. In the end we asked the vet to put the poor creature out of its misery .
59. Ten years of marriage to him have made her life a misery.
60. We have enormous wealth at one pole, and poverty and misery at the other.